John Crock
Washington State University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by John Crock.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998
Christopher L. Steele; John Crock; Jörg Bohlmann; Rodney Croteau
Grand fir (Abies grandis) has been developed as a model system for the study of oleoresin production in response to stem wounding and insect attack. The turpentine fraction of the oleoresin was shown to contain at least 38 sesquiterpenes that represent 12.5% of the turpentine, with the monoterpenes comprising the remainder. Assays of cell-free extracts from grand fir stem with farnesyl diphosphate as substrate indicated that the constitutive sesquiterpene synthases produced the same sesquiterpenes found in the oleoresin and that, in response to wounding, only two new products were synthesized, δ-cadinene and (E)-α-bisabolene. A similarity based cloning strategy yielded two new cDNA species from a stem cDNA library that, when expressed in Escherichia coli and the gene products subsequently assayed, yielded a remarkable number of sesquiterpene products. The encoded enzymes have been named δ-selinene synthase and γ-humulene synthase based on the principal products formed; however, each enzyme synthesizes three major products and produces 34 and 52 total sesquiterpenes, respectively, thereby accounting for many of the sesquiterpenes of the oleoresin. The deduced amino acid sequence of the δ-selinene synthase cDNA open reading frame encodes a protein of 581 residues (at 67.6 kDa), whereas that of the γ-humulene synthase cDNA encodes a protein of 593 residues (at 67.9 kDa). The two amino acid sequences are 83% similar and 65% identical to each other and range in similarity from 65 to 67% and in identity from 43 to 46% when compared with the known sequences of monoterpene and diterpene synthases from grand fir. Although the two sesquiterpene synthases from this gymnosperm do not very closely resemble terpene synthases from angiosperm species (52–56% similarity and 26–30% identity), there are clustered regions of significant apparent homology between the enzymes of these two plant classes. The multi-step, multi-product reactions catalyzed by the sesquiterpene synthases from grand fir are among the most complex of any terpenoid cyclase thus far described.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1997
John Crock; Mark R. Wildung; Rodney Croteau
(E)-beta-Farnesene is a sesquiterpene semiochemical that is used extensively by both plants and insects for communication. This acyclic olefin is found in the essential oil of peppermint (Mentha x piperita) and can be synthesized from farnesyl diphosphate by a cell-free extract of peppermint secretory gland cells. A cDNA from peppermint encoding (E)-beta-farnesene synthase was cloned by random sequencing of an oil gland library and was expressed in Escherichia coli. The corresponding synthase has a deduced size of 63.8 kDa and requires a divalent cation for catalysis (Km for Mg2+ approximately 150 microM; Km for Mn2+ approximately 7 microM). The sesquiterpenoids produced by the recombinant enzyme, as determined by radio-GC and GC-MS, are (E)-beta-farnesene (85%), (Z)-beta-farnesene (8%), and delta-cadinene (5%) with the native C15 substrate farnesyl diphosphate (Km approximately 0.6 microM; Vrel = 100) and Mg2+ as cofactor, and (E)-beta-farnesene (98%) and (Z)-beta-farnesene (2%) with Mn2+ as cofactor (Vrel = 80). With the C10 analog, GDP, as substrate (Km = 1.5 microM; Vrel = 3 with Mg2+ as cofactor), the monoterpenes limonene (48%), terpinolene (15%), and myrcene (15%) are produced.
Phytochemistry | 2002
Yu Cai; Jun-Wei Jia; John Crock; Zhi-Xin Lin; Xiao-Ya Chen; Rodney Croteau
Abstract An homology-based cloning strategy yielded a full-length cDNA from Artemisia annua that encoded a protein of 60.3 kDa which resembled a sesquiterpene synthase in sequence. Heterologous expression of the gene in Escherichia coli provided a soluble recombinant enzyme capable of catalyzing the divalent metal ion-dependent conversion of farnesyl diphosphate to β-caryophyllene, a sesquiterpene olefin found in the essential oil of A. annua. In reaction parameters and kinetic properties, β-caryophyllene synthase resembles other sesquiterpene synthases of angiosperms. The β-caryophyllene synthase gene is expressed in most plant tissues during early development, and is induced in mature tissue in response to fungal elicitor thus suggesting a role for β-caryophyllene in plant defense.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1998
Jörg Bohlmann; John Crock; Reinhard Jetter; Rodney Croteau
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1999
Per Mercke; John Crock; Rodney Croteau; Peter Brodelius
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1998
Sheila M. Colby; John Crock; Barbara Dowdle-Rizzo; Peggy G. Lemaux; Rodney Croteau
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1999
Jun-Wei Jia; John Crock; Shan Lu; Rodney Croteau; Xiao-Ya Chen
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1996
Klaus-Peter Adam; John Crock; Rodney Croteau
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1993
William R. Alonso; John Crock; R. Croteau
Archive | 1999
Rodney Croteau; Jörg Bohlmann; John Crock; Christopher L. Steele