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First published online January 24, 2008; 10.1104/pp.107.110544 Plant Physiology 146:1075-1084 (2008) © 2008 American Society of Plant Biologists Cloning and Characterization of Naringenin 8-Prenyltransferase, a Flavonoid-Specific Prenyltransferase of Sophora flavescens1,[W]Laboratory of Plant Gene Expression, Research Institute for Sustainable Humanosphere, Kyoto University, Uji 611–0011, Japan (K.S., K.M., K.O., K.Y.); and Plant Regulation Research Center, Faculty of Life Sciences, Toyo University, Gunma 374–0193, Japan (H.Y.)
Prenylated flavonoids are natural compounds that often represent the active components in various medicinal plants and exhibit beneficial effects on human health. Prenylated flavonoids are hybrid products composed of a flavonoid core mainly attached to either 5-carbon (dimethylallyl) or 10-carbon (geranyl) prenyl groups derived from isoprenoid (terpenoid) metabolism, and the prenyl groups are crucial for their biological activity. Prenylation reactions in vivo are crucial coupling processes of two major metabolic pathways, the shikimate-acetate and isoprenoid pathways, in which these reactions are also known as a rate-limiting step. However, none of the genes responsible for the prenylation of flavonoids has been identified despite more than 30 years of research in this field. We have isolated a prenyltransferase gene from Sophora flavescens, SfN8DT-1, responsible for the prenylation of the flavonoid naringenin at the 8-position, which is specific for flavanones and dimethylallyl diphosphate as substrates. Phylogenetic analysis shows that SfN8DT-1 has the same evolutionary origin as prenyltransferases for vitamin E and plastoquinone. The gene expression of SfN8DT-1 is strictly limited to the root bark where prenylated flavonoids are solely accumulated in planta. The ectopic expression of SfN8DT-1 in Arabidopsis thaliana resulted in the formation of prenylated apigenin, quercetin, and kaempferol, as well as 8-prenylnaringenin. SfN8DT-1 represents the first flavonoid-specific prenyltransferase identified in plants and paves the way for the identification and characterization of further genes responsible for the production of this large and important class of secondary metabolites.
The prenylation of aromatic compounds is a major contributor to the diversity of plant secondary metabolites due to differences in prenylation position on the aromatic ring, various lengths of prenyl chain, and further modifications of the prenyl moiety, e.g. cyclization and hydroxylation, resulting in the occurrence of more than 1,000 prenylated compounds in plants (Tahara and Ibrahim, 1995
Cell cultures of Sophora flavescens produce the prenylated flavonoid sophoraflavanone G (SFG) in a large quantity. The biosynthesis of SFG involves two prenylation reactions that have been biochemically determined to be associated with the crude membrane fraction of cultured cells (Yamamoto et al., 2000
In this article, we describe the identification of a plant flavonoid prenyltransferase gene encoding naringenin 8-dimethylallyltransferase (SfN8DT-1) that catalyzes the primary dimethylallylation step in SFG biosynthesis, as well as functional expression of the gene products in yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae). We also demonstrated the enzymatic function of SfN8DT-1 in planta using transgenic Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) plants.
