Note: When clicking on a Digital Object Identifier (DOI) number, you will be taken to an external site maintained by the publisher.
Some full text articles may not yet be available without a charge during the embargo (administrative interval).
What is a DOI Number?
Some links on this page may take you to non-federal websites. Their policies may differ from this site.
-
SUMMARY Plants direct substantial amounts of carbon toward the biosynthesis of aromatic amino acids (AAAs), particularly phenylalanine to produce lignin and other phenylpropanoids. Yet, we have a limited understanding of how plants regulate AAA metabolism, partially because of a scarcity of robust analytical methods. Here, we established a simplified workflow for simultaneous quantification of AAAs and their pathway intermediates from plant tissues, based on extraction at two alternative pH and analysis by Zwitterionic hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry. This workflow was then used to analyze metabolic responses to elevated or reduced carbon flow through the shikimate pathway in plants. Increased flow upon expression of a feedback‐insensitive isoform of the first shikimate pathway enzyme elevated all AAAs and pathway intermediates, especially arogenate, the last common precursor within the post‐chorismate pathway of tyrosine and phenylalanine biosynthesis. Additional overexpression of an arogenate dehydrogenase enzyme increased tyrosine levels and depleted phenylalanine and arogenate pools; however, the upstream shikimate pathway intermediates remained accumulated at high levels. Glyphosate treatment, which restricts carbon flow through the shikimate pathway by inhibiting its penultimate step, led to a predictable accumulation of shikimate and other precursors upstream of its target enzyme but also caused an unexpected accumulation of downstream metabolites, including arogenate. These findings highlight that the shikimate pathway and the downstream post‐chorismate AAA pathways function as independently regulated modules in plants. The method developed here paves the way for a deeper understanding of the shikimate and AAA biosynthetic pathways in plants.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available December 1, 2025
-
SUMMARY Plants produce a staggering array of chemicals that are the basis for organismal function and important human nutrients and medicines. However, it is poorly defined how these compounds evolved and are distributed across the plant kingdom, hindering a systematic view and understanding of plant chemical diversity. Recent advances in plant genome/transcriptome sequencing have provided a well‐defined molecular phylogeny of plants, on which the presence of diverse natural products can be mapped to systematically determine their phylogenetic distribution. Here, we built a proof‐of‐concept workflow where previously reported diverse tyrosine‐derived plant natural products were mapped onto the plant tree of life. Plant chemical‐species associations were mined from literature, filtered, evaluated through manual inspection of over 2500 scientific articles, and mapped onto the plant phylogeny. The resulting “phylochemical” map confirmed several highly lineage‐specific compound class distributions, such as betalain pigments and Amaryllidaceae alkaloids. The map also highlighted several lineages enriched in dopamine‐derived compounds, including the orders Caryophyllales, Liliales, and Fabales. Additionally, the application of large language models, using our manually curated data as a ground truth set, showed that post‐mining processing can largely be automated with a low false‐positive rate, critical for generating a reliable phylochemical map. Although a high false‐negative rate remains a challenge, our study demonstrates that combining text mining with language model‐based processing can generate broader phylochemical maps, which will serve as a valuable community resource to uncover key evolutionary events that underlie plant chemical diversity and enable system‐level views of nature's millions of years of chemical experimentation.more » « less
-
Abstract Vascular plants direct large amounts of carbon to produce the aromatic amino acid phenylalanine to support the production of lignin and other phenylpropanoids. Uniquely, grasses, which include many major crops, can synthesize lignin and phenylpropanoids from both phenylalanine and tyrosine. However, how grasses regulate aromatic amino acid biosynthesis to feed this dual lignin pathway is unknown. Here we show, by stable-isotope labeling, that grasses produce tyrosine >10-times faster than Arabidopsis without compromising phenylalanine biosynthesis. Detailed in vitro enzyme characterization and combinatorialin plantaexpression uncovered that coordinated expression of specific enzyme isoforms at the entry and exit steps of the aromatic amino acid pathway enables grasses to maintain high production of both tyrosine and phenylalanine, the precursors of the dual lignin pathway. These findings highlight the complex regulation of plant aromatic amino acid biosynthesis and provide novel genetic tools to engineer the interface of primary and specialized metabolism in plants.more » « less
-
null (Ed.)Tremendous chemical diversity is the hallmark of plants and is supported by highly complex biochemical machinery. Plant metabolic enzymes originated and were transferred from eukaryotic and prokaryotic ancestors and further diversified by the unprecedented rates of gene duplication and functionalization experienced in land plants. Unlike microbes, which have frequent horizontal gene transfer events and multiple inputs of energy and organic carbon, land plants predominantly rely on organic carbon generated from CO 2 and have experienced very few, if any, gene transfers during their recent evolutionary history. As such, plant metabolic networks have evolved in a stepwise manner and on existing networks under various evolutionary constraints. This review aims to take a broader view of plant metabolic evolution and lay a framework to further explore underlying evolutionary mechanisms of the complex metabolic network. Understanding the underlying metabolic and genetic constraints is also an empirical prerequisite for rational engineering and redesigning of plant metabolic pathways. Expected final online publication date for the Annual Review of Plant Biology, Volume 72 is May 2021. Please see http://www.annualreviews.org/page/journal/pubdates for revised estimates.more » « less
-
null (Ed.)The emergence of type III polyketide synthases (PKSs) was a prerequisite for the conquest of land by the green lineage.Within the PKS superfamily, chalcone synthases (CHSs) provide the entry point reaction to the flavonoid pathway, while LESS ADHESIVE POLLEN 5 and 6 (LAP5/6) provide constituents of the outer exine pollen wall. To study the deep evolutionary history of this key family, we conducted phylogenomic synteny network and phylogenetic analyses of whole-genome data from 126 species spanning the green lineage including Arabidopsis thaliana, tomato (Solanum lycopersicum),and maize (Zea mays). This study thereby combined study of genomic location and context with changes in gene sequen-ces. We found that the two major clades, CHS and LAP5/6 homologs, evolved early by a segmental duplication event priorto the divergence of Bryophytes and Tracheophytes. We propose that the macroevolution of the type III PKS superfamily isgoverned by whole-genome duplications and triplications. The combined phylogenetic and synteny analyses in this studyprovide insights into changes in the genomic location and context that are retained for a longer time scale with more re-cent functional divergence captured by gene sequence alterations.more » « less
An official website of the United States government
