Difference between revisions of "Maeda Lab:Research"
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*Tyrosine (Tyr) is an aromatic amino acid required for protein biosynthesis in all living cells and, due to the absence of Tyr biosynthesis in animals, is an essential nutrient in human diets. In plants, Tyr also serves as a precursor of numerous natural products, which include tocopherols (vitamin E), cyanogenic glycosides, and isoquinoline alkaloids (e.g., analgesic morphine and codeine). These Tyr-derived plant metabolites have a remarkable structural complexity and a variety of pharmacological and biological activities, making them effective nutritional compounds and pharmaceutical drugs. However, often the low yields of these compounds in plant tissues hamper their commercial production in plants, and there is a growing need to rationally engineer the plant Tyr pathway. | *Tyrosine (Tyr) is an aromatic amino acid required for protein biosynthesis in all living cells and, due to the absence of Tyr biosynthesis in animals, is an essential nutrient in human diets. In plants, Tyr also serves as a precursor of numerous natural products, which include tocopherols (vitamin E), cyanogenic glycosides, and isoquinoline alkaloids (e.g., analgesic morphine and codeine). These Tyr-derived plant metabolites have a remarkable structural complexity and a variety of pharmacological and biological activities, making them effective nutritional compounds and pharmaceutical drugs. However, often the low yields of these compounds in plant tissues hamper their commercial production in plants, and there is a growing need to rationally engineer the plant Tyr pathway. | ||
− | *Although the Tyr biosynthetic pathway has been extensively studied in microbes (e.g., ''E. coli'', yeast), '''we still do not know how and where Tyr | + | *Although the Tyr biosynthetic pathway has been extensively studied in microbes (e.g., ''E. coli'', yeast), '''we still do not know how and where Tyr is synthesized in plants'''. To investigate Tyr biosynthetic pathways, their localization and regulation in different plant species, we use two contrasting model plants, ''Arabidopsis thaliana'' and ''Medicago truncatula'', which appear to use different pathways for Tyr synthesis (see our paper, [[Maeda_Lab:Publications |'''Schenck ''et al''., 2014''']]). We particularly focus on prephenate dehydrogenase (TyrAp/'''PDH''') and arogenate dehydrogenase (TyrAa/'''ADH''') enzymes, which compete prephenate and arogenate substrates, respectively, against phenylalanine biosynthesis. Accurate understanding of the Tyr pathways may provide an opportunity to dramatically increase Tyr availability in plants by redirecting carbon flow from phenylalanine biosynthesis, which consumes major carbon flow for lignin biosynthesis in vascular plants. |
Revision as of 10:15, 12 September 2016
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Research Interests in Maeda LabPlants produce a diverse array of secondary (specialized) metabolites in order to survive in various ecological niches. In contrast to the well-documented diversification of plant secondary metabolism, primary metabolism, which provides precursors of secondary metabolites, is generally thought to be conserved across different plant species. However, it is not understood to what extent primary metabolic pathways of plants have evolved in different lineages to support the downstream synthesis of diverse secondary metabolites. Such basic knowledge of the interface between plant primary and secondary metabolism will be also crucial for future metabolic engineering and breeding to improve production of plant natural products. To address this question, we are investigating in different plant species the biosynthetic pathways of aromatic amino acids.
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