Abstract

Clitoria ternatea a perennial climber of the Fabaceae family, is well known for its agricultural and medical applications. It is also currently the only known member of the Fabaceae family that produces abundant amounts of the ultra-stable macrocyclic peptides, cyclotides, across all tissues. Cyclotides are a class of gene-encoded, disulphide-rich, macrocyclic peptides (26–37 residues) acting as defensive metabolites in several plant species. Previous transcriptomic studies have demonstrated the genetic origin of cyclotides from the Fabaceae plant family to be embedded in the albumin-1 genes, unlike its counterparts in other plant families. However, the complete mechanism of its biosynthesis and the repertoire of enzymes involved in cyclotide folding and processing remains to be understood. In this study, using RNA-Seq data and de novo transcriptome assembly of Clitoria ternatea, we have identified 71 precursor genes of cyclotides. Out of 71 unique cyclotide precursor genes obtained, 51 sequences display unique cyclotide domains, of which 26 are novel cyclotide sequences, arising from four individual tissues. MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry analysis of fractions from different tissue extracts, coupled with precursor protein sequences obtained from transcriptomic data, established the cyclotide diversity in this plant species. Special focus in this study has also been on identifying possible enzymes responsible for proper folding and processing of cyclotides in the cell. Transcriptomic mining for oxidative folding enzymes such as protein-disulphide isomerases (PDI), ER oxidoreductin-1 (ERO1) and peptidylprolyl cis-trans isomerases (PPIases)/cyclophilins, and their levels of expression are also reported. In particular, it was observed that the CtPDI genes formed plant-specific clusters among PDI genes as compared to those from other plant species. Collectively, this work provides insights into the biogenesis of the medicinally important cyclotides and establishes the expression of certain key enzymes participating in peptide biosynthesis. Also, several novel cyclotide sequences are reported and precursor sequences are analysed in detail. In the absence of a published reference genome, a comprehensive transcriptomics approach was adopted to provide an overview of diverse properties and constituents of C. ternatea.

Highlights

  • Clitoria ternatea a perennial climber of the Fabaceae family, is well known for its agricultural and medical applications

  • We have investigated the expression of enzyme-coding genes such as asparaginyl endopeptidase (AEP), protein disulphide isomerase (PDI), ER oxidoreductin-1 (ERO1) and peptidylprolyl cis-trans isomerase (PPIase), which are key enzymes directly or indirectly involved, providing a concerted effect in the proper oxidative folding of disulphide-rich polypeptides, such as the cyclotides, in the cell

  • Benchmarking Universal SingleCopy Orthologs (BUSCO) revealed the presence of 95.5% of complete BUSCOs out of the 1,375 orthologues searched from Embryophyta dataset, 94.5% of the 2,121 orthologues searched from Eudicotyledons dataset and 97.7% of the 430 orthologues searched from Viridiplantae dataset

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Summary

Introduction

Clitoria ternatea a perennial climber of the Fabaceae family, is well known for its agricultural and medical applications. Cyclotides are a class of gene-encoded, disulphide-rich, macrocyclic peptides (26–37 residues) acting as defensive metabolites in several plant species. MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry analysis of fractions from different tissue extracts, coupled with precursor protein sequences obtained from transcriptomic data, established the cyclotide diversity in this plant species. In the absence of a published reference genome, a comprehensive transcriptomics approach was adopted to provide an overview of diverse properties and constituents of C. ternatea Macrocyclics such as the cyclotides are a class of cyclic peptides (26–37 residues) containing three disulphide bonds. They are formed by cyclization of a gene encoded, linear precursor in specific plant species. They showed that the distribution of cyclotides in the plant tissues depends on the kind of herbivore attack, and suggested a combinatorial cyclotide ­defense[21]

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