Cloning of SfN8DT-1 cDNA and Characterization of Recombinant SfN8DT-1
From cDNA library sequence data, we selected clones for flavonoid prenyltransferases via three criteria: possessing at least one transmembrane domain, having a putative plastid transit peptide, and the presence of conserved amino acid sequences responsible for prenyl diphosphate recognition among Mg2+-dependent prenyltransferases: NDxxDxxxD, NQxxDxxxD, NQxxExxxD, DDxxDxxxD, DQxxDxxxD, or DQxxExxxD (Table I
). From 11,874 ESTs, 208 clones were found to contain one of these conserved sequences, from which membrane-bound proteins were selected using the SOSUI program, and three subcellular localization prediction programs (ChloroP, PSORT, WoLF PSORT) were used to predict transit peptides in the putative polypeptide sequences. Seven clones fulfilled all three criteria, and full-length clones were obtained for expression in yeast. The enzymatic activity was measured using the microsomal fraction of yeast transformants with naringenin and DMAPP, or LG and DMAPP as substrates, and one clone (SfN8DT-1; DNA Data Bank of Japan [DDBJ] accession no. AB325579) showed clear naringenin dimethylallyltransferase activity (1.38 ± 0.3 nmol h–1 mg protein–1) that was dependent on Mg2+ and DMAPP (Fig. 2B
; Supplemental Fig. S1A). The SfN8DT-1 clone had a stop codon upstream of the initiation codon in the same frame, representing the full-length clone. The truncated protein, in which N-terminal SfN8DT-1 sequence for 30 amino acids was removed, showed almost the same activity as the full-length clone when expressed in yeast (data not shown). The predicted polypeptide possessed nine transmembrane
SfN8DT-1 coded for a polypeptide of 410 amino acids with significant similarity to homogentisate (HG) prenyltransferases (21%–55%; Collakova and DellaPenna, 2001 The substrate specificity of SfN8DT-1 was analyzed with various plant flavonoids as prenyl acceptors (Fig. 3, A and C ) and compared to HG, where [14C]DMAPP was used as the prenyl donor. Recombinant SfN8DT-1 could accept only naringenin (100%), liquiritigenin (102%), and hesperetin (52%) as substrates, whereas flavonols or isoflavones are not prenylated.
The prenyl-donor substrate specificity of SfN8DT-1 is shown in Figure 3B. In addition to the native substrate DMAPP, geranyl diphosphate (GPP), farnesyl diphosphate (FPP), geranylgeranyl diphosphate (GGPP), and phytyl diphosphate (PDP) were tested, with naringenin as the prenyl acceptor. LC/ESI-MS analysis showed that the SfN8DT-1 protein had a strict substrate preference for DMAPP, and no detectable reaction products were obtained with any other prenyl diphosphates. The apparent Km values for DMAPP and naringenin were calculated to be 106 µM and 55 µM, respectively. These values coincided with those of the native protein (Yamamoto et al., 2000
The N-terminal partial sequence of SfN8DT-1 obtained from EST analysis was predicted to have a transit peptide during in silico screening, but when the full sequence of SfN8DT-1 was submitted to prediction programs (TargetP, ChloroP, PSORT, WoLF PSORT, iPSORT), only iPSORT showed high scores for a transit peptide at the N terminus. To confirm the subcellular localization of SfN8DT-1, full-length SfN8DT-1 or its N-terminal SfN8DT-1 sequence (30 amino acids) was independently fused to GFP under the control of the cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) 35S promoter and was introduced into onion (Allium cepa) peels and S. flavescens cultured cells by particle bombardment (Fig. 4
). Following transient expression, the fluorescence of SfN8DT1-GFP was localized to dotted organelles in both cell types, whose size and pattern were highly similar to that of isoprene synthase, a typical plastid protein, used as a positive control (Sasaki et al., 2005
Expression of SfN8DT-1 Genes in S. flavescens
The prenyltransferase activity in cultured S. flavescens cells was inducible by the application of methyl jasmonate (MJ), which mimics defense reactions against insect and fungal attack. SfN8DT-1 expression in cultured cells was also strongly induced by yeast extract, MJ, and salicylic acid when monitored by RNA gel-blot analysis (Fig. 5A
), suggesting that the induction of prenyltransferase activity detected in cultured cells was regulated at the transcriptional level. In intact S. flavescens plants, SfN8DT-1 mRNA was solely detected in root tissues (Fig. 5B), where many prenylated flavonoids, such as SFG, kurarinone, kushenol I, and 8-dimethylallyl kaempferol (8DK, des-O-methylanhydroicaritin), are localized (Yamamoto et al., 1992
Introduction of SfN8DT-1 cDNA into Arabidopsis Plants Arabidopsis does not show flavonoid prenyltransferase activity, and accordingly no prenylated flavonoid was detected. Thus, we transformed Arabidopsis with the full-length SfN8DT-1 cDNA, and the enzymatic function of N8DT in planta was observed in the Arabidopsis transformant, in which SfN8DT-1 was under the control of a CaMV 35S promoter. In the T2 generation, the expression of SfN8DT-1 mRNA was confirmed by reverse transcription (RT)-PCR (Supplemental Fig. S2). In the aqueous acetone extract of transformed seedlings, 8DK was detected by LC/MS (4.4 ± 0.43 µg/g dry weight [DW]; Table II ). Then we tested the effect of naringenin addition (100 µM) to the growth medium on the production of prenylated flavonoids. The supplementation of naringenin resulted in the production of 8DN (5.1 ± 0.93 µg/g DW), which provided the evidence that SfN8DT-1 was enzymatically functional in planta to form prenylated flavonoids in a heterologous host plant. It was noteworthy that, in addition to 8DN and 8DK (5.1 ± 1.05 µg/g DW), dimethylallylated derivatives of apigenin and quercetin were also detected in the Arabidopsis SfN8DT-1 transformants. The contents of these dimethylallylated apigenin and quercetin were expressed as 8DN equivalence according to their peak intensities in LC/MS (Table II), because we do not have authentic samples. In contrast, prenylated flavonoids were not detected in wild-type Arabidopsis seedlings, nor did the addition of naringenin produce 8DN.
