Activity of a number of enzymes related to lignin formation was measured in a Picea abies (L) Karsten suspension culture that is able to produce native-like lignin into the nutrient medium. This cell culture is an attractive model for studying lignin formation, as the process takes place independently of the complex macromolecular matrix of the native apoplast. Suspension culture proteins were fractionated into soluble cellular proteins, ionically and covalently bound cell wall proteins and nutrient medium proteins. The nutrient medium contained up to 5.3% of total coniferyl alcohol peroxidase (EC 1.11.1.7) activity and a significant NADH oxidase activity that is suggested to be responsible for hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) production. There also existed some malate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.37) activity in the apoplast of suspension culture cells (in ionically and covalently bound cell wall protein fractions), possibly for the regeneration of NADH that is needed for peroxidase-catalysed H2O2 production. However, there is no proof of the existence of NADH in the apoplast. Nutrient medium peroxidases could be classified into acidic, slightly basic and highly basic isoenzyme groups by isoelectric focusing. Only acidic peroxidases were found in the covalently bound cell wall protein fraction. Several peroxidase isoenzymes across the whole pI range were detected in the protein fraction ionically bound to cell walls and in the soluble cellular protein fraction. One laccase-like isoenzyme with pI of approximately 8.5 was found in the nutrient medium that was able to form dehydrogenation polymer from coniferyl alcohol in the absence of H2O2. The total activity of this oxidase towards coniferyl alcohol was, however, several orders of magnitude smaller than that of peroxidases in vitro. According to 2D 1H-13C correlation NMR spectra, most of the abundant structural units of native lignin and released suspension culture lignin are present in the oxidase produced dehydrogenation polymer but in somewhat different amounts compared to peroxidase derived synthetic lignin preparations. A coniferin beta-glucosidase (EC 3.2.1.21) was observed to be secreted into the culture medium.
A Norway spruce (Picea abies) tissue culture line that produces extracellular lignin into the culture medium has been used as a model system to study the enzymes involved in lignin polymerization. We report here the purification of two highly basic culture medium peroxidases, PAPX4 and PAPX5, and isolation of the corresponding cDNAs. Both isoforms had high affinity to monolignols with apparent K(m) values in microM range. PAPX4 favoured coniferyl alcohol with a six-fold higher catalytic efficiency (V(max)/K(m)) and PAPX5 p-coumaryl alcohol with a two-fold higher catalytic efficiency as compared to the other monolignol. Thus coniferyl and p-coumaryl alcohol could be preferentially oxidized by different peroxidase isoforms in this suspension culture, which may reflect a control mechanism for the incorporation of different monolignols into the cell wall. Dehydrogenation polymers produced by the isoforms were structurally similar. All differed from the released suspension culture lignin and milled wood lignin, in accordance with previous observations on the major effects that e.g. cell wall context, rate of monolignol feeding and other proteins have on polymerisation. Amino acid residues shown to be involved in monolignol binding in the lignification-related Arabidopsis ATPA2 peroxidase were nearly identical in PAPX4 and PAPX5. This similarity extended to other peroxidases involved in lignification, suggesting that a preferential structural organization of the substrate access channel for monolignol oxidation might exist in both angiosperms and gymnosperms.
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