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First published online October 3, 2002; 10.1104/pp.004309 Plant Physiol, October 2002, Vol. 130, pp. 1022-1031 Chemical Inactivation of the Cinnamate 4-Hydroxylase Allows for the Accumulation of Salicylic Acid in Elicited Cells1Department of Plant Stress Response, Institute of Plant Molecular Biology, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique-Unité Propre de Recherche 2357, Université Louis Pasteur, 28 Rue Goethe, F-67000 Strasbourg, France (G.A.S., D.W.-R.); and Department of Chemistry, Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana 70118 (G.N.N., W.L.A.)
The cinnamate (CA) 4-hydroxylase (C4H) is a cytochrome P450 that
catalyzes the second step of the main phenylpropanoid pathway, leading
to the synthesis of lignin, pigments, and many defense molecules.
Salicylic acid (SA) is an essential trigger of plant disease
resistance. Some plant species can synthesize SA from CA by a mechanism
not yet understood. A set of specific inhibitors of the C4H, including
competitive, tight-binding, mechanism-based irreversible, and
quasi-irreversible inhibitors have been developed with the main
objective to redirect cinnamic acid to the synthesis of SA. Competitive
inhibitors such as 2-hydroxy-1-naphthoic acid and the heme-coordinating
compound 3-(4-pyridyl)-acrylic acid allowed strong inhibition of C4H
activity in a tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum cv Bright
Yellow [BY]) cell suspension culture. This inhibition was however
rapidly relieved either because of substrate accumulation or because of
inhibitor metabolism. Substrate analogs bearing a methylenedioxo
function such as piperonylic acid (PIP) or a terminal acetylene such as
4-propynyloxybenzoic acid (4PB), 3-propynyloxybenzoic acid, and
4-propynyloxymethylbenzoic acid are potent mechanism-based inactivators
of the C4H. PIP and 4PB, the best inactivators in vitro, were also
efficient inhibitors of the enzyme in BY cells. Inhibition was not
reversed 46 h after cell treatment. Cotreatment of BY cells with
the fungal elicitor
Phenylpropanoids form a large family
of plant-specific compounds implicated in a broad range of functions.
Among the numerous chemical structures stemming from the pathway,
lignin is a quantitatively major biopolymer that plays a key role in
plant mechanical support and water transport and as physical barrier
against pathogen infection. Other chemical classes of phenylpropanoids
such as flavonoids, isoflavonoids, stilbenes, or coumarins have
essential functions as antimicrobials, UV protectants, signaling
molecules mediating interaction with insect or symbiotic bacteria, or
pathogen response (Dixon and Paiva, 1995 Although much is known about the diversity and accumulation of the phenylpropanoid products, less is understood about networking and control of their biosynthesis. In particular, the diversity of enzymes catalyzing the same reactions, evolution of some biosynthetic branches believed to be resulting from speciation, and equilibration/compensation mechanisms between the different branches of the pathway remain elusive. In addition, some biosynthetic branches such as those of SA or coumarins are not yet elucidated either at the biochemical or at the molecular level. The objective of this work was to develop new chemical effectors of the phenylpropanoid pathway. Chemicals allowing inactivation or enhancement of selected steps of the pathway are useful tools for both biochemical and molecular investigations, constituting alternatives or complements to mutation or transgenic techniques for gene up- or down-regulation. The main advantages of such chemical approaches are the simultaneous inhibition of all isoenzymes catalyzing the same reaction (provided that a reaction does not involve different families of proteins) and easy transposition to orthologous gene products. The upstream part of the phenylpropanoid metabolism consists of
three enzymatic steps leading to 4-coumaroyl CoA (Fig.
