Abstract

The first committed step in triterpenoid biosynthesis is the cyclization of epoxysqualene into various triterpene alcohol isomers, a reaction catalyzed by oxidosqualene cyclases (OSCs). The different OSCs have characteristic product specificities, which are mainly due to differences in the numbers of high-energy intermediates the enzymes can stabilize. The goal of this investigation was to clone and characterize OSCs from tomato (Solanum lycopersicum), a species known to accumulate δ-amyrin in its fruit cuticular wax, in order to gain insights into the enzymatic formation of this particular triterpenoid. We used a homology-based approach to isolate two tomato OSCs and tested their biochemical properties by heterologous expression in yeast as well as overexpression in tomato. One of the enzymes was found to be a product-specific β-amyrin synthase, while the other one was a multifunctional OSC synthesizing 48% δ-amyrin and six other products. The product spectra of both OSCs together account for both the range and the relative amounts of the triterpenoids found in the fruit cuticle. Both enzymes were expressed exclusively in the epidermis of the tomato fruit, indicating that their major function is to form the cuticular triterpenoids. The relative expression levels of both OSC genes, determined by quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction, were consistent with product profiles in fruit and leaves of the tomato cultivar MicroTom. However, the transcript ratios were only partially consistent with the differences in amounts of product triterpenoids between the tomato cultivars MicroTom, M82, and Ailsa Craig; thus, transcriptional control of the two OSCs alone cannot explain the fruit triterpenoid profiles of the cultivars.

Highlights

  • The first committed step in triterpenoid biosynthesis is the cyclization of epoxysqualene into various triterpene alcohol isomers, a reaction catalyzed by oxidosqualene cyclases (OSCs)

  • The entire sequence of steps is catalyzed by single enzymes that are designated as triterpenoid synthases after their preferred products or as oxidosqualene cyclases (OSCs) after their common substrate (Abe et al, 1993)

  • A glimpse of the biochemical diversity within OSCs can be seen in the case of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), where the genome was found to contain 13 OSC genes (Fazio et al, 2004)

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Summary

Introduction

The first committed step in triterpenoid biosynthesis is the cyclization of epoxysqualene into various triterpene alcohol isomers, a reaction catalyzed by oxidosqualene cyclases (OSCs). Even though the previous studies provide substantial information about the sequence variability and biochemical specificity within this large gene family, the information on the cyclization mechanism is still fairly limited This is mainly due to the fact that the large majority of OSCs characterized to date form lupeol and b-amyrin, the two triterpenoids most commonly found throughout the plant kingdom. Information on a broad range of OSCs from various plant species, and with varying product specificities, would help us understand how the different enzymes can catalyze specific numbers of rearrangement steps, stabilize the high-energy intermediates involved, and quench the reaction by deprotonation of a particular carbocation to form specific end products

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