The responses of plants to abiotic stress involve the up-regulation of numerous metabolic pathways, including several major routes that engage thiamine diphosphate (TDP)-dependent enzymes. This suggests that the metabolism of thiamine (vitamin B1) and its phosphate esters in plants may be modulated under various stress conditions. In the present study, Zea mays seedlings were used as a model system to analyse for any relation between the plant response to abiotic stress and the properties of thiamine biosynthesis and activation. Conditions of drought, high salt, and oxidative stress were induced by polyethylene glycol, sodium chloride, and hydrogen peroxide, respectively. The expected increases in the abscisic acid levels and in the activities of antioxidant enzymes including catalase, ascorbate peroxidase, and glutathione reductase were found under each stress condition. The total thiamine compound content in the maize seedling leaves increased under each stress condition applied, with the strongest effects on these levels observed under the oxidative stress treatment. This increase was also found to be associated with changes in the relative distribution of free thiamine, thiamine monophosphate (TMP), and TDP. Surprisingly, the activity of the thiamine synthesizing enzyme, TMP synthase, responded poorly to abiotic stress, in contrast to the significant enhancement found for the activities of the TDP synthesizing enzyme, thiamine pyrophosphokinase, and a number of the TDP/TMP phosphatases. Finally, a moderate increase in the activity of transketolase, one of the major TDP-dependent enzymes, was detectable under conditions of salt and oxidative stress. These findings suggest a role of thiamine metabolism in the plant response to environmental stress.
A thiamine biosynthesis gene, thi3, from maize Zea mays has been identified through cloning and sequencing of cDNA and heterologous overexpression of the encoded protein, THI3, in Escherichia coli. The recombinant THI3 protein was purified to homogeneity and shown to possess two essentially different enzymatic activities of HMP(-P) [4-amino-5-hydroxymethyl-2-methylpyrimidine (phosphate)] kinase and TMP (thiamine monophosphate) synthase. Both activities were characterized in terms of basic kinetic constants, with interesting findings that TMP synthase is uncompetitively inhibited by excess of one of the substrates [HMP-PP (HMP diphosphate)] and ATP. A bioinformatic analysis of the THI3 sequence suggested that these activities were located in two distinct, N-terminal kinase and C-terminal synthase, domains. Models of the overall folds of THI3 domains and the arrangements of active centre residues were obtained with the SWISS-MODEL protein modelling server, on the basis of the known three-dimensional structures of Salmonella enterica serotype Typhimurium HMP(-P) kinase and Bacillus subtilis TMP synthase. The essential roles of Gln98 and Met134 residues for HMP kinase activity and of Ser444 for TMP synthase activity were experimentally confirmed by site-directed mutagenesis.
Analysis of the spectral properties and structural differences of two turn-on ratiometric fluorescent receptors for Zn(2+) and Cd(2+) ions, derivatives of pyrrolo[2,3-b]quinoxaline (2), and earlier published 3 (Ostrowska et al. CrystEngComm 2015, 17, 498-502) was performed. Both ligands are E/Z push-pull olefins interconverting at room temperature, with barriers to rotation about enamine double bonds, from E to Z isomers of 19.3 ± 0.1 and 16.9 ± 0.3 kcal/mol and from Z to E of 16.9 ± 0.3 and 15.7 ± 0.2 kcal/mol, respectively. Diastereoisomers (E)-2 and (Z)-2 were isolated and characterized by X-ray structural analysis. The formation of complexes by (E/Z)-2 with acetates and acetylacetonates of Zn(2+) and Cd(2+) was monitored by UV-vis, fluorescence, and (1)H NMR titrations in acetonitrile, respectively. X-ray structural analysis for isolated [(E)-2]2Zn in relation to earlier published (E)-3-ZnOAc revealed the formation of a six-coordinated zinc ion with six- and four-membered bis-chelate rings by (E)-2. The chelate effect increases the ligand affinity for Zn(2+) (log β12 = 12.45) and causes the elongation of nitrogen-metal bonds. Extension of the coordination cavity size allows coordination of a cadmium ion. The introduction of a flexible ethylene linker between the fluorophore and ionophore pyridyl groups in 3 significantly affects the selectivity of zinc-ion recognition. The distorted tetrahedral geometry of (E)-3-ZnOAc with a four-coordinated zinc ion appears to be the most preferred because of the short donor-zinc distance with a 1:1 binding mode. The formation of the small coordination cavity size with six-membered bis-chelate rings provides an effective overlap of zinc and donor orbitals, precluding the coordination of a cadmium ion in the same manner as zinc.
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