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Plant Physiology 135:71-84 (2004) © 2004 American Society of Plant Biologists Biosynthesis of the Nitrile Glucosides Rhodiocyanoside A and D and the Cyanogenic Glucosides Lotaustralin and Linamarin in Lotus japonicus1Plant Biochemistry Laboratory, Department of Plant Biology, and Center for Molecular Plant Physiology (PlaCe; K.F., M.M., S.B.), Biotechnology Group, Danish Institute of Agricultural Sciences (B.J.), and Department of Chemistry (C.E.O.), Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University, 40 Thorvaldsensvej, DK1871 Frederiksberg C, Copenhagen, Denmark; Kazusa DNA Research Institute, Kisarazu, Chiba 2920818, Japan (E.A., S.S., S.T.); and Department of Physiological Botany, Evolutionary Biology Centre, Uppsala University, Villavagen 6, SE752 36 Uppsala, Sweden (K.F.)
Lotus japonicus was shown to contain the two nitrile glucosides rhodiocyanoside A and rhodiocyanoside D as well as the cyanogenic glucosides linamarin and lotaustralin. The content of cyanogenic and nitrile glucosides in L. japonicus depends on plant developmental stage and tissue. The cyanide potential is highest in young seedlings and in apical leaves of mature plants. Roots and seeds are acyanogenic. Biosynthetic studies using radioisotopes demonstrated that lotaustralin, rhodiocyanoside A, and rhodiocyanoside D are derived from the amino acid L-Ile, whereas linamarin is derived from Val. In silico homology searches identified two cytochromes P450 designated CYP79D3 and CYP79D4 in L. japonicus. The two cytochromes P450 are 94% identical at the amino acid level and both catalyze the conversion of Val and Ile to the corresponding aldoximes in biosynthesis of cyanogenic glucosides and nitrile glucosides in L. japonicus. CYP79D3 and CYP79D4 are differentially expressed. CYP79D3 is exclusively expressed in aerial parts and CYP79D4 in roots. Recombinantly expressed CYP79D3 and CYP79D4 in yeast cells showed higher catalytic efficiency with L-Ile as substrate than with L-Val, in agreement with lotaustralin and rhodiocyanoside A and D being the major cyanogenic and nitrile glucosides in L. japonicus. Ectopic expression of CYP79D2 from cassava (Manihot esculenta Crantz.) in L. japonicus resulted in a 5- to 20-fold increase of linamarin content, whereas the relative amounts of lotaustralin and rhodiocyanoside A/D were unaltered.
Cyanogenic glucosides are widely distributed in the plant kingdom. They are present in more than 2,650 different plant species derived from about 550 genera and more than 130 families (Seigler, 1991 -glucosides of -hydroxynitriles. When the subcellular structures of plant tissue containing cyanogenic glucosides are disrupted, e.g. by chewing insects, the cyanogenic glucosides are degraded by -glucosidases and -hydroxynitrilases. This results in concomitant release of toxic hydrogen cyanide, Glc, and an aldehyde or ketone. This binary systemtwo sets of components that separately are chemically inertprovides plants with an immediate chemical defense response to herbivores and pathogens that cause tissue damage (Møller and Seigler, 1999
Cyanogenic glucosides are derived from the protein amino acids L-Val, L-Ile, L-Leu, L-Phe, or L-Tyr and from the nonprotein amino acid cyclopentenyl-Gly. The Val and Ile derived cyanogenic glucosides linamarin and lotaustralin usually cooccur and are widespread in nature (Seigler, 1975
Nitrile glucosides have in a few cases been shown to cooccur with cyanogenic glucosides (Lechtenberg et al., 1996 -glucosides of hydroxy nitriles. However, in nitrile glucosides, the hydroxyl and nitrile groups are not linked to the same carbon atom of the aglycone. Accordingly, hydrolysis of nitrile glucosides by -glucosidases does not result in HCN release. Rhodiocyanoside A, B, and D, as well as sarmentosine, sarmentosine epoxide, and isosarmentosine are nitrile glucosides that based on their structural characteristics may be envisioned to be derived from Ile (Lechtenberg and Nahrstedt, 1999
Lotus corniculatus has previously been reported to contain the cyanogenic glucosides lotaustralin and linamarin (Jones, 1977 None of the previously studied cyanogenic glucoside producing plant species offers such overall advantages. Accordingly, we want to introduce L. japonicus as the genetic model system to study cyanogenic glucosides in higher plants. In this paper, we analyze the presence of cyanogenic glucosides in dependence of plant development. We document that the two nitrile glucosides, rhodiocyanoside A and D, are also formed, and that they are synthesized from Ile. We show that two independent biosynthetic pathways appear to operate in roots and aerial parts of L. japonicus, each supported by a separate CYP79 enzyme. The ability to modify composition as well as site of accumulation of cyanogenic glucosides in L. japonicus is demonstrated by the ectopic expression of an orthologous cytochrome P450 from cassava, CYP79D2, which processes different catalytic properties compared to L. japonicus CYP79D3 and CYP79D4.
