Plant Physiol, September 2002, Vol. 130, pp. 477-486
Cloning and Functional Characterization of a
-Pinene Synthase
from Artemisia annua That Shows a Circadian Pattern of
Expression1
Shan
Lu,23
Ran
Xu,3
Jun-Wei
Jia,
Jihai
Pang,
Seiichi P.T.
Matsuda, and
Xiao-Ya
Chen*
National Laboratory of Plant Molecular Genetics, Institute of Plant
Physiology and Ecology, Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences,
Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai 200032, China (S.L., J.-W.J.,
X.-Y.C.); and Departments of Chemistry and of Biochemistry and Cell
Biology, Rice University, Houston, Texas 77251 (R.X., J.P.,
S.P.T.M.)
Artemisia annua plants produce a broad range of
volatile compounds, including monoterpenes, which contribute to the
characteristic fragrance of this medicinal species. A cDNA clone, QH6,
contained an open reading frame encoding a 582-amino acid protein that
showed high sequence identity to plant monoterpene synthases. The
prokaryotically expressed QH6 fusion protein converted geranyl
diphosphate to (
)-
-pinene and (
)-
-pinene in a 94:6
ratio. QH6 was predominantly expressed in juvenile leaves 2 weeks
postsprouting. QH6 transcript levels were transiently reduced following
mechanical wounding or fungal elicitor treatment, suggesting that this
gene is not directly involved in defense reaction induced by either of
these treatments. Under a photoperiod of 12 h/12 h (light/dark), the abundance of QH6 transcripts fluctuated in a diurnal pattern that ebbed
around 3 h before daybreak (9th h in the dark phase) and peaked
after 9 h in light (9th h in the light phase). The contents of
(
)-
-pinene in juvenile leaves and in emitted volatiles also varied
in a diurnal rhythm, correlating strongly with mRNA accumulation. When
A. annua was entrained by constant light or constant
dark conditions, QH6 transcript accumulation continued to fluctuate with circadian rhythms. Under constant light, advanced cycles of
fluctuation of QH6 transcript levels were observed, and under constant
dark, the cycle was delayed. However, the original diurnal pattern
could be regained when the plants were returned to the normal
light/dark (12 h/12 h) photoperiod. This is the first report that
monoterpene biosynthesis is transcriptionally regulated in a circadian pattern.
1
This work was supported by the National
Natural Science Foundation of China (grant nos. 39925005 and 30030020 to X.-Y.C.), by the National Institutes of Health (grant no.
AI41598), and by the Robert A. Welch Foundation (grant no. C-1323 to
S.P.T.M.).
2
Present address: Max-Planck Institute for Chemical
Ecology, Winzerlaer Strasse 10, Beutenberg Campus, 07745 Jena, Germany.
3
These authors contributed equally to the paper.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail xychen{at}iris.sipp.ac.cn; fax
86-21-64042385.
© 2002 American Society of Plant Physiologists