1). The cinnamate (CA) 4-hydroxylase
(C4H) catalyzes the second step, i.e. the conversion of CA into
p-coumarate. This enzyme is a member of the structural
family of cytochrome P450 heme thiolate proteins, which catalyze
monooxygenation of a broad range of substrates within all organisms
(Werck-Reichhart and Feyereisen, 2000
The substrate specificity and several inhibitors of the recombinant
CYP73A1 expressed in yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) have
been described in detail (Pierrel et al., 1994 The most efficient inhibitors of the C4H share the same structural
characteristics as the substrates. Depending on the functions present
in the molecule, they behave as simple competitors or mechanism-based
irreversible or quasi-irreversible inactivators (Pierrel et al., 1994 A single branch point at CA is reported in the upstream phenylpropanoid
pathway, which leads to benzoic acids such as the defense signal SA by
a mechanism that is not yet elucidated (Chong et al., 2001 PIP and 2HN are both at least partially reversible inhibitors of C4H.
Irreversibly binding inactivators of the enzyme should thus be more
efficient for obtaining strong inhibition and redirection of metabolic
fluxes in vivo. Compounds containing a terminal alkyne are known as
potent irreversible inactivators of P450s (Ortiz de Montellano and
Komives, 1985
Binding of Inhibitors to CYP73A1 The set of CA analogs tested as inhibitors of CYP73A1 is shown in
Figure 2. New types of P450 inhibitors
were added to PIP and 2HN in these experiments, including
trans-3-(pyrid-4-yl)-acrylic acid (3PA), the
sp2 hybridized ring nitrogen of which is
positioned to coordinate as the sixth ligand to the heme iron. Such a
compound, anchored both on the protein and the heme, is expected to
behave as a tight-binding but reversible inhibitor of the C4H
(Ortiz de Montellano and Correia, 1995
The binding of ligands near the heme of the oxidized P450 influences
the spin state and the redox potential of the heme iron, which triggers
the reaction or makes it more difficult, and results in a change in
visible absorbance of the heme protein (Jefcoate, 1978
As expected for a compound forming a coordination to ferric heme iron,
the binding of 3PA induces a shift of the maximum of absorbance of
CYP73A1 from 414 to 428 nm, giving rise to a "type II" difference
spectrum. The resulting high- to low-spin transition is accompanied by
a change in redox potential that makes P450 reduction more difficult.
The dissociation constant for 3PA is slightly lower than that measured
for CA, and the maximum amplitude of the difference spectrum
( In Vitro Mechanism-Based Inactivation of CYP73A1 4PB, 3PB, and 4PO were tested as mechanism-based inactivators of
CYP73A1. Recombinant yeast microsomes were incubated with NADPH and
various concentrations of each of the molecules before determination of
residual C4H activity. C4H inactivation was concentration- and
time-dependent for all three compounds and did not occur in the absence
of NADPH. A high concentration of CA in the assay for residual activity
did not reverse the inhibition. Pseudo-first-order kinetics were
obtained in the initial phase of the inactivation (Fig.
3). The time required for half-maximal
inactivation (t1/2) at each inactivator
concentration was calculated and plotted versus the reciprocal of the
inhibitor concentration. The plots were typical of an inactivation that
proceeds with saturation (Silverman, 1996
Attempts to detect carboxylic acid metabolites of 4PB upon incubation with CYP73A1 were unsuccessful, indicating either a further modification of the product of the reaction or a very low partition ratio. In favor of the second hypothesis, only a very small proportion of the inhibitor was processed after complete inactivation. Competitive Inhibition of CYP73A1 3PA does not bear any function likely to lead to P450 inactivation but very closely mimics cinnamic acid. Combined with this strong structural homology to CA, coordination of its 4-nitrogen to the heme iron should lead to a very tight binding to the active site. No time-dependent inhibition was observed with 3PA that, as expected, behaved as a typical and strong competitive inhibitor (Fig. 4). The KI determined from the kinetic analysis is 2 µM, which is in good agreement with the KS measured in binding experiments.