Distribution of the Cyanogenic and Nitrile Glucosides in L. japonicus The presence and absence of cyanogenic glucosides, cyanogenic diglucosides, and nitrile glucosides in various L. japonicus tissues was analyzed by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry-selected ion monitoring (LC-MS-SIM). Glucosides readily form adducts with sodium ions. Sodium adducts of the cyanogenic glucosides linamarin (rt = 4.5 min) and lotaustralin (rt = 14.32 min) and of the nitrile glucosides, rhodiocyanoside D (rt = 8.5 min) and rhodiocyanoside A (rt = 9.5 min), were detected, albeit only in aerial tissues (Fig. 2). The identity of the compounds was confirmed by NMR spectrometry (data not shown). In roots, minute amounts of lotaustralin were occasionally detected. The nitrile glucosides rhodiocyanoside A and D were never detected in roots. The glucosides of linamarin and lotaustralin, denoted linustatin and neolinostatin, respectively, were not detected in any of the tissues analyzed. In L. japonicus aerial tissues, rhodiocyanoside A and lotaustralin are two major components, while linamarin and rhodiocyanoside D are minor components (Fig. 2). These four constituents cooccur in the different aerial tissues of L. japonicus, and the ratio between the components is relatively constant, except in cotyledons where the proportion of linamarin is higher (Fig. 2).
When cyanogenic glucosides are degraded by -glucosidases they release stoichiometric amounts of HCN, which can be detected colorimetrically (e.g. Forslund and Jonsson, 1997 -glucosidase activity, but do not release HCN. Accordingly, nitrile glucosides are not detected by the colorimetric assay for HCN potential. However, as cyanogenic and nitrile glucosides accumulate to the same relative amounts in all tissues examined (Fig. 2), the HCN potential provides a fast and convenient assay to follow the presence and absence of cyanogenic and nitrile glucosides during plant development and in different tissues (Fig. 3). L. japonicus leaves were found to contain an endogenous -glucosidase activity that, upon disruption of the leaf tissue by freeze/thawing cycles, was able to hydrolyze linamarin and lotaustralin. Full cleavage of the cyanogenic glucoside content was accomplished by incubation of the frozen/thawed material for 30 min, as evidenced by no increased cyanide release upon external addition of an excess of -glucosidase in the form of crude cassava linamarase.
Cyanide potential was detectable in L. japonicus seedlings 2 d after germination (Fig. 3, AC). The cyanide potential per shoot increased with plant age and size (Fig. 3, A and B), demonstrating that cyanogenic glucosides are de novo synthesized throughout the life cycle of the plant. The cyanide potential increased rapidly in the developing seedling per gram fresh weight (FW) and reached the highest level, 10 nmol HCN (mg FW)1, 4 d after germination (Fig. 3C). Thereafter, cyanide potential per milligram FW declined with plant age. The peaks in cyanide potential at day 4 and day 11 (Fig. 3, A and C) correspond to the time points where the cotyledons are developed and the first leaf becomes visible, and when the first leaf is fully developed and the second leaf is visible, respectively. Cyanide potential was never detected in seeds or in roots (Fig. 3D).