Many researchers have studied biochemical features of aromatic prenyltransferases and biological activities of prenylated aromatic compounds for a long time, as these compounds are attractive resources in food and pharmaceutical industry. There are several reports on the identification of prenyltransferase cDNAs of simple phenolic intermediates, such as PHB and HG involved in ubiquinone, plastoquinone, and vitamin E biosynthesis; however, there has been no report on the identification of a gene that encodes plant prenyltransferase producing valuable prenylated flavonoids or coumarins.
In this study, we isolated the first cDNA of flavonoid-specific plant prenyltransferase SfN8DT-1 involved in SFG biosynthesis of S. flavescens. Heterologous expression in yeast showed that the gene product exhibited enzyme activity to transfer the dimethylallyl moiety to flavonoid substrate naringenin. The result of the fractionation of the recombinant crude enzyme showed that SfN8DT-1 was a membrane-bound protein in accordance with prediction by the TMHMM program (Supplemental Fig. S1B). In addition, the apparent Km values and divalent cation requirements of recombinant SfN8DT-1 (Supplemental Fig. S1C) coincided with those of native protein (Yamamoto et al., 2000 SfN8DT-1 accepts flavanones as specific substrates, whereas flavonols or isoflavones are not prenylated. Judging from the preference for liquiritigenin as a substrate, the OH group at the 5-position of the A-ring does not play an important role in the enzymatic function of SfN8DT-1. In contrast, sakuranetin, a methyl derivative of naringenin, did not give any detectable reaction product, i.e. one methoxy group at the 7-position of the A-ring seemed to strongly hamper the recognition as a substrate, probably due to the vicinal position of prenylation. On the other hand, substitution of the B-ring did not strongly influence the enzymatic activity of SfN8DT-1, as hesperetin was clearly prenylated (Fig. 3A). In addition, SfN8DT-1 cannot accept LG, the substrate of the second prenylation step involved in SFG biosynthesis. A gene encoding LG 2''-dimethylallyltransferase was not found in the S. flavescens cDNA library either. However, we obtained three homologous genes by RT-PCR using internal sequences of SfN8DT-1 as primers, i.e. SfN8DT-2, SfL17a, and SfL17b (DDBJ accession nos. SfN8DT-2, AB370330; SfL17a, AB371287; SfL17b, AB370329). SfN8DT-2, sharing 93% amino acid identity with SfN8DT-1, exhibited the same enzymatic properties as SfN8DT-1, including the substrate specificity, which suggested the functional redundancy of these enzymes, but SfL17a and SfL17b, sharing 68% and 69% amino acid identities with SfN8DT-1, did not exhibit prenyltransferase activity as far as we tested using DMAPP and various flavonoids (naringenin, LG, liquiritigenin, hesperetin, kaempferol, apigenin, taxifolin, 2-hydroxychalcone, 2'-hydroxychalcone, isoliquiritigenin, and genistein).
