Chromoplast development in ripening bell pepper fruits is characterized by a massive synthesis of carotenoid pigments, resulting in their distinctive red color. We have shown that 95% of these pigments accumulate in chromoplasts in specific lipoprotein fibrils. In addition to carotenoids, purified fibrils contain galactolipids, phospholipids, and a single, 32-kD protein, designated fibrillin, which has antigenically related counterparts in other species. Fibrils were reconstituted in vitro when purified fibrillin was combined with carotenoids and polar lipids in the same stoichiometric ratio found in fibrils in vivo. Antibodies directed against fibrillin were used to isolate a fibrillin cDNA clone and, in immunological studies, to follow its accumulation during the chloroplast-to-chromoplast transition under different conditions. A model for fibril architecture is proposed wherein carotenoids accumulate in the center of the fibrils and are surrounded by a layer of polar lipids, which in turn are surrounded by an outer layer of fibrillin. Topological analysis of purified fibrils verified this structure. Collectively, these results suggest that the process of fibril self-assembly in chromoplasts is an example of a general phenomenon shared among cells that target excess membrane lipids into deposit structures to avoid their destabilizing or toxic effects. In addition, we have shown that abscisic acid stimulates this phenomenon in chromoplasts, whereas gibberellic acid and auxin delay it.
SummaryThe nature of isoprenoids synthesized in plants is primarily determined by the speci®city of prenyltransferases. Several of these enzymes have been characterized at the molecular level. The compartmentation and molecular regulation of geranyl diphosphate (GPP), the carbon skeleton that is the backbone of myriad monoterpene constituents involved in plant defence, allelopathic interactions and pollination, is poorly understood. We describe here the cloning and functional expression of a GPP synthase (GPPS) from Arabidopsis thaliana. Immunohistological analyses of diverse non-secretory and secretory plant tissues reveal that GPPS and its congeners, monoterpene synthase, deoxy-xylulose phosphate synthase and geranylgeranyl diphosphate synthase, are equally compartmentalized and distributed in non-green plastids as well in chloroplasts of photosynthetic cells. This argues that monoterpene synthesis is not solely restricted to specialized secretory structures but can also occur in photosynthetic parenchyma. These data provide new information as to how monoterpene biosynthesis is compartmentalized and induced de novo in response to biotic and abiotic stress in diverse plants.
Chromoplast development in ripening bell pepper fruits is characterized by a massive synthesis of carotenoid pigments, resulting in their distinctlve red color. We have shown that 95% of these pigments accumulate in chromoplasts in speclfic lipoprotein fibrils. In addltion to carotenoids, purified fibrils contain galactolipids, phospholipids, and a single, 32-kD protein, designated fibrillin, which has antigenically related counterparts in other species. Fibrlls were reconstltuted in vitro when purified fibrillin was combined with carotenoids and polar llpids in the same stoichlometrlc ratlo found in fibrils in vivo. Antibodies dlrected against fibrillin were used to isolate a fibrillin cDNA clone and, in immunological studies, to follow its accumulation during the chloroplast-tothromoplast transltlon under different condltions. A model for fibril amhitecture is proposed wherein carotenoids accumulate in the center of the fibrils and are surrounded by a layer of polar lipids, which in turn are surrounded by an outer layer of fibrillin. Topological analysis of purlfied fibrils verified this structure. Collectively, these results suggest that the process of fibrll self-assembly in chromoplasts 1s an example of a general phenomenon shared among cells that target excess membrane llpids into deposit structures to avoid their destabilizing or toxic effects. In addition, we have shown that abscisic acid stimulates this phenomenon in chromoplasts, whereas gibberellic acid and auxin delay it.
The bulbs of Hymenocallis littoralis, collected in Hawaii and horticulturally grown in Arizona, and bulbs of Hymenocallis caribaea and Hymenocallis latifolia, collected in Singapore, were found to contain a cytotoxic, isocarbostyril-type biosynthetic product, 7-deoxy-trans-dihydronarciclasine [2]. This new compound inhibited the cytopathicity and/or replication of various viruses. Companion cytotoxic constituents of H. littoralis and Hymenocallis sp. were found to be pancratistatin [1], narciclasine [5], and 7-deoxynarciclasine [4]. These four compounds, along with four other closely related compounds, were comparatively evaluated in the National Cancer Institute's in vitro cytotoxicity panel. Although there were striking differences in overall potency, some of the compounds shared a highly characteristic differential cytotoxicity profile against the 60 diverse human tumor cell lines comprising the NCI panel. As a group, the melanoma subpanel lines were most sensitive; certain individual lines within other subpanels (eg., NSC lung, colon, brain, renal) were as much as a thousand-fold or more sensitive than the less sensitive lines.
Isopentenyl diphosphate (IPP), which is produced from mevalonic acid or other nonmevalonic substrates, is the universal precursor of isoprenoids in nature. Despite the presence of several isoprenoid compounds in plastids, enzymes of the mevalonate pathway leading to IPP formation have never been isolated or identified to our knowledge. We now describe the characterization of two pepper (Capsicum annuum L.) cDNAs, CapTKT1 and CapTKT2, that encode transketolases having distinct and dedicated specificities. CapTKT1 is primarily involved in plastidial pentose phosphate and glycolytic cycle integration, whereas CapTKT2 initiates the synthesis of isoprenoids in plastids via the nonmevalonic acid pathway. From pyruvate and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate, CapTKT2 catalyzes the formation of 1-deoxy-xylulose-5-phosphate, the IPP precursor. CapTKT1 is almost constitutively expressed during the chloroplast-to-chromoplast transition, whereas CapTKT2 is overexpressed during this period, probably to furnish the IPP necessary for increased carotenoid biosynthesis. Because deoxy-xylulose phosphate is shared by the plastid pathways of isoprenoid, thiamine (vitamin B 1 ), and pyridoxine (vitamin B 6 ) biosynthesis, our results may explain why albino phenotypes usually occur in thiaminedeficient plants.Because of the combined activities of mevalonatesynthesizing and -activating enzymes, IPP is known as the universal isoprenoid building block. How IPP is synthesized and channeled into plastid isoprenoids to support the production of carotenoids, chlorophylls, prenylquinones, and diterpenes is largely unknown. Two hypotheses have been proposed. One is that plastids operate autonomously, synthesizing plastid isoprenoids directly from carbon dioxide or from plastid glycolytic intermediates such as pyruvate (Goodwin, 1971;Moore and Shephard, 1978; Heintze et al., 1990 Heintze et al., , 1994McCaskill and Croteau, 1995). However, the mechanism of carbon flow via a pyruvate intermediate is unknown for plants. A second hypothesis is that IPP is transported from the cytosol (Kleinig, 1989), which is based on the finding that hydroxymethylglutaryl CoA reductase and mevalonate-activating enzymes are absent in plastids (Gray, 1987). This view is reinforced by the fact that mevilonin, a specific inhibitor of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA reductase, drastically inhibits cytosolic sterol biosynthesis at moderate concentrations but does not affect isoprenoid synthesis in plastids (Bach and Lichtenthaler, 1983). This led to consideration of an alternative IPP-generation system. In fact, such a pathway is known for prokaryotes, in which IPP is formed via deoxy-xylulose phosphate rather than by mevalonate (Rohmer et al., 1993) in a transketolation reaction between pyruvate and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate . In vivo precursor labeling indicates that a similar pathway operates for the synthesis of ginkgolides (Schwarz, 1994) and plastid isoprenoids (Schwender et al., 1996; Arigoni et al., 1997;Lichtenthaler et al., 1997aLichtenthaler et al., , 1997b.In t...
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