14 research outputs found

    Silencing CAFFEOYL SHIKIMATE ESTERASE affects lignification and improves saccharification in poplar

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    Caffeoyl shikimate esterase (CSE) was recently shown to play an essential role in lignin biosynthesis in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) and later in Medicago truncatula. However, the general function of this enzyme was recently questioned by the apparent lack of CSE activity in lignifying tissues of different plant species. Here, we show that down-regulation of CSE in hybrid poplar (Populus tremula x Populus alba) resulted in up to 25% reduced lignin deposition, increased levels of p-hydroxyphenyl units in the lignin polymer, and a relatively higher cellulose content. The transgenic trees were morphologically indistinguishable from the wild type. Ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry-based phenolic profiling revealed a reduced abundance of several oligolignols containing guaiacyl and syringyl units and their corresponding hydroxycinnamaldehyde units, in agreement with the reduced flux toward coniferyl and sinapyl alcohol. These trees accumulated the CSE substrate caffeoyl shikimate along with other compounds belonging to the metabolic classes of benzenoids and hydroxycinnamates. Furthermore, the reduced lignin amount combined with the relative increase in cellulose content in the CSE down-regulated lines resulted in up to 62% more glucose released per plant upon limited saccharification when no pretreatment was applied and by up to 86% and 91% when acid and alkaline pretreatments were used. Our results show that CSE is not only important for the lignification process in poplar but is also a promising target for the development of improved lignocellulosic biomass crops for sugar platform biorefineries

    Synthesis of novel compounds for the study of biomolecules using NMR spectroscopy

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    This thesis presents an investigation into the synthesis of compounds viz., bifunctional chelators that could be used as lanthanide shift reagents and fluorinated amino acids that could be used as probes in the study of biomolecules using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Initially, syntheses of acyclic multidentate ligands like DTPA that could function as lanthanide shift reagents were investigated. A DTPA derivative with a cysteine side arm that could bind to biomolecules via a disulfide bond was synthesised. The lanthanum complex of this ligand was synthesised but the NMR spectrum of this coordination compound showed a complex spectrum due to the high conformational flexibility of the compound. Hence the synthesis of other non cyclic ligands with more stereochemically rigid structures, incorporating more stereo centers in the triamine pentaacetic acid backbone was investigated employing dialkylation and reductive amination methods. However, these acyclic ligands could not be synthesised due to steric hindrance in the substrates. Research was then directed towards the synthesis of another class of bifunctional chelators possessing a polyaza polycarboxylic macrocycle as in TETA. A TETA derivative with a cyclam backbone with three of the four substituents being an acetic acid moiety and the fourth substituent being a cysteine moiety was synthesised. The ytterbium complex of this ligand however was presumed to exist in a dynamic equilibrium with the uncomplexed ligand. This calls for significant structural modification of the ligand for it to be successfully used as a lanthanide shift reagent. Synthesis of fluorinated amino acids were investigated that can be incorporated into proteins. A stereoselective synthesis of (S)-y-fluoroleucine was accomplished. An HPLC assay was developed to determine the enantiomeric purity of the amino acid. Gratifyingly, preliminary studies showed that this unnatural amino acid was incorporated significantly in its hydrazide form into the protein via cell free protein synthesis. Development of a simple and straightforward general synthetic route for the synthesis of fluorinated amino acids using N-phthaloylvaline and N-phthaloylleucine and the corresponding hydrazides were investigated. The bromo and chloro substituted analogues were synthesised but the synthesis of the corresponding fluoro substituted analogues failed due to competing intramolecular and elimination side reactions favoured under the reaction conditions

    Stereocontrolled synthesis of (S)-Y-fluoroleucine

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    Starting with (S)-leucine, the corresponding γ-fluoride 8 has been prepared in a stereocontrolled fashion, by exploiting methods for the direct side-chain bromination of amino acid derivatives and silven(I) fluoride as the fluorinating reagent

    Synthesis of hydroxycinnamoyl shikimates and their role in monolignol biosynthesis