In vivo synthesis of linamarin from L-Val and of lotaustralin and rhodiocyanoside A as well as D from L-Ile was shown by administration of radiolabeled amino acids to detached apical leaves followed by analysis of the products by radio thin-layer chromatography (TLC; Fig. 4). The radiolabeled products were subsequently eluted from the TLC plate and identified by LC-MS as linamarin (1), lotaustralin (2), and rhodiocyanoside A and D (3). Rhodiocyanoside A and D comigrated in the solvent TLC system applied, but could be separated by LC-MS (see below, Fig. 9). In general, the total amount of L-[14C]Val taken up by the leaflet was considerably lower compared to the total amount of L-[14C]Ile taken up. The low uptake of L-Val in comparison to L-Ile is accompanied by a relatively low conversion of absorbed tracer into linamarin in comparison to the conversion of L-Ile into lotaustralin and rhodiocyanoside A and D. The remaining radiolabeled bands reflect L-Val and L-Ile metabolism, not related to biosynthesis of cyanogenic glucosides or nitrile glucosides.
According to the general scheme for synthesis of cyanogenic glucosides, L-Ile and L-Val are converted to the corresponding aldoximes by a microsomal cytochrome P450 enzyme belonging to the CYP79 family. The aldoximes are subsequently converted by a second microsomal cytochrome P450 to the corresponding cyanohydrins that are finally glucosylated by a soluble UDPG-glucosyltransferase (Fig. 1). These putative cytochrome P450 activities were studied using isolated microsomes. The microsomal production of radiolabeled (E) and (Z)-2-methylbutanal oxime (Ile-ox) and (E) and (Z)-2-methylpropanal oxime (Val-ox) from L-[14C]Ile and L-[14C]Val reflects the catalytic activity of the first cytochrome P450 and was dependent on NADPH as expected for a cytochrome P450 catalyzed reaction. Results obtained using L-[14C]Ile as substrate are shown in (Fig. 5). Biosynthesis of cyanogenic glucosides is highly channeled. To facilitate detection of the radiolabeled aldoximes formed, an excess of either unlabeled Ile-ox or Val-ox was added to the reaction mixture as a trap. The aldoxime producing activity of the microsomes was highest in apical leaves and no activity was detected in roots and older leaves throughout the plant development (Fig. 5). The microsomal enzyme system showed a strong preference for L-Ile as a substrate but also accepted L-Val as a substrate (Fig. 6A). Metabolism of L-Leu, L-Phe, or L-Tyr to the corresponding oximes was not detectable in consistence with the absence of cyanogenic glucosides derived from these amino acids (data not shown). The ability of the microsomal enzyme system to metabolize oximes was analyzed by measurements of HCN release from the spontaneous decomposition of the cyanohydrins formed by the action of CYP71E1 ortholog(s) present in the microsomes. As opposed to the L-Val and L-Ile metabolizing system, the putative aldoxime metabolizing CYP71E1 ortholog(s) showed overall less substrate specificity. Thus, all four aldoximes tested were metabolized, although Ile-ox and Val-ox were preferred over Phe-ox and Tyr-ox (Fig. 6B).
L. japonicus Contains Two CYP79 Genes
To identify the L-Val and L-Ile metabolizing cytochrome P450 in L. japonicus, a bioinformatics approach was undertaken. In silico homology searches of L. japonicus expressed sequence tags (ESTs; http://www.kazusa.or.jp/en/plant/lotus/EST/) using sorghum CYP79A1, cassava CYP79D1, and CYP79D2 identified several overlapping ESTs of which AV406380 turned out to be full length. A genomic L. japonicus library was subsequently screened by PCR and two new CYP79D subfamily members were identified that both mapped to the short arm of chromosome 3. The two L. japonicus CYP79s were designated CYP79D3 and CYP79D4 by the P450 nomenclature committee (http://drnelson.utmem.edu/CytochromeP450.html). CYP79D3 and CYP79D4 share 94% sequence identity at the amino acid level, whereas the promoter regions showed very low degree of sequence identity. The position of the intron in CYP79D3 and CYP79D4 was identical and corresponded to the highly conserved phase 0 intron found in most A-type P450s (Paquette et al., 2000
To determine if the differences in biosynthetic activity and accumulation of cyanogenic glucosides and nitrile glucosides in different tissues of L. japonicus were due to different mRNA levels of the biosynthetic enzymes, the amounts of CYP79D3 and CYP79D4 transcript were estimated by reverse transcription (RT)-PCR (Burleigh, 2001
Characterization of Recombinant CYP79D3 and CYP79D4
