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Folate salvage in plants: pterin aldehyde reduction is mediated by multiple non‐specific aldehyde reductases
Author(s) -
Noiriel Alexandre,
Naponelli Valeria,
Bozzo Gale G.,
Gregory Jesse F.,
Hanson Andrew D.
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
the plant journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.058
H-Index - 269
eISSN - 1365-313X
pISSN - 0960-7412
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-313x.2007.03143.x
Subject(s) - pterin , aldehyde , aldehyde dehydrogenase , aldehyde oxidase , biochemistry , chemistry , arabidopsis , enzyme , gene , cofactor , catalysis , mutant , xanthine oxidase
Summary Folates undergo oxidative cleavage in vivo , releasing a pterin aldehyde fragment that can be re‐used in folate synthesis if the aldehyde group is reduced. High levels of NADPH‐dependent reductase activity against pterin‐6‐aldehyde and its dihydro form were detected in Arabidopsis, pea and other plants; modeling predicted that the activity would maintain in vivo pterin aldehyde pools at extremely low levels (<0.2 pmol g −1 FW). Subcellular fractionation showed that the pea leaf activity is mainly cytosolic, and anion exchange chromatography revealed multiple isoforms, all of which catalyzed reduction of other aldehydes. Arabidopsis seed activity likewise comprised various isoforms. An Arabidopsis gene ( At1g10310 ) encoding a pterin aldehyde reductase was identified by searching the short‐chain dehydrogenase/reductase family for proteins predicted to be NADPH‐linked, and sharing conserved residues with reductases that mediate analogous reactions. The recombinant protein behaved as a dimer in size exclusion chromatography. In addition to pterin aldehydes, it catalyzed the reduction of diverse aromatic and aliphatic aldehydes: V max values varied <5‐fold, but K m values ranged from 3.6 μ m to 1.7 m m , those for pterin‐6‐aldehyde and dihydropterin‐6‐aldehyde being 36 and 56 μ m , respectively. Activity with dihydropterin‐6‐aldehyde was unusually high at 0°C. The At1g10310 transcript was most abundant in seeds, but, as expected for multiple isoforms, inactivating the At1g10310 gene caused only a minor change in seed pterin aldehyde reductase activity. We conclude that pterin aldehyde salvage in plants involves multiple, generalist NADPH‐linked reductases, and that the At1g10310 enzyme is typical of these and hence suitable for use in engineering studies of folate turnover.

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