The mechanism of the recombinant tomato allene oxide synthase (LeAOS3, CYP74C3) was studied. Incubations of linoleic acid (9S)-hydroperoxide with dilute suspensions of LeAOS3 (10-20 s, 0 °C) yield mostly the expected allene oxide (12Z)-9,10-epoxy-10,12-octadecadienoic acid (9,10-EOD), which was detected as its methanol-trapping product. In contrast, the relative yield of 9,10-EOD progressively decreased when the incubations were performed with fourfold, tenfold, or 80-fold larger amounts of LeAOS3, while -ketol and the cyclopentenone rac-cis-10-oxo-11-phytoenoic acid (10-oxo-PEA) became the predominant products. Both the -ketol and 10-oxo-PEA were also produced when LeAOS3 was exposed to preformed 9,10-EOD, which was generated by maize allene oxide synthase (CYP74A). LeAOS3 also converted linoleic acid (13S)-hydroperoxide into the corresponding allene oxide, but with about tenfold lower yield of cyclopentenone. The results indicate that in contrast to the ordinary allene oxide synthases (CYP74A subfamily), LeAOS3 (CYP74C subfamily) is a multifunctional enzyme, catalyzing not only the synthesis, but also the hydrolysis and cyclization of allene oxide.
Keywords: allene oxide synthase • enzyme catalysis • metabolism • oxylipins • tomato
3 comments:
Hi Bong Thavrak,
Great job. You are one of the few Cambodians I've seen doing biochemical research. Are you also doing genetic engineering, aka directed evolution like Error-prone PCR or DNA shuffling?
Thanks for visiting and comment.
Yes, I did on genetic engineering to insert a new gene to rice plant...
Do you do DNA manipulation? I just wrote a DNA shuffling protocol. Not sure if you're interested.
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