Grants and Contracts Details
Description
The objective of this proposal is to understand the structural and mechanistic features governing the
cyclizationof farnesyl diphosphate (FPP) catalyzed by a homologous set of four plant sesquiterpene
cyclases including Nictotiana tabacum 5-epi-aristolochene synthase (TEAS), Hyoscyamus muticus
vetispiradiene synthase (HVS), Gossypium arboreum cadinene synthase (GCADS), and Artemisia annua L
epi-cedrol synthase (AECS). The x-ray crystal structures of wild-type TEAS, mutant TEAS enzymes, and
various small molecule complexes with each provided the first atomic resolution three-dimensional models
of any plant terpene cyclase that allowed us to propose an enzymatic reaction mechanism consistent with the
chemical mechanism of FPP cyclization to 5-epi-aristolochene. These structures served as starting points
for a mutagenesis strategy focused on a limited set of active site residues identified crystallographic ally .
The initial set of site-directed mutants have given us solid evidence for the proposed reaction mechanism.
Weare now positioned to expand this directed approach combining structural and biochemical
information with sequence alignments, homology modeling, and product identification to understand the
structural and mechanistic basis for both substrate and product selectivity in terpene cYclases. The rapidly
expanding database of plant terpene cyclase sequences gives us some indication of what positions in the
cyclase active site are most variable. We propose to use site-directed mutagenesis at single and multiple
positions, steady state and pre-steady state kinetic analysis, product profiling by argentation thin-layer
chromatography (arg- TLC) and radiometric gas chromatography (r-GC), product identification by gas
chromatography / mass spectrometry (GC-MS), and x-ray crystallography to address the role that this
variability plays in substrate selection and in the alternative reaction mechanisms of related cYclases.
Status | Finished |
---|---|
Effective start/end date | 7/1/00 → 6/30/06 |
Funding
- Salk Institute: $176,000.00
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