Publication | Open Access
Genetic Engineering of Plant Secondary Metabolism (Accumulation of 4-Hydroxybenzoate Glucosides as a Result of the Expression of the Bacterial ubiC Gene in Tobacco)
98
Citations
13
References
1996
Year
EngineeringGeneticsEscherichia ColiSecondary MetabolismBiosynthesisNatural Product BiosynthesisBiochemistryPlant Secondary MetabolismBacterial Ubic GeneUbic GenePlant MetabolismTransgenic PlantsBiotechnologyGenetic EngineeringSynthetic BiologySynthetic Plant BiologyMicrobiologyMedicinePlant Physiology
The ubiC gene of Escherichia coli encodes chorismate pyruvatelyase, an enzyme that converts chorismate into 4-hydroxybenzoate (4HB) and is not normally present in plants. The ubiC gene was expressed in Nicotiana tabacum L. plants under control of a constitutive plant promoter. The gene product was targeted into the plastid by fusing it to the sequence for the chloroplast transit peptide of the small subunit of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase. Transgenic plants showed high chorismate pyruvate-lyase activity and accumulated 4HB as beta-glucosides, with the glucose attached to either the hydroxy or the carboxyl function of 4HB. The total content of 4HB glucosides was approximately 0.52% of dry weight, which exceeded the content of untransformed plants by at least a factor of 1000. Feeding experiments with [1,7-13C2]shikimic acid unequivocally proved that the 4HB that was formed in the transgenic plants was not derived from the conventional phenylpropanoid pathway but from the newly introduced chorismate pyruvate-lyase reaction.
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