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Abstract Detail


Ranunculales - a Basal Eudicot Perspective of Angiosperm Evolution

Kutchan, Toni M [1].

Alkaloid Biosynthesis in Berberis, Eschscholzia, Papaver.

Plant natural products form an enormous reservoir of chemical biodiversity. The structures of more than 200,000 secondary metabolites have been elucidated to date. In comparison to primary metabolites, secondary metabolites are not essential to the growth and development of a plant, but rather function in the communication of the plant with its environment. The dynamic interactions between competing organisms are reflected in the diversity of secondary metabolites. It is presumed that the genes of secondary metabolite formation have been recruited from primary metabolism; there is evidence accumulating to support this view. Alkaloids, in particular, appear to function in the chemical defense of the plant as anti-feedants and toxins. Specifically in our research, we investigate how selected plant systems synthesize alkaloids at the enzyme and gene levels. The study of the formation of plant alkaloids has greatly advanced in recent years, such that a number of genes are now available from (S)-reticuline-derived tetrahydrobenzylisoquinoline alkaloid biosynthetic pathways from Berberis spp. (berberine), Eschscholzia californica (sanguinarine) and Papaver somniferum (morphine). These species share a central biosynthetic pathway that leads from L-tyrosine to (S)-reticuline and most of the cDNAs encoding the enzymes of the central pathway have been identified. The biosynthetic pathways branch after (S)-reticuline to form the classes of alkaloids that are characteristic of a given species. Regulation of these pathways at the gene and enzyme level is complex; multiple cell types can be required for synthesis and for storage. When we perturb cellular physiology, metabolite homeostasis and intra- and intercellular partitioning can be effected in still unpredictable ways. An update will be given on what we understand today about enzymes, genes and spatial organization in the isoquinoline alkaloid biosynthesis field specifically in Berberis, Eschscholzia and Papaver.


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1 - Donald Danforth Plant Science Center, 975 North Warson Road, Saint Louis, MO, 63132, USA

Keywords:
Alkaloid biosynthesis
Ranunculales.

Presentation Type: Symposium or Colloquium Presentation
Session: SY19
Location: Stevens 2/Hilton
Date: Wednesday, July 11th, 2007
Time: 3:30 PM
Number: SY19004
Abstract ID:749


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