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Molecular Basis for Sesterterpene Diversity Produced by Plant Terpene Synthases

Authors :
Juan He
Yong Wang
Zhixi Liu
Ikuro Abe
Jianxu Li
Takaaki Mitsuhashi
Tetsuro Shinada
Peng Zhang
Yihua Ma
Tsutomu Sato
Hai-Li Liu
Hongwei Liu
Qingwen Chen
Yuting Zhang
Guodong Wang
Source :
Plant Communications
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2020.

Abstract

Class I terpene synthase (TPS) generates bioactive terpenoids with diverse backbones. Sesterterpene synthase (sester-TPS, C25), a branch of class I TPSs, was recently identified in Brassicaceae. However, the catalytic mechanisms of sester-TPSs are not fully understood. Here, we first identified three nonclustered functional sester-TPSs (AtTPS06, AtTPS22, and AtTPS29) in Arabidopsis thaliana. AtTPS06 utilizes a type-B cyclization mechanism, whereas most other sester-TPSs produce various sesterterpene backbones via a type-A cyclization mechanism. We then determined the crystal structure of the AtTPS18–FSPP complex to explore the cyclization mechanism of plant sester-TPSs. We used structural comparisons and site-directed mutagenesis to further elucidate the mechanism: (1) mainly due to the outward shift of helix G, plant sester-TPSs have a larger catalytic pocket than do mono-, sesqui-, and di-TPSs to accommodate GFPP; (2) type-A sester-TPSs have more aromatic residues (five or six) in their catalytic pocket than classic TPSs (two or three), which also determines whether the type-A or type-B cyclization mechanism is active; and (3) the other residues responsible for product fidelity are determined by interconversion of AtTPS18 and its close homologs. Altogether, this study improves our understanding of the catalytic mechanism of plant sester-TPS, which ultimately enables the rational engineering of sesterterpenoids for future applications.<br />Sesterterpenoids, a relatively new group of terpenoids, are structurally diverse and widely distributed in bacteria, fungi, and the plant kingdom. However, the enzymatic mechanism of sesterterpene synthase (sester-TPS), the first committed biosynthesis step, remains obscure. This study reveals the critical amino acids controlling the substrate and product specificity of plant sester-TPS by determining the first crystal structure of the sester-TPS–FSPP complex.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
25903462
Volume :
1
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Plant Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b113fb53c6f6fcfc24aa18106f995201