Biosynthesis ofp-hydroxybenzoic acid in elicitor-treated carrot cell cultures
✍ Scribed by Jörg-Peter Schnitzler; Johannes Madlung; Anette Rose; Hanns Ulrich Seitz
- Book ID
- 104659480
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag
- Year
- 1992
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 702 KB
- Volume
- 188
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0032-0935
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Carrot (Daucus carota L.) cells respond to treatment with fungal elicitors by synthesizing wallbound p-hydroxybenzoic acid (p-HBA). The biosynthetic pathway to p-HBA is still hypothetical. Tracer experiments with L-phenylalanine indicate the involvement of the general phenylpropanoid pathway. 3,4 (Methylenedioxy)-cinnamic acid, an inhibitor of hydrocycinnamate: CoA ligase, inhibits the accumulation of anthocyanins in carrot, while it does not interfere with p-HBA synthesis. Thus p-HBA biosynthesis does not appear to involve CoA thioesters. In the present report the sequence of enzymic reactions leading to p-HBA was investigated in vitro using protein preparations from cells treated with a fungal elicitor from Pythium aphanidermatum (Edson) Fitzp. The side-chain degradation from p-coumaric acid to p-HBA is not analogous to the 13-oxidation of fatty acids and involves p-hydroxybenzaldehyde as an intermediate. The final step from p-hydroxybenzaldehyde to p-HBA is catalyzed by an NAD-dependent p-hydroxybenzaldehyde dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1. ). This reaction was characterized with regard to cofactor requirements, pH and temperature optima. The in-vitro formation ofp-HBA from p-coumaric acid and the activity of the hydroxybenzaldehyde dehydrogenase are moderately elicitor-induced but to a much lesser extent than phenylalanine ammonialyase, which is the starting enzyme of the general phenylpropanoid pathway.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES