ACS Appl Mater Interfaces
April 2023
Virus-like particles (VLPs) derived from bacteriophage P22 have been explored as biomimetic catalytic compartments. colocalization of enzymes within P22 VLPs uses sequential fusion to the scaffold protein, resulting in equimolar concentrations of enzyme monomers. However, control over enzyme stoichiometry, which has been shown to influence pathway flux, is key to realizing the full potential of P22 VLPs as artificial metabolons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiosci Biotechnol Biochem
August 2021
The effects of different heating conditions set to prevent food poisoning on the volatile components, lipid oxidation, and odor of yellowtail, Seriola quinqueradiata, were investigated. The heating conditions did not affect the lipid oxidation, fatty acid composition, and volatile compounds of each part of the flesh. High-temperature/short-time (90 °C for 6 min) heating led to significantly higher trimethylamine (TMA) contents in all muscle parts and higher odor intensity of TMA in dark muscle (DM) compared to those of lower temperature heating.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAmino acid transporters play a vital role in metabolism and nutrient signaling pathways. Typically, transport activity is investigated using single substrates and competing amounts of other amino acids. We used GC-MS and LC-MS for metabolic screening of oocytes expressing various human amino acid transporters incubated in complex media to establish their comprehensive substrate profiles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhile industrial nitrogen fertilizer is intrinsic to modern agriculture, it is expensive and environmentally harmful. One approach to reduce fertilizer usage is to engineer the bacterial nitrogenase enzyme complex within plant mitochondria, a location that may support enzyme function. Our current strategy involves fusing a mitochondrial targeting peptide (MTP) to nitrogenase (Nif) proteins, enabling their import to the mitochondrial matrix.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
September 2020
To engineer Mo-dependent nitrogenase function in plants, expression of the structural proteins NifD and NifK will be an absolute requirement. Although mitochondria have been established as a suitable eukaryotic environment for biosynthesis of oxygen-sensitive enzymes such as NifH, expression of NifD in this organelle has proven difficult due to cryptic NifD degradation. Here, we describe a solution to this problem.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSaturated mid-chain branched fatty acids (SMCBFAs) are widely used in the petrochemical industry for their high oxidative stability and low melting temperature. Dihydrosterculic acid (DHSA) is a cyclopropane fatty acid (CPA) that can be converted to SMCBFA hydrogenation, and therefore oils rich in DHSA are a potential feedstock for SMCBFA. Recent attempts to produce DHSA in seed oil by recombinant expression of cyclopropane fatty acid synthases (CPFASes) resulted in decreased oil content and poor germination or low DHSA accumulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEngineering high biomass plants that produce oil (triacylglycerol or TAG) in vegetative rather than seed-related tissues could help meet our growing demand for plant oil. Several studies have already demonstrated the potential of this approach by creating transgenic crop and model plants that accumulate TAG in their leaves and stems. However, TAG synthesis may compete with other important carbon and energy reserves, including carbohydrate production, and thereby limit plant growth.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Plant roots release a variety of organic compounds into the soil which alter the physical, chemical and biological properties of the rhizosphere. Root exudates are technically challenging to measure in soil because roots are difficult to access and exudates can be bound by minerals or consumed by microorganisms. Exudates are easier to measure with hydroponically-grown plants but, even here, simple compounds such as sugars and organic acids can be rapidly assimilated by microorganisms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSynthesis and accumulation of the storage lipid triacylglycerol in vegetative plant tissues has emerged as a promising strategy to meet the world's future need for vegetable oil. Sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) is a particularly attractive target crop given its high biomass, drought resistance and C photosynthesis. While oilseed-like triacylglycerol levels have been engineered in the C model plant tobacco, progress in C monocot crops has been lagging behind.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn enantioselective total synthesis of (+)-anthecularin, an antiplasmodial and antitrypanosomal sesquiterpene lactone, has been achieved in 3.9% overall yield through 18 steps from a known dibromo alcohol. The key features of the synthesis include an intramolecular Claisen-type cyclization of a formyl-protected hydroxyl lactone to construct a bicyclic intermediate with a quaternary stereogenic center and a stereocontrolled 1,2-addition of vinyllithium to a methoxyethyl-protected spirocyclic hydroxyl enone to install a tetrasubstituted asymmetric center with excellent diastereoselection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVegetable oils extracted from oilseeds are an important component of foods, but are also used in a range of high value oleochemical applications. Despite being biodegradable, nontoxic and renewable current plant oils suffer from the presence of residual polyunsaturated fatty acids that are prone to free radical formation that limit their oxidative stability, and consequently shelf life and functionality. Many decades of plant breeding have been successful in raising the oleic content to ~90%, but have come at the expense of overall field performance, including poor yields.