Fernando Geu-Flores
University of Copenhagen
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Featured researches published by Fernando Geu-Flores.
Trends in Plant Science | 2010
Ida E. Sønderby; Fernando Geu-Flores; Barbara Ann Halkier
Glucosinolates are sulfur-rich secondary metabolites characteristic of the Brassicales order with important biological and economic roles in plant defense and human nutrition. Application of systems biology tools continues to identify genes involved in the biosynthesis of glucosinolates. Recent progress includes genes in all three phases of the pathway, i.e. side-chain elongation of precursor amino acids, formation of the core glucosinolate structure and side-chain decoration. Major breakthroughs include the ability to produce glucosinolates in Nicotiana benthamiana, the finding that specific glucosinolates play a key role in Arabidopsis innate immune response, and a better understanding of the link between primary sulfur metabolism and glucosinolate biosynthesis.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2007
Fernando Geu-Flores; Hussam Hassan Nour-Eldin; Morten Thrane Nielsen; Barbara Ann Halkier
We present a method that allows simultaneous fusion and cloning of multiple PCR products in a rapid and efficient manner. The procedure is based on the use of PCR primers that contain a single deoxyuridine residue near their 5′ end. Treatment of the PCR products with a commercial deoxyuridine-excision reagent generates long 3′ overhangs designed to specifically complement each other. The combination of this principle with the improved USER cloning technique provides a simple, fast and very efficient method to simultaneously fuse and clone multiple PCR fragments into a vector of interest. Around 90% positive clones were obtained when three different PCR products were fused and cloned into a USER-compatible vector in a simple procedure that, apart from the single PCR amplification step and the bacterial transformation, took approximately one hour. We expect this method to replace overlapping PCR and the use of type IIS restriction enzymes in many of their applications.
Nature Chemical Biology | 2009
Fernando Geu-Flores; Morten Thrane Nielsen; Majse Nafisi; Morten Emil Møldrup; Carl Erik Olsen; Mohammed Saddik Motawia; Barbara Ann Halkier
Consumption of cruciferous vegetables is associated with reduced risk of developing cancer, a phenomenon attributed to glucosinolates, which are characteristic of these vegetables. We report production of the bioactive benzylglucosinolate in the noncruciferous plant Nicotiana benthamiana through metabolic engineering. The study includes identification of gamma-glutamyl peptidase 1 (GGP1), which substantially increased glucosinolate production by metabolizing an accumulating glutathione conjugate, an activity not previously described for glucosinolate biosynthesis or for proteins containing glutamine amidotransferase domains.
Methods of Molecular Biology | 2010
Hussam Hassan Nour-Eldin; Fernando Geu-Flores; Barbara Ann Halkier
The explosive development of the field of molecular biology has led to the need for simpler and more efficient cloning techniques. These requirements are elegantly met by the ligation-free cloning technique called USER cloning. USER cloning is suitable not only for everyday and high-throughput cloning but also for the one-step construction of complex DNA constructs, which can be achieved in a variant called USER fusion. In this chapter, we present a general protocol for converting any vector into a USER-compatible vector, together with protocols for both USER cloning and USER fusion.
The Plant Cell | 2011
Fernando Geu-Flores; Morten Emil Møldrup; Christoph Böttcher; Carl Erik Olsen; Dierk Scheel; Barbara Ann Halkier
This work demonstrates that glutathione is the sulfur donor for the biosynthesis of glucosinolates, plant compounds that play important roles in agriculture, ecology, and human health. Furthermore, it identifies the enzymes that act immediately downstream of the sulfur donation step (γ-glutamylpeptidases), thereby assigning a previously unknown in planta function to this family of enzymes. The defense-related plant metabolites known as glucosinolates play important roles in agriculture, ecology, and human health. Despite an advanced biochemical understanding of the glucosinolate pathway, the source of the reduced sulfur atom in the core glucosinolate structure remains unknown. Recent evidence has pointed toward GSH, which would require further involvement of a GSH conjugate processing enzyme. In this article, we show that an Arabidopsis thaliana mutant impaired in the production of the γ-glutamyl peptidases GGP1 and GGP3 has altered glucosinolate levels and accumulates up to 10 related GSH conjugates. We also show that the double mutant is impaired in the production of camalexin and accumulates high amounts of the camalexin intermediate GS-IAN upon induction. In addition, we demonstrate that the cellular and subcellular localization of GGP1 and GGP3 matches that of known glucosinolate and camalexin enzymes. Finally, we show that the purified recombinant GGPs can metabolize at least nine of the 10 glucosinolate-related GSH conjugates as well as GS-IAN. Our results demonstrate that GSH is the sulfur donor in the biosynthesis of glucosinolates and establish an in vivo function for the only known cytosolic plant γ-glutamyl peptidases, namely, the processing of GSH conjugates in the glucosinolate and camalexin pathways.
Planta | 2009
Fernando Geu-Flores; Carl Erik Olsen; Barbara Ann Halkier
Glucosinolates are amino acid-derived secondary metabolites present in cruciferous plants. Glucosinolates and their hydrolysis products are involved in defence against insects and pathogens, but are also known for their characteristic flavor and their cancer-preventive and antibacterial properties. This wide range of bioactivities has prompted a desire to engineer glucosinolates into non-cruciferous plants. We report the one-step transfer of the last three steps of the benzylglucosinolate pathway (comprising the C–S lyase, glycosyltransferase and sulfotransferase) from Arabidopsis to tobacco. This was achieved using an expression construct consisting of a single 2A polycistronic open reading frame, which allowed the expression of the three coding-sequences from a single promoter. When compared to wildtype plants, transgenic tobacco lines showed increased ability to convert the intermediate phenylacetothiohydroxamate to benzylglucosinolate upon in vivo feeding. Enzymatic assays using plant extracts demonstrated that the individual activities required for this conversion were enhanced in the transgenic plants. The relatively high conversion by wildtype plants in feeding assays supports the hypothesis that the last part of the glucosinolate pathway was recruited from existing detoxification reactions. Immunoblots confirmed that individual proteins were being successfully produced from the 2A polycistronic open reading frame, albeit fusion proteins could also be detected. In summary, we transferred the last three steps of the benzylglucosinolate pathway to tobacco as a first step towards engineering glucosinolates into non-cruciferous plants.
