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Development of Transcriptomic Resources for Interrogating the Biosynthesis of Monoterpene Indole Alkaloids in Medicinal Plant Species

The natural diversity of plant metabolism has long been a source for human medicines. One group of plant-derived compounds, the monoterpene indole alkaloids (MIAs), includes well-documented therapeutic agents used in the treatment of cancer (vinblastine, vincristine, camptothecin), hypertension (res...

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Autores principales: Góngora-Castillo, Elsa, Childs, Kevin L., Fedewa, Greg, Hamilton, John P., Liscombe, David K., Magallanes-Lundback, Maria, Mandadi, Kranthi K., Nims, Ezekiel, Runguphan, Weerawat, Vaillancourt, Brieanne, Varbanova-Herde, Marina, DellaPenna, Dean, McKnight, Thomas D., O’Connor, Sarah, Buell, C. Robin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3530497/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23300689
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0052506
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author Góngora-Castillo, Elsa
Childs, Kevin L.
Fedewa, Greg
Hamilton, John P.
Liscombe, David K.
Magallanes-Lundback, Maria
Mandadi, Kranthi K.
Nims, Ezekiel
Runguphan, Weerawat
Vaillancourt, Brieanne
Varbanova-Herde, Marina
DellaPenna, Dean
McKnight, Thomas D.
O’Connor, Sarah
Buell, C. Robin
author_facet Góngora-Castillo, Elsa
Childs, Kevin L.
Fedewa, Greg
Hamilton, John P.
Liscombe, David K.
Magallanes-Lundback, Maria
Mandadi, Kranthi K.
Nims, Ezekiel
Runguphan, Weerawat
Vaillancourt, Brieanne
Varbanova-Herde, Marina
DellaPenna, Dean
McKnight, Thomas D.
O’Connor, Sarah
Buell, C. Robin
author_sort Góngora-Castillo, Elsa
collection PubMed
description The natural diversity of plant metabolism has long been a source for human medicines. One group of plant-derived compounds, the monoterpene indole alkaloids (MIAs), includes well-documented therapeutic agents used in the treatment of cancer (vinblastine, vincristine, camptothecin), hypertension (reserpine, ajmalicine), malaria (quinine), and as analgesics (7-hydroxymitragynine). Our understanding of the biochemical pathways that synthesize these commercially relevant compounds is incomplete due in part to a lack of molecular, genetic, and genomic resources for the identification of the genes involved in these specialized metabolic pathways. To address these limitations, we generated large-scale transcriptome sequence and expression profiles for three species of Asterids that produce medicinally important MIAs: Camptotheca acuminata, Catharanthus roseus, and Rauvolfia serpentina. Using next generation sequencing technology, we sampled the transcriptomes of these species across a diverse set of developmental tissues, and in the case of C. roseus, in cultured cells and roots following elicitor treatment. Through an iterative assembly process, we generated robust transcriptome assemblies for all three species with a substantial number of the assembled transcripts being full or near-full length. The majority of transcripts had a related sequence in either UniRef100, the Arabidopsis thaliana predicted proteome, or the Pfam protein domain database; however, we also identified transcripts that lacked similarity with entries in either database and thereby lack a known function. Representation of known genes within the MIA biosynthetic pathway was robust. As a diverse set of tissues and treatments were surveyed, expression abundances of transcripts in the three species could be estimated to reveal transcripts associated with development and response to elicitor treatment. Together, these transcriptomes and expression abundance matrices provide a rich resource for understanding plant specialized metabolism, and promotes realization of innovative production systems for plant-derived pharmaceuticals.
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spelling pubmed-35304972013-01-08 Development of Transcriptomic Resources for Interrogating the Biosynthesis of Monoterpene Indole Alkaloids in Medicinal Plant Species Góngora-Castillo, Elsa Childs, Kevin L. Fedewa, Greg Hamilton, John P. Liscombe, David K. Magallanes-Lundback, Maria Mandadi, Kranthi K. Nims, Ezekiel Runguphan, Weerawat Vaillancourt, Brieanne Varbanova-Herde, Marina DellaPenna, Dean McKnight, Thomas D. O’Connor, Sarah Buell, C. Robin PLoS One Research Article The natural diversity of plant metabolism has long been a source for human medicines. One group of plant-derived compounds, the monoterpene indole alkaloids (MIAs), includes well-documented therapeutic agents used in the treatment of cancer (vinblastine, vincristine, camptothecin), hypertension (reserpine, ajmalicine), malaria (quinine), and as analgesics (7-hydroxymitragynine). Our understanding of the biochemical pathways that synthesize these commercially relevant compounds is incomplete due in part to a lack of molecular, genetic, and genomic resources for the identification of the genes involved in these specialized metabolic pathways. To address these limitations, we generated large-scale transcriptome sequence and expression profiles for three species of Asterids that produce medicinally important MIAs: Camptotheca acuminata, Catharanthus roseus, and Rauvolfia serpentina. Using next generation sequencing technology, we sampled the transcriptomes of these species across a diverse set of developmental tissues, and in the case of C. roseus, in cultured cells and roots following elicitor treatment. Through an iterative assembly process, we generated robust transcriptome assemblies for all three species with a substantial number of the assembled transcripts being full or near-full length. The majority of transcripts had a related sequence in either UniRef100, the Arabidopsis thaliana predicted proteome, or the Pfam protein domain database; however, we also identified transcripts that lacked similarity with entries in either database and thereby lack a known function. Representation of known genes within the MIA biosynthetic pathway was robust. As a diverse set of tissues and treatments were surveyed, expression abundances of transcripts in the three species could be estimated to reveal transcripts associated with development and response to elicitor treatment. Together, these transcriptomes and expression abundance matrices provide a rich resource for understanding plant specialized metabolism, and promotes realization of innovative production systems for plant-derived pharmaceuticals. Public Library of Science 2012-12-26 /pmc/articles/PMC3530497/ /pubmed/23300689 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0052506 Text en © 2012 Góngora-Castillo et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Góngora-Castillo, Elsa
Childs, Kevin L.
Fedewa, Greg
Hamilton, John P.
Liscombe, David K.
Magallanes-Lundback, Maria
Mandadi, Kranthi K.
Nims, Ezekiel
Runguphan, Weerawat
Vaillancourt, Brieanne
Varbanova-Herde, Marina
DellaPenna, Dean
McKnight, Thomas D.
O’Connor, Sarah
Buell, C. Robin
Development of Transcriptomic Resources for Interrogating the Biosynthesis of Monoterpene Indole Alkaloids in Medicinal Plant Species
title Development of Transcriptomic Resources for Interrogating the Biosynthesis of Monoterpene Indole Alkaloids in Medicinal Plant Species
title_full Development of Transcriptomic Resources for Interrogating the Biosynthesis of Monoterpene Indole Alkaloids in Medicinal Plant Species
title_fullStr Development of Transcriptomic Resources for Interrogating the Biosynthesis of Monoterpene Indole Alkaloids in Medicinal Plant Species
title_full_unstemmed Development of Transcriptomic Resources for Interrogating the Biosynthesis of Monoterpene Indole Alkaloids in Medicinal Plant Species
title_short Development of Transcriptomic Resources for Interrogating the Biosynthesis of Monoterpene Indole Alkaloids in Medicinal Plant Species
title_sort development of transcriptomic resources for interrogating the biosynthesis of monoterpene indole alkaloids in medicinal plant species
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3530497/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23300689
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0052506
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