CYP79D3 and CYP79D4 were functionally expressed in a yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) strain system that enables coexpression of the Arabidopsis P450 reductase, ATR1, to facilitate delivery of electrons from NADPH (Pompon et al., 1996
Metabolic Engineering of L. japonicus To study whether the ratio between linamarin and lotaustralin is determined by the availability of the amino acid precursors or the catalytic efficiencies of the enzyme systems, the cassava ortholog CYP79D2 was ectopically expressed in L. japonicus. Twenty-two individual transformants were selected and the ratio between linamarin and lotaustralin was determined by LC-MS-SIM (Fig. 8). Of the 22 lines tested, the line designated 35S::CYP79D2#5 was selected for further analysis as it contained a single insert as monitored by segregation analysis, and because it contained the highest ratio of linamarin to lotaustralin content. The line appeared morphometrically indistinguishable from wild type. In line 35S::CYP79D2#5, the cyanide potential was 16 nmol cyanide/FW (mg)1, approximately twice as high as in wild-type plants. While the linamarin content was increased approximately20-fold, the lotaustralin content was only slightly increased. Accordingly, the increase in cyanide potential is mainly the consequence of increased linamarin content. The ratio of rhodiocyanoside A and D to lotaustralin was unaltered in leaves (Fig. 9). In roots expressing cassava CYP79D2, linamarin and lotaustralin could be detected although in much smaller quantities than in green tissue (Fig. 9). In wild-type roots, the level of lotaustralin and especially linamarin was very low and in most cases below detection limit (Fig. 9).
Cyanogenic and Nitrile Glucosides in L. japonicus
Most Lotus species are cyanogenic (Gebrehiwot and Beuselinck, 2001
The total content of lotaustralin and linamarin in L. japonicus as measured per plant increases during plant growth and development (Fig. 3). The highest cyanide potential per gram FW is reached at day four when the cotyledons are fully developed and the first true leaves start to emerge (Fig. 3, A and B). During the entire life cycle of L. japonicus, the cyanide potential is highest in newly formed tissues, e.g. cotyledons and primary leaves at the seedling stage and apical leaves and flowers at later developmental stages. No cyanide potential was detected in roots or in dry seeds at any time during development. On few occasions, e.g. as shown in Figure 9, very low levels of lotaustralin were detectable in roots of L. japonicus by LC-MS-SIM analysis, which is much more sensitive than measurements of cyanide potential. High amounts of cyanogenic glucosides in actively growing tissues and absence or presence of only minute amounts of cyanogenic glucosides in roots and seeds has earlier been reported in other Lotus species (Gebrehiwot and Beuselinck, 2001
The overall tissue distribution of lotaustralin and linamarin (Fig. 3) in comparison to the microsomal enzyme activity (Fig. 5) shows that young growing tissues like seedlings, apical leaves, and stems are major sites of synthesis and storage. The presence of only tiny amounts of cyanogenic glucosides and the apparent lack of rhodiocyanosides A and D in roots indicate that in L. japonicus, neither cyanogenic glucosides nor nitrile glucosides are transported over long distances within the plant. Diglucosides have been proposed as long distance transport forms of cyanogenic glucosides in Hevea braziliensis (Selmar et al., 1988
The general biosynthetic pathway for cyanogenic glucosides involves two membrane-bound cytochrome P450s and a soluble UDPG-glucosyl transferase (Jones et al., 2000
Microsomal preparations obtained from 3-d-old seedlings of L. japonicus as well as recombinantly expressed CYP79D3 and CYP79D4 were found to exclusively metabolize L-Ile and L-Val, the two expected precursors for lotaustralin and linamarin. This result is in agreement with previous observations that the CYP79 enzyme(s) defines the substrate specificity of the entire pathway (Koch et al., 1992 The biosynthetic pathway for rhodiocyanoside A and D has to our knowledge not previously been studied. We demonstrate using radiolabeling that rhodiocyanoside A and D are derived from Ile (Fig. 4). The relative content of lotaustralin, rhodiocyanoside A, and rhodiocyanoside D remains nearly constant in aerial tissues (Fig. 2). This suggests that lotaustralin and the two rhodiocyanosides are derived from the same pool of Ile-ox (Fig. 1).
