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Plant Physiology Preview Published on August 29, 2002; 10.1104/pp.006544
Received March 31, 2002 Cloning and Functional Characterization of a ß-Pinene Synthase from Artemisia annua That Shows a Circadian Pattern of Expression
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.) * Corresponding author; email: xychen{at}iris.sipp.ac.cn.
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 (-)-ß-pinene and (-)-
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