Artículo de revista
Influence of electron transport proteins on the reactions catalyzed by Fusarium fujikuroi gibberellin monooxygenases
Date
2008-02Registration in:
PHYTOCHEMISTRY, Volume: 69,Issue: 3, Pages: 672-683, 2008
0031-9422
Author
Troncoso, Claudia
Cárcamo, José J.
Hedden, Peter
Tudzynski, Bettina
Rojas, M. Cecilia
Institutions
Abstract
The multifunctional cytochrome P450 monooxygenases P450-1 and P450-2 from Fusarium fujikuroi catalyze the formation of GA14
and GA4, respectively, in the gibberellin (GA)-biosynthetic pathway. However, the activity of these enzymes is qualitatively and quantitatively
different in mutants lacking the NADPH:cytochrome P450 oxidoreductase (CPR) compared to CPR-containing strains. 3b-
Hydroxylation, a major P450-1 activity in wild-type strains, was strongly decreased in the mutants relative to oxidation at C-6 and
C-7, while synthesis of C19-GAs as a result of oxidative cleavage of C-20 by P450-2 was almost absent whereas the C-20 alcohol, aldehyde
and carboxylic acid derivatives accumulated. Interaction of the monooxygenases with alternative electron transport proteins could
account for these different product distributions. In the absence of CPR, P450-1 activities were NADH-dependent, and stimulated by
cytochrome b5 or by added FAD. These properties as well as the decreased efficiency of P450-1 and P450-2 in the mutants are consistent
with the participation of cytochrome b5:NADH cytochrome b5 reductase as redox partner of the gibberellin monooxygenases in the
absence of CPR. We provide evidence, from either incubations of GA12 (C-20 methyl) with cultures of the mutant suspended in
[18O]H2O or maintained under an atmosphere of [18O]O2:N2 (20:80), that GA15 (C-20 alcohol) and GA24 (C-20 aldehyde) are formed
directly from dioxygen and not from hydrolysis of covalently enzyme-bound intermediates. Thus these partially oxidized GAs correspond
to intermediates of the sequential oxidation of C-20 catalyzed by P450-2.