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    Hydroxycinnamoyl shikimates were reported in 2005 to be intermediates in monolignol biosynthesis. 3-Hydroxylation of p-coumarate, originally thought to occur via coumarate 3-hydroxylase (C3H) from p-coumaric acid or its CoA thioester, was revealed to be via the action of coumaroyl shikimate 3 '-hydroxylase (C3 ' H) utilizing p-coumaroyl shikimate as the substrate, itself derived from p-coumaroyl-CoA via hydroxycinnamoyl-CoA: shikimate hydroxycinnamoyltransferase (HCT). The same HCT was conjectured to convert the product, caffeoyl shikimate, to caffeoyl-CoA to continue on the pathway starting with its 3-O-methylation. At least in some plants, however, a more recently discovered caffeoyl shikimate esterase (CSE) enzyme hydrolyzes caffeoyl shikimate to caffeic acid from which it must again produce its CoA thioester to continue on the monolignol biosynthetic pathway. HCT and CSE are therefore monolignol biosynthetic pathway enzymes that have provided new opportunities to misregulate lignification. To facilitate studies into the action and substrate specificity of C3H/C3 ' H, HCT, and CSE enzymes, as well as for metabolite authentication and for enzyme characterization, including kinetics, a source of authentic substrates and products was required. A synthetic scheme starting from commercially available shikimic acid and the four key hydroxycinnamic acids (p-coumaric, caffeic, ferulic, and sinapic acid) has been developed to provide this set of hydroxycinnamoyl shikimates for researchers

    In situ deprotection and incorporation of unnatural amino acids during cell-free protein synthesis

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    The S30 extract from E. coli BL21 Star (DE3) used for cell-free protein synthesis removes a wide range of α-amino acid protecting groups by cleaving α-carboxyl hydrazides; methyl, benzyl, tert-butyl, and adamantyl esters; tert-butyl and adamantyl carbo

    Structural Characterization of Lignins from Willow Bark and Wood

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    Understanding the chemical structure of lignin in willow bark is an indispensable step to design how to separate its fiber bundles. The whole cell wall and enzyme lignin preparations sequentially isolated from ball-milled bark, inner bark, and wood were comparatively investigated by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and three classical degradative methods, i.e., alkaline nitrobenzene oxidation, derivatization followed by reductive cleavage, and analytical thioacidolysis. All results demonstrated that the guaiacyl (G) units were predominant in the willow bark lignin over syringyl (S) and minor <i>p</i>-hydroxyphenyl (H) units. Moreover, the monomer yields and S/G ratio rose progressively from bark to inner bark and wood, indicating that lignin may be more condensed in bark than in other tissues. Additionally, major interunit linkage substructures (β-aryl ethers, phenylcoumarans, and resinols) together with cinnamyl alcohol end groups were relatively quantitated by two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy. Bark and inner bark were rich in pectins and proteins, which were present in large quantities and also in the enzyme lignin preparations

    BdCESA7, BdCESA8, and BdPMT Utility Promoter Constructs for Targeted Expression to Secondary Cell-Wall-Forming Cells of Grasses.

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    Utility vectors with promoters that confer desired spatial and temporal expression patterns are useful tools for studying gene and cellular function and for industrial applications. To target the expression of DNA sequences of interest to cells forming plant secondary cell walls, which generate most of the vegetative biomass, upstream regulatory sequences of the Brachypodium distachyon lignin biosynthetic gene BdPMT and the cellulose synthase genes BdCESA7 and BdCESA8 were isolated and cloned into binary vectors designed for Agrobacterium-mediated transformation of monocots. Expression patterns were assessed using the β-glucuronidase gene GUSPlus and X-glucuronide staining. All three promoters showed strong expression levels in stem tissue at the base of internodes where cell wall deposition is most active, in both vascular bundle xylem vessels and tracheids, and in interfascicular tissues, with expression less pronounced in developmentally older tissues. In leaves, BdCESA7 and BdCESA8 promoter-driven expression was strongest in leaf veins, leaf margins, and trichomes; relatively weaker and patchy expression was observed in the epidermis. BdPMT promoter-driven expression was similar to the BdCESA promoters expression patterns, including strong expression in trichomes. The intensity and extent of GUS staining varied considerably between transgenic lines, suggesting that positional effects influenced promoter activity. Introducing the BdPMT and BdCESA8 Open Reading Frames into BdPMT and BdCESA8 utility promoter binary vectors, respectively, and transforming those constructs into Brachypodium pmt and cesa8 loss-of-function mutants resulted in rescue of the corresponding mutant phenotypes. This work therefore validates the functionality of these utility promoter binary vectors for use in Brachypodium and likely other grass species. The identification, in Bdcesa8-1 T-DNA mutant stems, of an 80% reduction in crystalline cellulose levels confirms that the BdCESA8 gene is a secondary-cell-wall-forming cellulose synthase
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