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Tobacco locus phenylcoumaran benzylic ether reductase
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AB445398 Nicotiana tabacum TP7 mRNA for phenylcoumaran benzylic ether reductase, complete cds.
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Literature annotations [3]
Literature annotations [3]
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Regional and cell-specific gene expression patterns during petal development.
The Plant cell (1992)
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We investigated gene expression patterns that occur during tobacco petal development. Two petal mRNA classes were identified that are present at elevated levels relative to other organs. One class is represented equally in the unpigmented tube and pigmented limb regions of the corolla. The other class accumulates preferentially within the limb region. Limb-specific mRNAs accumulate at different times during corolla development, peak in prevalence prior to flower opening, and are localized in either the epidermal cell layers or the mesophyll. The epidermal- and mesophyll-specific mRNAs change abruptly in concentration within a narrow zone of the limb/tube border. Preferential accumulation of at least one limb-specific mRNA occurs within the corolla upper region early in development prior to limb maturation and pigment accumulation. Limb-specific mRNAs also accumulate preferentially within the unpigmented corolla limb region of Nicotiana sylvestris, a diploid progenitor of tobacco. Runoff transcription studies and experiments with chimeric beta-glucuronidase genes showed that petal gene organ, cell, and region specificities are controlled primarily at the transcriptional level. We conclude that during corolla development transcriptional processes act coordinately on limb-specific genes to regulate their regional expression patterns, but act individually on these genes to define their cell specificities.
Drews, GN. Beals, TP. Bui, AQ. Goldberg, RB.
The Plant cell.
1992.
4(11).
1383-404.
Expression patterns of two tobacco isoflavone reductase-like genes and their possible roles in secondary metabolism in tobacco.
Plant molecular biology (2003)
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Plants contain a large number of proteins homologous to isoflavone reductase, an NADPH-dependent reductase involved in the biosynthesis of isoflavonoid phytoalexins in legumes. Although some are bonafide isoflavone reductases, others may catalyze distinct reductase reactions. Two tobacco genes, TP7 and A622, encoding isoflavone reductase-like proteins, had been previously identified from their unique expression patterns, but their functions were not known. We show here that TP7 is a tobacco phenylcoumaran benzylic ether reductase involved in lignan biosynthesis, but that A622 is not. To gain insight into the possible function of A622, we analyzed in detail the expression patterns of the A622 gene by RNA and protein blots, immunohistochemistry, and its promoter expression in transgenic Nicotiana sylvestris roots. The A622 expression patterns were qualitatively similar to those of putrescine N-methyltransferase, the first enzyme in nicotine biosynthesis, suggesting that A622 may function in the metabolism of nicotine or related alkaloids.
Shoji, T. Winz, R. Iwase, T. Nakajima, K. Yamada, Y. Hashimoto, T.
Plant molecular biology.
2003.
50(3).
427-40.
A PIP-family protein is required for biosynthesis of tobacco alkaloids.
Plant molecular biology (2009)
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Plants in the Nicotiana genus produce nicotine and related pyridine alkaloids as a part of their chemical defense against insect herbivores. These alkaloids are formed by condensation of a derivative of nicotinic acid, but the enzyme(s) involved in the final condensation step remains elusive. In Nicotiana tabacum, an orphan reductase A622 and its close homolog A622L are coordinately expressed in the root, upregulated by methyl jasmonate treatment, and controlled by the NIC regulatory loci specific to the biosynthesis of tobacco alkaloids. Conditional suppression of A622 and A622L by RNA interference inhibited cell growth, severely decreased the formation of all tobacco alkaloids, and concomitantly induced an accumulation of nicotinic acid beta-N-glucoside, a probable detoxification metabolite of nicotinic acid, in both hairy roots and methyl jasmonate-elicited cultured cells of tobacco. N-methylpyrrolinium cation, a precursor of the pyrrolidine moiety of nicotine, also accumulated in the A622(L)-knockdown hairy roots. We propose that the tobacco A622-like reductases of the PIP family are involved in either the formation of a nicotinic acid-derived precursor or the final condensation reaction of tobacco alkaloids.
Kajikawa, M. Hirai, N. Hashimoto, T.
Plant molecular biology.
2009.
69(3).
287-98.
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