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant storage compounds such as starch and lipids are important for human and animal nutrition as well as industry. There is interest in diverting some of the carbon stored in starch-rich organs (leaves, tubers, and cereal grains) into lipids in order to improve the energy density or nutritional properties of crops as well as providing new sources of feedstocks for food and manufacturing. Previously, we generated transgenic potato plants that accumulate up to 3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe safflower (Carthamus tinctorius L.) is considered a strongly domesticated species with a long history of cultivation. The hybridization of safflower with its wild relatives has played an important role in the evolution of cultivars and is of particular interest with regards to their production of high quality edible oils.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCollagen is ubiquitous throughout the animal kingdom, where it comprises some 28 diverse molecules that form the extracellular matrix within organisms. In the 1960s, an extracorporeal animal collagen that forms the cocoon of a small group of hymenopteran insects was postulated. Here we categorically demonstrate that the larvae of a sawfly species produce silk from three small collagen proteins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlants in the Santalaceae family, including the native cherry Exocarpos cupressiformis and sweet quandong Santalum acuminatum, accumulate ximenynic acid (trans-11-octadecen-9-ynoic acid) in their seed oil and conjugated polyacetylenic fatty acids in root tissue. Twelve full-length genes coding for microsomal Δ12 fatty acid desaturases (FADs) from the two Santalaceae species were identified by degenerate PCR. Phylogenetic analysis of the predicted amino acid sequences placed five Santalaceae FADs with Δ12 FADs, which include Arabidopsis thaliana FAD2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCancer and stem cells share the ability to silence tumor suppressors. We focused on Lefty, which encodes one of the most abundant tumor suppressors in embryonic stem (ES) cells and is not expressed in somatic cancer cells. We found that transforming growth factor β (TGF-β) induced demethylation of the Lefty B cytosine-phosphate-guanine (CpG) island and increased Lefty expression (10-200 times) in human pancreatic cancer cells and human liver cancer cells (PLC/PRF/5 and HLF).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe defensive and bioactive polyacetylenic fatty acid, 8Z-dihydromatricaria acid, is sequestered within a wide range of organisms, including plants, fungi and soldier beetles. The 8Z-dihydromatricaria acid is concentrated in the defence and accessory glands of soldier beetles to repel avian predators and protect eggs. In eukaryotes, acetylenic modifications of fatty acids are catalysed by acetylenases, which are desaturase-like enzymes that act on existing double bonds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTGF-β1 can regulate osteoblast differentiation not only positively but also negatively. However, the mechanisms of negative regulation are not well understood. We previously established the reproducible model for studying the suppression of osteoblast differentiation by repeated or high dose treatment with TGF-β1, although single low dose TGF-β1 strongly induced osteoblast differentiation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClassic studies of protein structure in the 1950s and 1960s demonstrated that green lacewing egg stalk silk possesses a rare native cross-beta sheet conformation. We have identified and sequenced the silk genes expressed by adult females of a green lacewing species. The two encoded silk proteins are 109 and 67 kDa in size and rich in serine, glycine and alanine.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Biol Macromol
October 2008
Aposthonia gurneyi, an Australian webspinner species, is a primitive insect that constructs and lives in a silken tunnel which screens it from the attentions of predators. The insect spins silk threads from many tiny spines on its forelegs to weave a filmy sheet. We found that the webspinner silk fibers have a mean diameter of only 65 nm, an order of magnitude smaller than any previously reported insect silk.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInsect Biochem Mol Biol
October 2007
Male hilarine flies (Diptera: Empididae: Empidinae) present prospective mates with silk-wrapped gifts. The silk is produced by specialised cells located in the foreleg basitarsus of the fly. In this report, we describe 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMultilocus enzyme electrophoresis of 161 Hafnia alvei isolates from 158 hosts and 3 water column samples collected in Australia revealed that this species consists of two genetically distinct groups. The two groups of H. alvei differed significantly in their genetic structure and host distribution.
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