C4H Activity and Inhibition in Vivo The best inhibitor of each type, i.e. 2HN (simple competitive), 3PA (iron-coordinating, competitive), PIP (quasi-irreversible, mechanism-dependent), and 4PB (irreversible, mechanism-dependent) was selected for comparison of C4H inhibition efficiency in planta. To set up a test for the evaluation of in vivo C4H activity, a tobacco BY cell suspension culture was fed with 20 µM [14C]CA. Free phenolic acid content was extracted, and radiolabeled CA and p-coumarate were quantified by thin-layer chromatography (TLC) and HPLC. p-Coumarate was the only radiolabeled metabolite recovered in these assays. Its identity was confirmed by HPLC-diode array analysis. The time-dependent formation of p-coumarate relative to initial CA is represented in Figure 5. Approximately 25% of the initial [14C]CA is converted into p-coumarate in 30 min. p-Coumarate then declines, probably because of further conversion into non-ether-soluble esters or other metabolites. C4H inhibition in BY cells was therefore evaluated by measuring the formation of p-coumarate after 30 min of incubation with radiolabeled substrate.
The inhibitors were added to the BY cell suspension culture, and
aliquots were collected for monitoring of residual activity (Fig.
6). Strong C4H inhibition was observed
with all four molecules in aliquots collected immediately after
addition of the inhibitors. After 4 h, 2HN, 3PA and PIP inhibition
was more than 95%. After 22 h, competitive inhibition by 2HN and
3PA was largely reversed, either because of an accumulation of
substrate and displacement of the inhibitor or because of an inhibitor
conjugation and/or compartmentation. Both mechanism-based inactivators,
4PB and PIP, remained fully effective for at least 46 h. Slow
displacement by CA of the inhibitory carbene formed upon PIP metabolism
was previously reported (Schalk et al., 1998
The same cell treatment was performed after 30 min of elicitation with
Inhibition of the PAL Cinnamic acid and structurally related molecules were reported to
behave as PAL inhibitors (Sato et al., 1982
SA Accumulation in Inhibitor-Treated BY Cells The expected impacts of an in vivo C4H inactivation are a
decreased formation of downstream metabolites, such as scopoletin (Schalk et al., 1998
When the BY cells were treated with inhibitors, only very slight
increases in SA, never exceeding 45% of the control, were detected in
the absence of
New Reversible and Irreversible C4H Inhibitors The main objective of this work was to develop new C4H inhibitors to control the flow of the metabolites in the main phenylpropanoid pathway and to investigate the impact of a redirection of this flow on the synthesis of SA and plant defense. Efficient C4H inhibitors may in particular constitute very useful tools to help characterization of the SA biosynthetic routes that remain elusive. Different types of inhibitors have been described, based on specific
properties of cytochromes P450. In addition to classical competitive
inhibitors, the synthesis of structural analogs of the substrate
bearing activatable functions allows the design of molecules
selectively inactivating specific P450 isoforms (Ortiz de Montellano
and Correia, 1995 3PA was assayed for its potential ability to coordinate heme iron by
the intermediate of the electron pair of its ring nitrogen and to
simultaneously bind through its carboxylate the substrate docking
region of the protein. It behaved as a good ligand and formed the
expected heme coordination resulting in characteristic absorption
spectra. As expected for such a type of direct heme ligand inducing a
high- to low-spin shift of the iron, it was not metabolized but behaved
as a competitive inhibitor. 3PA dissociation constant was however not
significantly lower than that measured for the substrate and much
higher than that of the classical competitive inhibitor 2HN. A possible
explanation of this relatively weak interaction of 3PA can be found in
NMR measurements of the distances of the substrate protons to the heme
iron, which indicate that the initial positioning of the substrate and
its analogs in the active site is approximately parallel with the heme
plane (Schoch, 2001 We showed previously that PIP is a potent quasi-irreversible
mechanism-dependent inhibitor of the C4H (Schalk et al., 1998 As expected, 4PB, 3PB, and 4PO all behaved as mechanism-dependent
