MGPP-Logo U. Krämer M. Piotrowski O. Soltani B. Pietzenuk Vinod Kumar Natalia Wozniak Usman Anwer Fakultät

Graduiertenkolleg MiCon (nur Englisch)

 

Mikrobenbaum

This is our winner of this year's MiCon agar art contest 2022. Congratulations to Jan Plewka-Mandelkow from @PlantAdaption for his great microbe tree (different bacteria on agar medium).

 

Biosynthesis of the metal chelator molecule nicotianamine

Background and preliminary work: The Krämer group has discovered that a plant membrane transport protein, Arabidopsis thaliana Zinc-Induced Facilitator 1 (ZIF1), mediates the vacuolar sequestration of nicotianamine (NA). NA is a non-proteinogenic amino acid that acts as a high-affinity metal chelator molecule in metal homeostasis of plants and filamentous fungi. Furthermore, NA has promising anti-hypertensive pharmacological activity. Roots of Arabidopsis thaliana overexpressing AtZIF1 accumulate ~30-fold enhanced NA concentrations. Nicotianamine synthases (NAS) of plants and filamentous fungi convert three S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) molecules to one NA molecule. NAS catalyses several consecutive reactions in a single active site, as concluded based on crystal structures of an NAS-like archaeal thermoNAS. Its reaction product, thermoNA, contains a glutamate instead of the terminal SAM-derived unique azetidine-2-carboxylate moiety that is characteristic of NA.

NAS proteins were first identified in barley and other plant species, and only later in filamentous fungi. More recently, NAS-like genes were found to be part of a Pseudomonas aeruginosa operon essential for survival on human airway mucus secretions, and to act in the synthesis of an NA-related compound of Staphylococcus aureus that utilizes only a single SAM molecule. Interestingly, no proteins acting in the catabolism of NA are known. A possible NA breakdown product – the toxic proline analogue and allelopathic chemical azetidine-2-carboxylate – was detected in only a few plants to date.
 

Figure 1

Work planned: The proposed project will address structure-function relationships of fungal and plant NAS proteins and explore avenues for enhancing cellular NA production. To identify residues acting in intermediate formation and azetidine ring closure, a combination of site-directed mutagenesis and biochemical in vitro activity assays will be conducted based on protein structural modelling (cooperation with Eckhard Hofmann; see Figure on the right). Furthermore, the respective roles in biosynthetic efficacy of a possible membrane association of some NAS proteins and of product compartmentalization will be compared between plant and fungal NA production systems (cooperation with Ulrich Kück). In an international collaboration (Pascal Arnoux, France), we will address the unknown physiological functions of archael and bacterial NA-like metabolites. In preparation for this project, the Krämer group has established heterologous expression of NAS proteins in E. coli, their purification and in vitro enzyme assays, as well as site-directed mutagenesis of NAS proteins.
 

Figure 2

 

Selected references:

  • Dreyfus C, Lemaire D, Mari S, Pignol D, & Arnoux P (2009) Crystallographic snapshots of iterative substrate translocations during nicotianamine synthesis in Archaea. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 106(38):16180-16184.
  • Ghssein G, et al. (2016) Biosynthesis of a broad-spectrum nicotianamine-like metallophore in Staphylococcus aureus. Science 352(6289):1105-1109.
  • Haydon MJ, et al. (2012) Vacuolar nicotianamine has critical and distinct roles under iron deficiency and for zinc sequestration in Arabidopsis. Plant Cell 24(2):724-737.

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Mitarbeiter

  • Markus Piotrowski
    PD Dr. Markus Piotrowski
    Privatdozent, Akadem. Rat
    Büro: 3/49 (0234/32-24290)
    Labor: 3/29 (0234/32-24275)
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  • Myra Schmidtke
    Myra Schmidtke, Doktorandin
    Büro: 3/62 (0234/32-24274)
    Labor: 3/29 (0234/32-24275)
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  • Jan Plewka-Mandelkow
    Jan Plewka-Mandelkow, Doktorand
    Büro: 3/62 (0234/32-24274)
    Labor: 3/64 (0234/32-24296)
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  • Ute Krämer
    Prof. Dr. Ute Krämer
    Lehrstuhlleitung
    Büro: 3/30  (0234/32-28004)
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