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A Collaborative Classroom Investigation of the Evolution of SABATH Methyltransferase Substrate Preference Shifts over 120 My of Flowering Plant History.

Authors :
Dubs NM
Davis BR
de Brito V
Colebrook KC
Tiefel IJ
Nakayama MB
Huang R
Ledvina AE
Hack SJ
Inkelaar B
Martins TR
Aartila SM
Albritton KS
Almuhanna S
Arnoldi RJ
Austin CK
Battle AC
Begeman GR
Bickings CM
Bradfield JT
Branch EC
Conti EP
Cooley B
Dotson NM
Evans CJ
Fries AS
Gilbert IG
Hillier WD
Huang P
Hyde KW
Jevtovic F
Johnson MC
Keeler JL
Lam A
Leach KM
Livsey JD
Lo JT
Loney KR
Martin NW
Mazahem AS
Mokris AN
Nichols DM
Ojha R
Okorafor NN
Paris JR
Reboucas TF
Sant'Anna PB
Seitz MR
Seymour NR
Slaski LK
Stemaly SO
Ulrich BR
Van Meter EN
Young ML
Barkman TJ
Source :
Molecular biology and evolution [Mol Biol Evol] 2022 Mar 02; Vol. 39 (3).
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Next-generation sequencing has resulted in an explosion of available data, much of which remains unstudied in terms of biochemical function; yet, experimental characterization of these sequences has the potential to provide unprecedented insight into the evolution of enzyme activity. One way to make inroads into the experimental study of the voluminous data available is to engage students by integrating teaching and research in a college classroom such that eventually hundreds or thousands of enzymes may be characterized. In this study, we capitalize on this potential to focus on SABATH methyltransferase enzymes that have been shown to methylate the important plant hormone, salicylic acid (SA), to form methyl salicylate. We analyze data from 76 enzymes of flowering plant species in 23 orders and 41 families to investigate how widely conserved substrate preference is for SA methyltransferase orthologs. We find a high degree of conservation of substrate preference for SA over the structurally similar metabolite, benzoic acid, with recent switches that appear to be associated with gene duplication and at least three cases of functional compensation by paralogous enzymes. The presence of Met in active site position 150 is a useful predictor of SA methylation preference in SABATH methyltransferases but enzymes with other residues in the homologous position show the same substrate preference. Although our dense and systematic sampling of SABATH enzymes across angiosperms has revealed novel insights, this is merely the "tip of the iceberg" since thousands of sequences remain uncharacterized in this enzyme family alone.<br /> (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1537-1719
Volume :
39
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Molecular biology and evolution
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35021222
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msac007