inactivators of recombinant C4H in yeast microsomes. 4PB and 3PB, being
better positioned in the active site, were more effective inhibitors of
C4H than 4PO and than previously described compounds (Pierrel et
al., 1994 Compared Inhibition Efficiency in Vivo All types of inhibitors efficiently blocked the C4H activity in cell culture experiments. Efficiency of 3PA and 2HN was correlated to their respective enzyme affinities. Inhibition by such competitive inhibitors was however rapidly reversed. This was possibly attributable to elevated CA concentrations in the treated cells or resulted from their inactivation by detoxification systems (conjugation and compartmentation). Fast reversion of C4H inhibition is a strong limitation to the use of 3PA and 2HN for in vivo experiments. Very similar responses to the quasi-irreversible and irreversible mechanism-dependent inactivators, PIP and 4PB, were obtained when C4H inhibition was assayed in cell cultures. PIP was still effective 46 h after cell treatment, when the experiment was carried on in the absence of elicitor. This suggests that the CA concentrations in the PIP-treated cells are not sufficient to dissociate the enzyme-inhibitor complex or that the dissociation rate of the complex is slower than the further inactivation of the enzyme. PIP thus remains a useful C4H inactivator, effective at a low concentration, and is therefore likely to be specific. Its efficiency is further proved by the SA accumulation triggered by PIP concentrations as low as 10 µM. C4H inhibition by 3PA and 2HN being very transient, only PIP and 4PB
were tested for their ability to redirect CA to the synthesis of SA. In
cells cultured under normal axenic conditions, low SA concentrations
were detected and these concentrations were only slightly increased
upon treatment with C4H inhibitors (Fig. 8). Under such conditions, the
SA biosynthetic pathway thus seemed almost inactive, possibly because
of low precursor supply (Chong et al., 2001
A set of C4H inhibitors has been developed, allowing short to long
term modulation of the enzyme activity in plant tissues. Such
inhibitors should be useful tools to help elucidate the molecular mechanisms of the conversion of CA to SA and for understanding regulation of the SA and general phenylpropanoid pathways. Their reported effect on SA accumulation in elicited tobacco cell cultures (this work; Chong et al., 2001
Chemicals CA, PIP, 2-HN, NADPH, SA, and DMSO were from Sigma-Aldrich
(L'Isle d'Abeau Chesnes, France), 3PA was from Maybridge (Tintagel, UK), trans-[3'-14C]CA was from Isotopchim (Ganagobie,
France), [1'-14C]SA and
L-[14C(U)]-Phe were from NEN (Zaventem,
Belgium). 4-Hydroxybenzoic acid, 3-hydroxybenzoic acid,
4-(hydroxymethyl) benzoic acid, 4-hydroxycinnamic acid,
3-hydroxycinnamic acid, propargyl bromide, and acetyl chloride were
from Aldrich (Milwaukee). Synthesis of the Propynyl Derivatives (Fig. 9) Flash column chromatography techniques were performed by using silica gel (mesh-230-400). The gas chromatography/mass spectroscopy (GC/MS) analyses of the synthesized products were carried out on a gas chromatograph/mass spectrometer (Chem Station 5997, Hewlett Packard, Palo Alto, CA). NMR spectra were recorded on an Omega 400 MHz FT-NMR spectrometer (General Electric, Fairfield, CT).
4-Hydroxybenzoate Acetyl chloride (3.6 g, 46 mmol) and methanol (15 mL) were mixed
together at 0°C and then 4-hydroxybenzoic acid (5 g, 30.5 mmol) was
added. After the mixture was stirred at room temperature overnight, the
methanol was removed, and the residue was dissolved in
CH2Cl2. The solution was washed with a
saturated aqueous solution of NaHCO3 and water and then
dried over magnesium sulfate. The solvent was removed under reduced
pressure to give 4-hydroxybenzoic acid methyl ester (4.8 g, 88%
yield). 1H NMR 4-Propynyloxybenzoate Solution of powdered KOH (6 g, 108 mmol) in DMSO (12 mL) was
prepared. After stirring the mixture for 5 min, 4-hydroxybenzoic acid
methyl ester (4.8 g, 27 mmol) was added followed immediately by
propargyl bromide (7 g, 48 mmol). Stirring continued for 1 h at
room temperature. The reaction mixture was poured into water (40 mL)
and extracted with CH2Cl2 (2 × 30 mL).
The combined organic extracts were washed with water, dried over
magnesium sulfate and reduced to dryness under reduced pressure.