Plant Physiology | 2013
Sébastien Besseau; Franziska Kellner; Arnaud Lanoue; Antje M. K. Thamm; Vonny Salim; Bernd Schneider; Fernando Geu-Flores; René Höfer; Grégory Guirimand; Anthony Guihur; Audrey Oudin; Gaëlle Glévarec; Emilien Foureau; Nicolas Papon; Marc Clastre; Nathalie Giglioli-Guivarc’h; Benoit St-Pierre; Danièle Werck-Reichhart; Vincent Burlat; Vincenzo De Luca; Sarah E. O’Connor; Vincent Courdavault
A newly identified cytochrome P450 isoform initiates the synthesis of valuable alkaloids in leaves of Catharanthus roseus by hydroxylating tabersonine. Hydroxylation of tabersonine at the C-16 position, catalyzed by tabersonine 16-hydroxylase (T16H), initiates the synthesis of vindoline that constitutes the main alkaloid accumulated in leaves of Catharanthus roseus. Over the last decade, this reaction has been associated with CYP71D12 cloned from undifferentiated C. roseus cells. In this study, we isolated a second cytochrome P450 (CYP71D351) displaying T16H activity. Biochemical characterization demonstrated that CYP71D12 and CYP71D351 both exhibit high affinity for tabersonine and narrow substrate specificity, making of T16H, to our knowledge, the first alkaloid biosynthetic enzyme displaying two isoforms encoded by distinct genes characterized to date in C. roseus. However, both genes dramatically diverge in transcript distribution in planta. While CYP71D12 (T16H1) expression is restricted to flowers and undifferentiated cells, the CYP71D351 (T16H2) expression profile is similar to the other vindoline biosynthetic genes reaching a maximum in young leaves. Moreover, transcript localization by carborundum abrasion and RNA in situ hybridization demonstrated that CYP71D351 messenger RNAs are specifically located to leaf epidermis, which also hosts the next step of vindoline biosynthesis. Comparison of high- and low-vindoline-accumulating C. roseus cultivars also highlights the direct correlation between CYP71D351 transcript and vindoline levels. In addition, CYP71D351 down-regulation mediated by virus-induced gene silencing reduces vindoline accumulation in leaves and redirects the biosynthetic flux toward the production of unmodified alkaloids at the C-16 position. All these data demonstrate that tabersonine 16-hydroxylation is orchestrated in an organ-dependent manner by two genes including CYP71D351, which encodes the specific T16H isoform acting in the foliar vindoline biosynthesis.
Nature Chemical Biology | 2016
Hajo Kries; Lorenzo Caputi; Clare E. M. Stevenson; Mohammed O Kamileen; Nathaniel H. Sherden; Fernando Geu-Flores; David M. Lawson; Sarah E. O'Connor
The carbon skeleton of ecologically and pharmacologically important iridoid monoterpenes is formed in a reductive cyclization reaction unrelated to canonical terpene cyclization. Here we report the crystal structure of the recently discovered iridoid cyclase (Catharanthus roseus) bound to a mechanism-inspired inhibitor that illuminates substrate binding and catalytic function of the enzyme. Key features that distinguish iridoid synthase from its close homologue, progesterone 5β-reductase, are highlighted.
Phytochemistry Reviews | 2006
Majse Nafisi; Ida E. Sønderby; Bjarne Gram Hansen; Fernando Geu-Flores; Hussam Hassan Nour-Eldin; Morten H. H. Nørholm; Niels Bjerg Jensen; Jing Li; Barbara Ann Halkier
Characteristic of cruciferous plants is the synthesis of nitrogen- and sulfur-rich compounds, such as glucosinolates and indole alkaloids. The intact glucosinolates have limited biological activity, but give rise to an array of bio-active breakdown products when hydrolysed by endogenous β-thioglucosidases (myrosinases) upon tissue disruption. Both glucosinolates and indole alkaloids constitute an important part of the defence of plants against herbivores and pathogens, with the difference that a basal level of glucosinolates is ever-present in the plant whereas indole alkaloids are true phytoalexins that are de novo synthesised upon pathogen attack. With the completion of the genome sequence of the model plant, Arabidopsis thaliana, which is a crucifer, many genes involved in the biosynthesis of glucosinolates and indole alkaloids have been identified and cytochromes P450 are key players in these pathways. In the present review, we will focus on the cytochromes P450 in the biosynthesis of both groups of compounds. Their functional roles and regulation will be discussed.
Chemistry & Biology | 2014
Stephanie Lindner; Fernando Geu-Flores; Stefan Bräse; Nathaniel H. Sherden; Sarah E. O’Connor
Summary The core structure of the iridoid monoterpenes is formed by a unique cyclization reaction. The enzyme that catalyzes this reaction, iridoid synthase, is mechanistically distinct from other terpene cyclases. Here we describe the synthesis of two substrate analogs to probe the mechanism of iridoid synthase. Enzymatic assay of these substrate analogs along with clues from the product profile of the native substrate strongly suggest that iridoid synthase utilizes a Michael reaction to achieve cyclization. This improved mechanistic understanding will facilitate the exploitation of the potential of iridoid synthase to synthesize new cyclic compounds from nonnatural substrates.