In S. flavescens plants, prenylated flavonoids such as kurarinone, kushenol I, SFG, and 8DK were mainly localized in root bark and detected in neither aerial parts nor peeled roots (Yamamoto et al., 1992
It was demonstrated that transgenic Arabidopsis overexpressing SfN8DT-1 accumulated a prenylated flavonoid, 8DK, whereas wild type did not (Table II). It is not clear if SfN8DT-1 catalyzed the prenylation of kaempferol in planta, or if naringenin, a precursor of kaempferol, was first prenylated by SfN8DT-1 and then converted to 8DK in vivo. However, because kaempferol is the major flavonoid in Arabidopsis and the in vivo level of naringenin is very low, the occurrence of 8DK may be reasonable (Peer et al., 2001
Biochemical properties of prenyltransferases involved in biosynthesis of vitamin E and plastoquinone are very similar to those of SfN8DT-1, i.e. these catalyze an aromatic proton substitution with prenyl moiety, have eight or nine putative transmembrane
SfN8DT-1 and SfN8DT-2 isolated in this study are the first cDNAs that encode plant membrane-bound prenyltransferases catalyzing the transfer of the prenyl moiety to flavonoid. These cDNAs are expected to be useful for genetic engineering of SFG production. Cell-free extract from S. flavescens-cultured cells catalyzed the prenylation of other flavonoids, such as genistein, taxifolin, kaempferol, and quercetin, so this cDNA could be very powerful tool for isolating prenyltransferase cDNAs of other flavonoids. In fact, several bands were observed in the genomic Southern blot using full-length SfN8DT-1 as a probe (data not shown). Controlled expression of SfN8DT-1 in plants will provide new resources to supply prenylated flavonoids, which have beneficial effects for human health, such as prevention of cancer and nonantibiotic antibacterial agents that have become more important to suppress multiple drug resistant microorganisms in the medical field (Stevens and Page, 2004
Plant Materials and Reagents
Cultured cells of Sophora flavescens were maintained in Murashige and Skoog medium with 1 µM 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid and 1 µM kinetin as described previously (Yamamoto et al., 1991
Cultured S. flavescens cells were treated with 20 µL of 0.1 M MJ dissolved in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO; final concentration 0.1 mM) for 36 h to induce the expression of flavonoid prenylation enzymes. Total RNA was prepared from the cultured cells, from which poly(A+) RNA was isolated using an Oligotex-MAG mRNA purification kit (TAKARA Bio). A cDNA plasmid library was constructed using a cDNA synthesis kit (Stratagene) with a yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) shuttle vector, pDR196, for the purpose of functional expression of membrane-bound proteins. In brief, the first strand of cDNA was synthesized using 7 µg of poly(A+) RNA, and oligo(dT)18 anchor primer containing an XhoI restriction site. After second-strand cDNA synthesis, a blunt-ended adaptor containing an EcoRI restriction site was ligated onto the double-stranded DNA, and the fragments were then ligated into the pDR196 vector downstream of the strong constitutive promoter PMA1 (Rentsch et al., 1995
The cDNA library was introduced into Escherichia coli DH10B, and 11,874 independent clones of the primary library were randomly picked and sequenced from the 5'-end using a primer that annealed to the PMA1 promoter region (single-pass sequencing). The average size of the sequenced ESTs was 559 bp, and the insert size of the cDNA library was approximately from 500 bp to 5 kb. They were clustered into 1,519 contiguous sequences, 1,086 cluster singletons, and 4,270 singletons. These EST data are available on the Web site of the Research Institute for Sustainable Humanosphere, Kyoto University (http://database.rish.kyoto-u.ac.jp/arch/plantdb/index.html).