Chromatography on silica gel with eluent hexane:ethyl acetate
(3:1, v/v) gave 4PB methyl ester (3 g, yield 59%). 1H NMR
4PB 4PB methyl ester (3 g, 16 mmol) was added to a solution of NaOH
(1.6 g, 40 mmol) in ethanol (25 mL) and water (8 mL). After stirring
overnight at 25°C the alcohol was removed under reduced pressure, and
the reaction mixture was extracted with methylene chloride (2 × 30 mL). The combined organic extracts were washed with water and
acidified with 2 N HCl. The product precipitated as white
crystals, which were recrystallized from ethanol-water to give 4PB (2.4 g, yield 84%). Melting point (mp) 195°C, 1H NMR 3PB This compound was prepared from 3-hydroxybenzoic acid following
the chemical procedure above. mp 130°C, 1H NMR 4PO The compound was prepared from 4-(hydroxymethyl) benzoic acid
following the chemical procedure above. mp 135°C, 1H NMR
Yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) Expression and Microsome Preparation In vitro inhibition experiments were performed using microsomal
preparations from yeast W(R) transformed with the expression plasmid
pCA4H/V60, allowing co-expression of the yeast P450 reductase and
CYP73A1 (Urban et al., 1994 Spectrometric Measurements and Enzyme Assays P450 content was calculated from reduced P450-CO versus reduced
difference UV-visible spectra (Omura and Sato, 1964 trans-Cinnamic acid hydroxylation was assayed using radiolabeled
trans-[3'-14C]cinnamic acid as described by Pierrel et
al. (1994) The time-dependent inactivation of the C4H in yeast microsomes was
evaluated using a general dilution procedure (Silverman, 1996 Treatment of Tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) Cell Suspension Culture The tobacco BY cell suspension was maintained as described for
BY-2 lines (Nagata et al., 1992 In Vivo Enzyme Assays In vivo conversion of trans-CA into p-coumarate
was evaluated using 1 mL of cell culture (about 0.3 g wet cells)
incubated with 20 µM of [14C]CA (140 Bq/nmol) at 30°C under agitation. The reaction was stopped by
addition of 500 mM HCl from a 4 N solution.
Free phenolic acids were extracted three times with 2 volumes of
ether:petroleum ether (50:50, v/v), concentrated under nitrogen and
analyzed by TLC. Radiolabeled spots were scraped, eluted with ether,
and further analyzed by HPLC on a LiChrosorb RP-18 column (Merck 4 × 125 mm, 5 µm) at a flow rate of 1 mL min For C4H inhibition experiments, 15 mL of 5-d-old-BY cell suspension
were subcultured 46 h in the presence of the inhibitor. At time
intervals, 1-mL aliquots were assayed for residual C4H activity. For
PAL inhibition measurements, filtered BY cells were extracted and
enzyme activity was monitored, as described previously (Pellegrini et
al., 1994 SA Quantification For evaluation of SA accumulation, 40 mL of 5-d-old BY cell
suspension culture was treated with inhibitors simultaneously in the
presence or absence of elicitor. At time intervals, 3-mL aliquots were
filtered, weighted, and frozen in liquid nitrogen. After addition of 2 nCi of [14C]SA as internal standard, total phenolics were
extracted successively with 2 mL g Samples were injected on a Nova Pak RP-C18 column (3.9 × 150 mm,
5 µm; Waters, Milford, MA) equilibrated in solvent A, at a flow rate
of 1 mL min
We thank Monique Le Ret and Laurent Levallois for technical
assistance. The W(R) yeast strain and the pYeDP60 expression vector were kindly provided by Drs. D. Pompon and P. Urban (Centre National de
la Recherche Scientifique [CNRS], Gif-sur-Yvette), and
Received February 14, 2002; returned for revision May 10, 2002; accepted June 23, 2002. 1 This work was supported by Ministère de la Recherche et de l'Enseignement Supérieur (grant to G.A.S.).
* Corresponding author: e-mail daniele.werck{at}ibmp-ulp.u-strasbg.fr; fax 33-3-90-24-18-84.
Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.004309.
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