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Featured researches published by Jiachen Zi.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Investigation of terpene diversification across multiple sequenced plant genomes

Alexander M. Boutanaev; Tessa Moses; Jiachen Zi; David R. Nelson; Sam T. Mugford; Reuben J. Peters; Anne Osbourn

Significance The terpenes are the largest class of plant natural products. This major class of compounds represents tremendous chemical diversity of which only a relatively small fraction has so far been accessed and used by industry. The primary drivers of terpene diversification are terpenoid synthases and cytochromes P450, which synthesize and modify terpene scaffolds. Here, focusing on these two gene families, we investigate terpene synthesis and evolution across 17 sequenced plant genomes. Our analyses shed light on the roots of terpene biosynthesis and diversification in plants. They also reveal that different genomic mechanisms of pathway assembly predominate in eudicots and monocots. Plants produce an array of specialized metabolites, including chemicals that are important as medicines, flavors, fragrances, pigments and insecticides. The vast majority of this metabolic diversity is untapped. Here we take a systematic approach toward dissecting genetic components of plant specialized metabolism. Focusing on the terpenes, the largest class of plant natural products, we investigate the basis of terpene diversity through analysis of multiple sequenced plant genomes. The primary drivers of terpene diversification are terpenoid synthase (TS) “signature” enzymes (which generate scaffold diversity), and cytochromes P450 (CYPs), which modify and further diversify these scaffolds, so paving the way for further downstream modifications. Our systematic search of sequenced plant genomes for all TS and CYP genes reveals that distinct TS/CYP gene pairs are found together far more commonly than would be expected by chance, and that certain TS/CYP pairings predominate, providing signals for key events that are likely to have shaped terpene diversity. We recover TS/CYP gene pairs for previously characterized terpene metabolic gene clusters and demonstrate new functional pairing of TSs and CYPs within previously uncharacterized clusters. Unexpectedly, we find evidence for different mechanisms of pathway assembly in eudicots and monocots; in the former, microsyntenic blocks of TS/CYP gene pairs duplicate and provide templates for the evolution of new pathways, whereas in the latter, new pathways arise by mixing and matching of individual TS and CYP genes through dynamic genome rearrangements. This is, to our knowledge, the first documented observation of the unique pattern of TS and CYP assembly in eudicots and monocots.


Annual Review of Plant Biology | 2014

To Gibberellins and Beyond! Surveying the Evolution of (Di)Terpenoid Metabolism

Jiachen Zi; Sibongile Mafu; Reuben J. Peters

The diterpenoids are classically defined by their composition--four isoprenyl units (20 carbons)--and are generally derived from [E,E,E]-geranylgeranyl diphosphate (GGPP). Such metabolism seems to be ancient and has been extensively diversified, with ∼12,000 diterpenoid natural products known. Particularly notable are the gibberellin phytohormones, whose requisite biosynthesis has provided a genetic reservoir that gave rise to not only a large superfamily of ∼7,000 diterpenoids but also, to some degree, all plant terpenoid natural products. This review focuses on the diterpenoids, particularly the defining biosynthetic characteristics of the major superfamilies defined by the cyclization and/or rearrangement of GGPP catalyzed by diterpene synthases/cyclases, although it also includes some discussion of the important subsequent elaboration in the few cases where sufficient molecular genetic information is available. It additionally addresses the array of biological activity providing the selective pressures that drive the observed gene family expansion and diversification, along with biosynthetic gene clustering.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Novel Product Chemistry from Mechanistic Analysis of ent-Copalyl Diphosphate Synthases from Plant Hormone Biosynthesis†

Kevin C. Potter; Jared Criswell; Jiachen Zi; Alisha Stubbs; Reuben J. Peters

An active-site water molecule coordinated by conserved histidine and asparagine residues seems to serve as the catalytic base in all ent-copalyl diphosphate synthases (CPSs). When these residues are substituted by alanine, the mutant CPSs produce stereochemically novel ent-8-hydroxy-CPP. Given the requisite presence of CPSs in all land plants for gibberellin phytohormone biosynthesis, such plasticity presumably underlies the observed extensive diversification of the resulting labdane-related diterpenoids.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2014

Functional conservation of the capacity for ent-kaurene biosynthesis and an associated operon in certain rhizobia

David M. Hershey; Xuan Lu; Jiachen Zi; Reuben J. Peters

Bacterial interactions with plants are accompanied by complex signal exchange processes. Previously, the nitrogen-fixing symbiotic (rhizo)bacterium Bradyrhizobium japonicum was found to carry adjacent genes encoding two sequentially acting diterpene cyclases that together transform geranylgeranyl diphosphate to ent-kaurene, the olefin precursor to the gibberellin plant hormones. Species from the three other major genera of rhizobia were found to have homologous terpene synthase genes. Cloning and functional characterization of a representative set of these enzymes confirmed the capacity of each genus to produce ent-kaurene. Moreover, comparison of their genomic context revealed that these diterpene synthases are found in a conserved operon which includes an adjacent isoprenyl diphosphate synthase, shown here to produce the geranylgeranyl diphosphate precursor, providing a critical link to central metabolism. In addition, the rest of the operon consists of enzymatic genes that presumably lead to a more elaborated diterpenoid, although the production of gibberellins was not observed. Nevertheless, it has previously been shown that the operon is selectively expressed during nodulation, and the scattered distribution of the operon via independent horizontal gene transfer within the symbiotic plasmid or genomic island shown here suggests that such diterpenoid production may modulate the interaction of these particular symbionts with their host plants.