By motif searching with 11,874 clones, it was found that 208 clones contained one of the following amino acid sequences conserved among aromatic substrate prenyltransferases, NDxxDxxxD, NQxxDxxxD, NQxxExxxD, DDxxDxxxD, DQxxDxxxD, or DQxxExxxD, which appeared normally at 80 to 170 amino acids from the N terminus in PHB and HG prenyltransferases. These cDNA clones were analyzed using the SOSUI program to find that 20 clones out of 208 candidates contained a transmembrane domain, at least in the sequenced region. In PHB and HG prenyltransferases, the first transmembrane domain exists upstream of the conserved motif of prenyltransferases. Transit peptide sequences were searched for with three frequently used prediction programs, ChloroP, PSORT, and WoLF PSORT, which suggested that 30 out of 208 clones had putative plastid targeting signals. Taken together, a single-pass sequence covering approximately 170 amino acids from the N terminus enabled us to check three criteria. In fact, among these 208 clones, seven clones contained both plastid targeting signal and transmembrane
All 208 candidate clones were expressed as yeast transformants (W303-1A-
8DN was identified using LC/ESI-MS and LC-NMR by comparison with a chemically synthesized standard specimen (Tahara et al., 1994
LC-NMR data was acquired using a Varian UNITY-INOVA-500 spectrometer (1H: 499.83 MHz) equipped with a 60-µL triple-resonance microflow NMR probe (Iwasa et al., 2005
The enzymatic features of recombinant SfN8DT-1 were mostly analyzed by HPLC. Substrate specificity for the prenyl donor was examined using LC/MS analysis, which covered the elution period of the predicted reaction products. Substrate specificity for various flavonoid compounds was examined using a radioactive assay.
The same assay mixture was used as described above except that 4.5 µM [1-14C]DMAPP (specific activity 2.0 GBq/mmol; American Radiolabeled Chemicals) was used instead of cold DMAPP. After incubation, the ethyl acetate-soluble portion was evaporated to dryness, dissolved in 20 µL of methanol, and spotted onto a silica gel thin-layer chromatography plate (20 x 20 cm; Silica Gel 60 F254; Merck). Thin-layer chromatography was developed with toluene:ethyl acetate (8:2) and subjected to autoradiography to detect the reaction products. The radioactivity of the products was quantified using a BAS1800 Bio-image Analyzer (Fuji Film).
The nucleotide sequence for full-length SfN8DT-1 or its N-terminal sequence was amplified by PCR (SfN8DTfull_Fw: 5'-GCGGTACCATGGGTTCTATGCTTCTTGCATCTTT-3' and SfN8DTfullnostop_Rv: 5'-CAGCGGCCGCTCTAAACAAAGGTATGAGGAAGTACTCTGC-3' or SfN8DTtpnostop_Rv: 5'-CAGCGGCCGCGGATTCTTGGCATATTGTTTACTCCTCAAGC-3'; KpnI and NotI site underlined). The PCR product was subcloned into pENTR1A to give pENTR-SfN8DT1, pENTR-SfN8DT1-TP. For transient expression of the GFP fusion proteins, the entry vector constructs were subjected to GATEWAY system transfer of the full-length SfN8DT-1 or its N-terminal sequence into modified pGWB5, so that either SfN8DT1-GFP or SfN8DT1-TP-GFP was expressed from the CaMV 35S promoter. The resulting plasmids (10 µg) were introduced into onion (Allium cepa) peels or cultured S. flavescens cells using a particle gun (PDS-1000; Bio-Rad), and the GFP fluorescence was analyzed as described previously (Sasaki et al., 2005
For the expression analysis of cultured cells, filter-sterilized DMSO solutions of 100 mM MJ or salicylic acid (20 µL each), or autoclaved 500 mg/mL yeast extract solution in 200 µL of water were aseptically added to the cell cultures (final concentrations, 0.1 mM, 0.1 mM, and 5 mg/mL, respectively), and cultured for 1 d. Twenty microliters of DMSO and 200 µL of water were used as negative controls. For organ-specific expression analysis, an adult plant of S. flavescens (approximately 150–170 cm in height) was used, and total RNA was extracted with an RNeasy Plant Mini kit (Qiagen). Each RNA sample (10 µg) was separated by formamide-containing 1% agarose gel electrophoresis and then capillary blotted onto a nylon membrane (Hybond N+; GE Healthcare). The membrane was hybridized with a 32P-labeled probe of full-length SfN8DT-1 cDNA, washed, and exposed by a standard procedure. Signals of ribosomal RNA stained with ethidium bromide were used as a loading control.