CYP79D4 is specifically expressed in root tissue and has a lower Km value for L-Ile and L-Val when compared to the corresponding Km values of CYP79D3 present in the aerial parts of the plant. The relative lower Km values of CYP79D4 compared to CYP79D3 for L-Ile and L-Val do not correlate with a higher level of lotaustralin and linamarin in the root. Accordingly, the low levels of linamarin and lotaustralin in roots most likely reflect a relatively lower expression level of CYP79D4 (Fig. 7) or lower levels of the substrates L-Val and L-Ile. Another possibility is the presence of CYP79 inhibitors in roots. This possibility was ruled out by demonstrating that CYP79D2 from cassava is active in L. japonicus roots (Fig. 9). The high Km value of both CYP79D3 and CYP79D4 for L-Val compared to L-Ile may reflect the low abundance of linamarin in comparison to lotaustralin in all tissue examined.
Cassava is allotetraploid and contains two CYP79 copies, CYP79D1 and CYP79D2, that both metabolize L-Val and L-Ile (Andersen et al., 2000
To study the impact of free amino acid availability versus the catalytic properties of the CYP79s on the type and amounts of cyanogenic glucosides that accumulate in L. japonicus, the CYP79D2 ortholog from cassava was ectopically expressed in L. japonicus. The transgenic plants showed up to 20-fold increase in linamarin content in shoots and a small increase in lotaustralin content (Figs. 8 and 9). Wild-type L. japonicus accumulate approximately 10 times more lotaustralin than linamarin (Fig. 2), while in the highest expresser the lotaustralin level is only approximately 1.5-fold higher than the linamarin level (Fig. 8). The observed change in linamarin to lotaustralin ratio is in accordance with the reported catalytic properties of the cassava ortholog CYP79D2 (Andersen et al., 2000
Ectopic expression of CYP79s has been used to alter the profiles of glucosinolates (Mikkelsen et al., 2002 Accordingly, our results substantiate the conclusion that the substrate specificity and efficiency of the CYP79 catalyzed step exerts quantitative and qualitative control of the flux through the pathway.
Ectopic expression of CYP79D2 in L. japonicus resulted in up to 20-fold increase in linamarin in shoots, whereas the relative amounts of lotaustralin, rhodiocyanoside A, and rhodiocyanoside D were almost unaltered (Fig. 9). Low amounts of linamarin and lotaustralin were also detectable in transgenic roots, but were accompanied by minute amounts of rhodiocyanosides A and D (Fig. 9). The most obvious explanation for this is the operation of two independent pathways in aerial parts of the plant and in roots. In favor of this hypothesis is the existence of two differentially expressed CYP79D paralogs, CYP79D3 and CYP79D4, of which CYP79D4 is specifically expressed in roots and CYP79D3 in the aerial parts (Fig. 7). The operation of two independent pathways would imply the existence of at least two CYP71E1 orthologs in L. japonicus. The CYP71E1 ortholog expressed in aerial parts of the plants would then be able to convert Val-ox and Ile-ox into the aglycones of linamarin and those of lotaustralin and rhodiocyanosides A and D, respectively. The CYP71E1 ortholog expressed in roots would primarily convert Val-ox and Ile-ox into the aglycons of linamarin and lotaustralin, respectively, i.e. primarily catalyze hydroxylation of the
Previously, the entire pathway for synthesis of the cyanogenic glucoside dhurrin has been introduced into Arabidopsis by genetic engineering (Tattersall et al., 2001
Culture of Plants
Seeds from Lotus japonicus GIFU B-129-S9 were scarified by a short treatment with sandpaper and surface sterilized in 2% hypochlorite with 0.02% Tween 20 (shaking, 20 min). The seeds were washed in 6 shifts of autoclaved water and germinated for 1 week on water saturated filter paper (20°C, photosynthetic flux of 100120 µmol photons m2 s1, and a light dark regime of 16/8 h). All plant material was grown hydroponically with the seedlings mounted with foam in Eppendorf tubes from which the bottom had been cut off. The Eppendorf tubes were then mounted in the lid of a 4-L high density polyethylene container filled with aerated nutrient solution (Husted et al., 2002