Analytical Chemistry | 2015

Investigation of the Chemical Interface in the Soybean–Aphid and Rice–Bacteria Interactions Using MALDI-Mass Spectrometry Imaging

Adam T. Klein; Gargey B. Yagnik; Jessica Hohenstein; Zhiyuan Ji; Jiachen Zi; Malinda D. Reichert; Gustavo C. MacIntosh; Bing Yang; Reuben J. Peters; Javier Vela; Young Jin Lee

Mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) is an emerging technology for high-resolution plant biology. It has been utilized to study plant-pest interactions, but limited to the surface interfaces. Here we expand the technology to explore the chemical interactions occurring inside the plant tissues. Two sample preparation methods, imprinting and fracturing, were developed and applied, for the first time, to visualize internal metabolites of leaves in matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization (MALDI)-MSI. This is also the first time nanoparticle-based ionization was implemented to ionize diterpenoid phytochemicals that were difficult to analyze with traditional organic matrices. The interactions between rice-bacterium and soybean-aphid were investigated as two model systems to demonstrate the capability of high-resolution MSI based on MALDI. Localized molecular information on various plant- or pest-derived chemicals provided valuable insight for the molecular processes occurring during the plant-pest interactions. Specifically, salicylic acid and isoflavone based resistance was visualized in the soybean-aphid system and antibiotic diterpenoids in rice-bacterium interactions.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Blocking Deprotonation with Retention of Aromaticity in a Plant ent‐Copalyl Diphosphate Synthase Leads to Product Rearrangement

Kevin C. Potter; Jiachen Zi; Young J. Hong; Samuel Schulte; Brandi Malchow; Dean J. Tantillo; Reuben J. Peters

Substitution of a histidine, comprising part of the catalytic base group in the ent-copalyl diphosphate synthases found in all seed plants for gibberellin phytohormone metabolism, by a larger aromatic residue leads to rearrangements. Through a series of 1,2-hydride and methyl shifts of the initially formed bicycle predominant formation of (-)-kolavenyl diphosphate is observed. Further mutational analysis and quantum chemical calculations provide mechanistic insight into the basis for this profound effect on product outcome.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Biosynthesis of Lycosantalonol, a cis-Prenyl Derived Diterpenoid

Jiachen Zi; Yuki Matsuba; Young J. Hong; Alana J. Jackson; Dean J. Tantillo; Eran Pichersky; Reuben J. Peters

Terpenoid natural products are generally derived from isoprenyl diphosphate precursors with trans double-bond configuration, and no diterpenoid derived from the cisoid precursor (Z,Z,Z)-nerylneryl diphosphate (1) has yet been identified. Here further investigation of a terpenoid biosynthetic gene cluster from tomato is reported, which resulted in identification of a biosynthetic pathway from 1, in a pathway featuring a number of interesting transformations. Compound 1 is first cyclized to a tricyclene core ring structure analogous to that found in α-santalene, with the resulting diterpene termed here lycosantalene (2). Quantum chemical calculations indicate a role for the diphosphate anion coproduct in this cyclization reaction. Subsequently, the internal cis double bond of the neryl side chain in 2 is then further transformed to an α-hydroxy ketone moiety via an epoxide intermediate (3). Oxygen labeling studies indicate 3 undergoes oxidative conversion to lycosantalonol (4). Thus, in addition to elucidating the cisoid origins of 4, this work has further provided mechanistic insight into the interesting transformations required for its production.


The Plant Cell | 2016

Molecular Diversity of Terpene Synthases in the Liverwort Marchantia polymorpha.

Santosh Kumar; Chase Kempinski; Xun Zhuang; Ayla Norris; Sibongile Mafu; Jiachen Zi; Stephen A. Bell; Stephen Eric Nybo; Scott Kinison; Zuodong Jiang; Sheba Goklany; Kristin B. Linscott; Xinlu Chen; Qidong Jia; Shoshana D. Brown; John L. Bowman; Patricia C. Babbitt; Reuben J. Peters; Feng Chen; Joseph Chappell