The tissue-specific expression of SfN8DT-1 in root was analyzed by RT-PCR. Total RNA (5 µg) extracted from the root bark and the peeled root of S. flavescens adult plants was reverse-transcribed with SuperScript III RNase H– reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen). PCR was carried out with Go Taq DNA polymerase (Promega) and the following primer pair (SfN8DTfull_Fw; SfN8DTfull_Rv: 5'-CAGCGGCCGCTCATCTAAACAAAGGTATGAGGAAGTACTCTGC-3'). For normalization, actin was used as an external standard (actin-Fw, 5'-CAACTGGGACGACATGGAGA-3' and actin-Rv, 5'-GATCCACATCTGCTGGAAGG-3').
Sample extraction was basically carried out according to the method of Wiesman et al. (2002)
The nucleotide sequence for full-length SfN8DT-1 was amplified by PCR using primer pair SfN8DTfull_Fw and SfN8DTfull_Rv. The PCR product was subcloned into pENTR1A. The entry vector was subjected to the GATEWAY recombination to transfer the full-length cDNA of SfN8DT-1 into the binary destination vector pGWB2 for constitutive expression. Agrobacterium tumefaciens GV3101 (pMP90) was transformed with the binary vector and was used to transform Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) Columbia wild-type plants by the floral dip method. T1 generation transformants were grown on germination medium supplemented with 50 µg/mL kanamycin for selection before transfer to soil. Expression of SfN8DT-1 mRNA in Arabidopsis was checked by RT-PCR using seedlings of the T2 generation. Total RNA prepared from 100 mg seedlings was subjected to RT-PCR, in which Go Taq DNA polymerase (Promega) was employed to amplify the full-length SfN8DT-1 (primer pair, SfN8DTfull_Fw and SfN8DTfull_Rv). Actin was used as an external standard (primer pair, actin-Fw and actin-Rv).
Arabidopsis plants (2-week-old T2 seedling, approximately 100 mg DW) were grown on plates with or without 0.1 mM naringenin, flavonoids were extracted with 80% aqueous acetone, and the acetone extract was evaporated and partitioned with water and diethyl ether. The ether soluble portion was evaporated to dryness, and the residue was dissolved with methanol. Methanol extracts from transgenic and wild-type plants were analyzed by LC/MS analysis (microTOF-Q; Bruker Daltonics), and 8DN and 8DK were identified by direct comparison with standard specimens. Other prenylated compounds were identified by accurate MS.
Total RNA prepared from S. flavescens cell cultures treated with MJ was reverse-transcribed using GeneRacer kit (Invitrogen), and RT products were subjected to RACE according to the manufacturer's protocol. SfN8DT-2, SfL17a, and SfL17b were obtained by use of primers specific for SfN8DT-1. Their full-length clones were re-isolated by RT-PCR using primer pairs specific for each clone. DDBJ accession numbers for the genes isolated in this article are AB325579 (SfN8DT-1 cDNA), AB370330 (SfN8DT-2 cDNA), AB371287 (SfL17a cDNA), and AB370329 (SfL17b cDNA).
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
We thank Dragon Genomics Center (Takara Bio), Bruker Daltonics K.K., and Akita Prefectural University for in silico screening of ESTs, analysis of prenylated flavonoids in Arabidopsis, and DNA sequencing, respectively. We are grateful to Drs. W. Frommer (Carnegie Institution), T. Nakagawa (Shimane University), T. Shikanai (Kyushu University), and T. Koyama (Tohoku University) for experimental materials. Drs. K. Iwasa and M. Sugiura (Kobe Pharmaceutical University), and T. Umezawa and A. Oka (Kyoto University) provided technical assistance. S. flavescens plants were from the Kyoto Botanical Garden. Received October 8, 2007; accepted January 13, 2008; published January 24, 2008.
1 This work was supported in part by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (no. 17310126 to K.Y.) and by a research fellowship from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science for Young Scientists (no. 183424 to K.S.). The author responsible for distribution of materials integral to the findings presented in this article in accordance with the policy described in the Instructions for Authors (www.plantphysiol.org) is: Kazufumi Yazaki (yazaki{at}rish.kyoto-u.ac.jp).
[W] The online version of this article contains Web-only data. www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.107.110544 * Corresponding author; e-mail yazaki{at}rish.kyoto-u.ac.jp.
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