Title of article :
Characterization of two geraniol synthases from Valeriana officinalis and Lippia dulcis: Similar activity but difference in subcellular localization
Author/Authors :
Dong، نويسنده , , Lemeng and Miettinen، نويسنده , , Karel and Goedbloed، نويسنده , , Miriam and Verstappen، نويسنده , , Francel W.A. and Voster، نويسنده , , Alessandra and Jongsma، نويسنده , , Maarten A. and Memelink، نويسنده , , Johan and Krol، نويسنده , , Sander van der and Bouwmeester، نويسنده , , Harro J.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages :
14
From page :
198
To page :
211
Abstract :
Two geraniol synthases (GES), from Valeriana officinalis (VoGES) and Lippia dulcis (LdGES), were isolated and were shown to have geraniol biosynthetic activity with Km values of 32 µM and 51 µM for GPP, respectively, upon expression in Escherichia coli. The in planta enzymatic activity and sub-cellular localization of VoGES and LdGES were characterized in stable transformed tobacco and using transient expression in Nicotiana benthamiana. Transgenic tobacco expressing VoGES or LdGES accumulate geraniol, oxidized geraniol compounds like geranial, geranic acid and hexose conjugates of these compounds to similar levels. Geraniol emission of leaves was lower than that of flowers, which could be related to higher levels of competing geraniol-conjugating activities in leaves. GFP-fusions of the two GES proteins show that VoGES resides (as expected) predominantly in the plastids, while LdGES import into to the plastid is clearly impaired compared to that of VoGES, resulting in both cytosolic and plastidic localization. Geraniol production by VoGES and LdGES in N. benthamiana was nonetheless very similar. Expression of a truncated version of VoGES or LdGES (cytosolic targeting) resulted in the accumulation of 30% less geraniol glycosides than with the plastid targeted VoGES and LdGES, suggesting that the substrate geranyl diphosphate is readily available, both in the plastids as well as in the cytosol. The potential role of GES in the engineering of the TIA pathway in heterologous hosts is discussed.
Keywords :
ENGINEERING , Subcellular Localization , enzyme assay , Metabolic Profiling , Geraniol synthase
Journal title :
Metabolic Engineering
Serial Year :
2013
Journal title :
Metabolic Engineering
Record number :
1429670
Link To Document :
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