To determine the content of individual cyanogenic glucosides as well as nitrile glucosides, L. japonicus plant material was extracted in 85% (v/v) boiling methanol. The solvent was evaporated by lyophilization and the residue dissolved in water and extracted three times with n-pentane. Aliquots of the aqueous phase were subjected to LC-MS-SIM analysis using an HP1100 LC coupled to a Bruker Esquire-LC ion trap mass spectrometer (Bruker Instruments, Billerica, MA). A Waters Xterra MS C18 column (Waters, Milford, MA) was used and the LC conditions were as described in (Nielsen et al., 2002
To determine the total content of linamarin and lotaustralin, plant material was harvested into liquid nitrogen, homogenized, and extracted (10 min) in 85% (v/v) boiling methanol. After removal of solvent by evaporation and phase separation with sterile water/n-pentane (1:10, v/v), the water phase was collected. Assay mixtures (total volume: 200 µL) contained aliquots (110 µL) of the water phase, crude cassava (Manihot esculenta Crantz.) linamarase extract, (as a source of
Microsomes were prepared from 3-d-old L. japonicus seedlings (0.10.5 g) as described for barley (Nielsen et al., 2002
Detached leaflets of 2-week-old L. japonicus seedlings were mounted in Eppendorf tubes containing 5 µL L-[U-14C]Ile or L-[U-14C]Val (0.5 µCi, 300 mCi mmol1). Water (45 µL) was administrated to the leaves after the tracer had been taken up. After incubation for 24 h in closed Eppendorf tubes, the leaves were extracted with 85% (v/v) boiling methanol (5 min). The extracts were applied to TLC plates (Silica Gel 60 F254, Merck), and developed in ethyl acetate/acetone/chloroform/methanol/water (40:30:12:10:8, v/v/v/v/v). The presence of radiolabeled products was monitored as described above.
PCR fragments corresponding to the open reading frame of CYP79D3 and CYP79D4 were isolated by a PCR approach, using the EST AV 406380 as template for CYP79D3 and the BAC clone BMO 53279 from Kazusa DNA Research Institute as template for CYP79D4. The two CYP79D4 exons were combined by overlap extension PCR. BamHI/KpnI and BamHI/SacI sites were introduced by PCR and used to ligate CYP79D3 and CYP79D4, respectively, into the pYeDP60 vector (Pompon et al., 1996
To determine the substrate specificity of CYP79D3 and CYP79D4, yeast microsomes (10 pmol CYP79) harboring recombinant CYP79D3 or CYP79D4 were incubated (30 min, 28°C, gentle agitation (350 rpm) with L-[U-14C]labeled Val, Ile, Leu, Tyr, Phe, Met, Trp, or Pro, (Amersham Biosciences) in assay mixtures containing NADPH (1 mM), oxime (3.3 mM) and Tricine (10 mM, pH 7.5). Reaction mixtures to which no NADPH was added and reaction mixtures containing microsomes prepared from WAT11 transformed with empty vector served as negative controls. After incubation, reaction mixtures were analyzed as described above for the plant microsomes. Kcat and Km values with L-Ile or L-Val as substrates were determined using assay mixtures (total volume of 30 µL) containing microsomes (6.5 µL; 9.32 pmol of CYP79D3 or 11.35 pmol of CYP79D4), substrate (50 µM to 2 mM), NADPH (1 mM), and Ile-ox (3.3 mM) or Val-ox (3.3 mM) in 50 mM Tricine (pH 7.5). After incubation (5 min, 28°C) reactions were stopped by addition of ethyl acetate (50 µL). The organic phase was collected and its radioactive content determined by liquid scintillation counting. All measurements were carried out in duplicates. Radioactivity detected in the ethyl acetate phase in assay mixtures containing void vector were subtracted as background. Sigma Plot 2001 and EnzymeKinetics 1.10 (SPSS, Chicago) were used to calculate Kcat and Km values.
