| dc.description.abstract |
Grape (Vitis spp.) is a culturally and economically important crop plant that has
been cultivated for thousands of years, primarily for the production of wine. Grape
berries accumulate a myriad of phenylpropanoid secondary metabolites, many of which
are glucosylated in plantae More than 90 O-glucosyltransferases have been cloned and
biochemically characterized from plants, only two of which have been isolated from Vitis
spp. The world-wide economic importance of grapes as a crop plant, the human health
benefits associated with increased consumption of grape-derived metabolites, the
biological relevance of glucosylation, and the lack of information about Vitis
glucosyltransferases has inspired the identification, cloning and biochemical
characterization of five novel "family 1" O-glucosyltransferases from Concord grape
(Vitis labrusca cv. Concord).
Protein purification and associated protein sequencIng led to the molecular
cloning of UDP-glucose: resveratrollhydroxycinnamic acid O-glucosyltransferase
(VLRSGT) from Vitis labrusca berry mesocarp tissue. In addition to being the first
glucosyltransferase which accepts trans-resveratrol as a substrate to be characterized in
vitro, the recombinant VLRSGT preferentially produces the glucose esters of
hydroxycinnamic acids at pH 6.0, and the glucosides of trans-resveratrol and flavonols at
'pH 9.0; the first demonstration of pH-dependent bifunctional glucosylation for this class
of enzymes. Gene expression and metabolite profiling support a role for this enzyme in
the bifuncitonal glucosylation ofstilbenes and hydroxycinnamic acids in plantae
A homology-based approach to cloning was used to identify three enzymes from
the Vitis vinifera TIGR grape gene index which had high levels of protein sequence
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identity to previously characterized UDP-glucose: anthocyanin 5-0-glucosyltransferases.
Molecular cloning and biochemical characterization demonstrated that these enzymes
(rVLOGTl, rVLOGT2, rVLOGT3) glucosylate the 7-0-position of flavonols and the
xenobiotic 2,4,5-trichlorophenol (TCP), but not anthocyanins. Variable gene expression
throughout grape berry development and enzyme assays with native grape berry protein
are consistent with a role for these enzymes in the glucosylation of flavonols; while the
broad substrate specificity, the ability of these enzymes to glucosylate TCP and
expression of these genes in tissues which are subject to pathogen attack (berry, flower,
bud) is consistent with a role for these genes in the plant defense response.
Additionally, the Vitis labrusca UDP-glucose: flavonoid 3-0-glucosyltransferase
(VL3GT) was identified, cloned and characterized. VL3GT has 96 % protein sequence
identity to the previously characterized Vitis vinifera flavonoid 3-0-glucosyltransferase
(VV3GT); and glucosylates the 3-0-position of anthocyanidins and flavonols in vitro.
Despite high levels of protein sequence identity, VL3GT has distinct biochemical
characteristics (as compared to VV3GT), including a preference for B-ring methylated
flavonoids and the inability to use UDP-galactose as a donor substrate. RT-PCR analysis
of VL3GT gene expression and enzyme assays with native grape protein is consistent
with an in planta role for this enzyme in the glucosylation of anthocyanidins,but not
flavonols.
These studies reveal the power of combining several biochemistry- and
molecular biology-based tools to identify, clone, biochemically characterize and elucidate
the in planta function of several biologically relevant O-glucosyltransferases from Vitis
spp. |
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