Marchantia polymorpha, like all liverworts, accumulates a large array of terpenes, and this process depends on a unique family of terpene synthases. Marchantia polymorpha is a basal terrestrial land plant, which like most liverworts accumulates structurally diverse terpenes believed to serve in deterring disease and herbivory. Previous studies have suggested that the mevalonate and methylerythritol phosphate pathways, present in evolutionarily diverged plants, are also operative in liverworts. However, the genes and enzymes responsible for the chemical diversity of terpenes have yet to be described. In this study, we resorted to a HMMER search tool to identify 17 putative terpene synthase genes from M. polymorpha transcriptomes. Functional characterization identified four diterpene synthase genes phylogenetically related to those found in diverged plants and nine rather unusual monoterpene and sesquiterpene synthase-like genes. The presence of separate monofunctional diterpene synthases for ent-copalyl diphosphate and ent-kaurene biosynthesis is similar to orthologs found in vascular plants, pushing the date of the underlying gene duplication and neofunctionalization of the ancestral diterpene synthase gene family to >400 million years ago. By contrast, the mono- and sesquiterpene synthases represent a distinct class of enzymes, not related to previously described plant terpene synthases and only distantly so to microbial-type terpene synthases. The absence of a Mg2+ binding, aspartate-rich, DDXXD motif places these enzymes in a noncanonical family of terpene synthases.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Probing the promiscuity of ent-kaurene oxidases via combinatorial biosynthesis

Sibongile Mafu; Meirong Jia; Jiachen Zi; Dana Morrone; Yisheng Wu; Meimei Xu; Matthew L. Hillwig; Reuben J. Peters

Significance Combinatorial biosynthesis is enabled by the use of promiscuous enzymes, but also can be applied to the discovery of such biocatalysts. Here, such an approach was used for the investigation of the substrate selectivity of cytochrome P450 enzymes from diterpenoid phytohormone biosynthesis, enabling facile characterization of both multiple substrates and structural analysis of the resulting products. The discovery of one such promiscuous cytochrome P450, reported here, provides insight into the underlying structure–function relationship and also may have biotechnological implications. The substrate specificity of enzymes from natural products’ metabolism is a topic of considerable interest, with potential biotechnological use implicit in the discovery of promiscuous enzymes. However, such studies are often limited by the availability of substrates and authentic standards for identification of the resulting products. Here, a modular metabolic engineering system is used in a combinatorial biosynthetic approach toward alleviating this restriction. In particular, for studies of the multiply reactive cytochrome P450, ent-kaurene oxidase (KO), which is involved in production of the diterpenoid plant hormone gibberellin. Many, but not all, plants make a variety of related diterpenes, whose structural similarity to ent-kaurene makes them potential substrates for KO. Use of combinatorial biosynthesis enabled analysis of more than 20 such potential substrates, as well as structural characterization of 12 resulting unknown products, providing some insight into the underlying structure–function relationships. These results highlight the utility of this approach for investigating the substrate specificity of enzymes from complex natural products’ biosynthesis.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Biosynthesis of the Diterpenoid Lycosantalonol via Nerylneryl Diphosphate in Solanum lycopersicum

Yuki Matsuba; Jiachen Zi; A. Daniel Jones; Reuben J. Peters; Eran Pichersky

We recently reported that three genes involved in the biosynthesis of monoterpenes in trichomes, a cis-prenyltransferase named neryl diphosphate synthase 1 (NDPS1) and two terpene synthases (TPS19 and TPS20), are present in close proximity to each other at the tip of chromosome 8 in the genome of the cultivated tomato (Solanum lycopersicum). This terpene gene “cluster” also contains a second cis-prenyltransferase gene (CPT2), three other TPS genes, including TPS21, and the cytochrome P450-oxidoreductase gene CYP71BN1. CPT2 encodes a neryneryl diphosphate synthase. Co-expression in E. coli of CPT2 and TPS21 led to the formation of the diterpene lycosantalene, and co-expression in E. coli of CPT2, TPS21 and CYP71BN1 led to the formation of lycosantalonol, an oxidation product of lycosantalene. Here we show that maximal expression of all three genes occurs in the petiolule part of the leaf, but little expression of these genes occurs in the trichomes present on the petiolules. While lycosantalene or lycosantalonol cannot be detected in the petiolules of wild-type plants (or anywhere else in the plant), lycosantalene and lycosantalonol are detected in petiolules of transgenic tomato plants expressing CPT2 under the control of the 35S CaMV promoter. These results suggest that lycosantalene and lycosantalonol are produced in the petiolules and perhaps in other tissues of wild-type plants, but that low rate of synthesis, controlled by the rate-limiting enzyme CPT2, results in product levels that are too low for detection under our current methodology. It is also possible that these compounds are further modified in the plant. The involvement of CPT2, TPS21 and CYP71BN1 in a diterpenoid biosynthetic pathway outside the trichomes, together with the involvement of other genes in the cluster in the synthesis of monoterpenes in trichomes, indicates that this cluster is further evolving into “sub-clusters” with unique biochemical, and likely physiological, roles.

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Sibongile Mafu

University of California

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Young J. Hong

University of California

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A. Daniel Jones

Michigan State University

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