Poly(A) RNA was isolated from 21-d-old hydroponically grown plants using Micro Poly-A-Pure (Ambion, Austin, TX) according to the manufacturer's instructions. The poly(A) RNA was treated (30 min, 37°C) with RNase free DNase I (RNasine, Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) followed by phenol-chloroform extraction and precipitation with ethanol to remove traces of contaminating DNA. Poly(A) RNA (0.5 µg) from each tissue was reverse transcribed using SuperScript II reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) following the manufacturer's instructions. Random hexamers [200 ng, Oligo dN (pd(N)6); Amersham Biosciences] were used to prime the reaction. Reverse-transcribed cDNA samples were diluted 20 times with water and 1 µL was PCR-amplified. PCR reactions (total volume 50 µL) were performed in PCR buffer (Invitrogen) containing 200 µM dNTPs, 1.5 mM MgCl2, 10 pmol of forward and reverse primers, and 2.5 units of Taq DNA polymerase (Invitrogen). The PCR programs were as follows: 94°C for 2 min followed by 26 cycles (actin homolog, CYP98A3 homolog, and CYP79D3), or 32 cycles (CYP79D4) of: 94°C for 30 s, 60°C for 30 s, and 72°C for 30 s. The number of cycles chosen for these gene specific primer sets was set to enable a semiquantitative comparison between samples. Using sequences in GenBank, primer pairs were designed to amplify transcribed portions of: L. japonicus putative actin homolog (EST no. AU089544) forward: 5'-CTT TTA ATA CCC CCG CTA TGT ATG-3' and reverse 5'-GGT GGT AAA AGA ATA ACC ACG TTC-3'; CYP79D3 (GenBank accession no. AY599895): forward 5'-ACC AAG ATT GGC TGC AGA ACT C-3' and reverse 5'-TTC AAC AAC TGC ATG GCT TTA CAA-3'; CYP79D4 (GenBank accession no. AY599896): forward 5'-CGA TCT TAC CCA GTC CAG TGA T-3' and reverse 5'-CAC ATG CGT GAG TAA CAT CAA AC-3'; L. japonicus CYP98A3 homolog (EST no. AV417871): forward 5'-CTC TCA CCT CCA AAT TCT CCA C-3' and reverse 5'-CCT TCT CCT TAA GAA CCT CCT TG-3'. The specificity and efficiency of each primer pair was established by amplification from L. japonicus genomic DNA and confirmed by DNA sequencing. PCR products were analyzed by gel electrophoresis on 1% (w/v) agarose gels. Bands were visualized by ethidium bromide staining and quantified using a Gel Doc 2000 Transilluminator (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA). All experiments were repeated using independent tissue samples. Amplification of actin cDNA was used to control that similar amounts of cDNA from each sample were used in the PCR experiments.
The cassava CYP79D2 cDNA containing the 35S promoter and polyadenylation site was excised from pPZP221 cauliflower mosaic virus 35S::CYP79D2 constructs (Mikkelsen and Halkier, 2003 Sequence data from this article have been deposited with the EMBL/GenBank data libraries under accession numbers AY599895 and AY599896.
Professor Birger Lindberg Møller and Dr. David Tattersall are thanked for helpful discussions. Dr. Michael Dalgaard Mikkelsen is thanked for providing the pPZP221 35S::CYP79D2 construct. Anne Vinther Rasmussen and Mika Zagrobelny are thanked for critically reading the manuscript, Steen Malmmose for taking care of the hydroponically grown L. japonicus plants, and Winnie Dam and Mai-Britt Eicke for skilful technical assistance. Dr. Jens Stougaard provided seeds of L. japonicus and Dr. Kirsten Jørgensen provided crude cassava linamarase. Received December 19, 2003; returned for revision February 20, 2004; accepted February 20, 2004.
1 This work was supported by the Danish National Research Foundation by a grant to the Center for Molecular Plant Physiology (PlaCe), by the Danish Agricultural and Veterinary Research Council (grant no. 23020095), and by the Swedish Research Council for Environment, Agricultural Sciences and Spatial Planning (FORMAS; grant no. 672.0825/0096 to K.F.).
2 Present address: Department of Physiological Botany, EBC, Uppsala University, Villavagen 6, SE752 36 Uppsala, Sweden. Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.103.038059. * Corresponding author; e-mail bak{at}kvl.dk; fax 4535283333.
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