Katherine A. Elliott
Norwich Research Park
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Publication
Featured researches published by Katherine A. Elliott.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005
Colin Hanfrey; Katherine A. Elliott; Marina Franceschetti; Melinda J. Mayer; Crista Illingworth; Anthony J. Michael
A novel form of translational regulation is described for the key polyamine biosynthetic enzyme S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase (AdoMetDC). Plant AdoMetDC mRNA 5′ leaders contain two highly conserved overlapping upstream open reading frames (uORFs): the 5′ tiny and 3′ small uORFs. We demonstrate that the small uORF-encoded peptide is responsible for constitutively repressing downstream translation of the AdoMetDC proenzyme ORF in the absence of increased polyamine levels. This first example of a sequence-dependent uORF to be described in plants is also functional in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The tiny uORF is required for normal polyamine-responsive AdoMetDC mRNA translation, and we propose that this is achieved by control of ribosomal recognition of the occluded small uORF, either by ribosomal leaky scanning or by programmed -1 frameshifting. In vitro expression demonstrated that both the tiny and the small uORFs are translated. This tiny/small uORF configuration is highly conserved from moss to Arabidopsis thaliana, and a more diverged tiny/small uORF arrangement is found in the AdoMetDC mRNA 5′ leader of the single-celled green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, indicating an ancient origin for the uORFs.
The Plant Cell | 2009
Jie Luo; Christine Fuell; Adrian J. Parr; Lionel Hill; Paul Bailey; Katherine A. Elliott; Shirley A. Fairhurst; Cathie Martin; Anthony J. Michael
Hydroxycinnamic acid amides are a class of secondary metabolites distributed widely in plants. We have identified two sinapoyl spermidine derivatives, N-((4′-O-glycosyl)-sinapoyl),N′-sinapoylspermidine and N,N′-disinapoylspermidine, which comprise the two major polyamine conjugates that accumulate in Arabidopsis thaliana seed. Using metabolic profiling of knockout mutants to elucidate the functions of members of the BAHD acyltransferase family in Arabidopsis, we have also identified two genes encoding spermidine disinapoyl transferase (SDT) and spermidine dicoumaroyl transferase (SCT) activities. At2g23510, which is expressed mainly in seeds, encodes a spermidine sinapoyl CoA acyltransferase (SDT) that is required for the production of disinapoyl spermidine and its glucoside in Arabidopsis seed. The structurally related BAHD enzyme encoded by At2g25150 is expressed specifically in roots and has spermidine coumaroyl CoA acyltransferase (SCT) activity both in vitro and in vivo.
Plant Physiology and Biochemistry | 2010
Christine Fuell; Katherine A. Elliott; Colin Hanfrey; Marina Franceschetti; Anthony J. Michael
Polyamine biosynthesis in plants differs from other eukaryotes because of the contribution of genes from the cyanobacterial ancestor of the chloroplast. Plants possess an additional biosynthetic route for putrescine formation from arginine, consisting of the enzymes arginine decarboxylase, agmatine iminohydrolase and N-carbamoylputrescine amidohydrolase, derived from the cyanobacterial ancestor. They also synthesize an unusual tetraamine, thermospermine, that has important developmental roles and which is evolutionarily more ancient than spermine in plants and algae. Single-celled green algae have lost the arginine route and are dependent, like other eukaryotes, on putrescine biosynthesis from the ornithine. Some plants like Arabidopsis thaliana and the moss Physcomitrella patens have lost ornithine decarboxylase and are thus dependent on the arginine route. With its dependence on the arginine route, and the pivotal role of thermospermine in growth and development, Arabidopsis represents the most specifically plant mode of polyamine biosynthesis amongst eukaryotes. A number of plants and algae are also able to synthesize unusual polyamines such as norspermidine, norspermine and longer polyamines, and biosynthesis of these amines likely depends on novel aminopropyltransferases similar to thermospermine synthase, with relaxed substrate specificity. Plants have a rich repertoire of polyamine-based secondary metabolites, including alkaloids and hydroxycinnamic amides, and a number of polyamine-acylating enzymes have been recently characterised. With the genetic tools available for Arabidopsis and other model plants and algae, and the increasing capabilities of comparative genomics, the biological roles of polyamines can now be addressed across the plant evolutionary lineage.
FEBS Letters | 2003
Crista Illingworth; Melinda J. Mayer; Katherine A. Elliott; Colin Hanfrey; Nicholas J. Walton; Anthony J. Michael
We functionally identified the last remaining step in the plant polyamine biosynthetic pathway by expressing an Arabidopsis thaliana agmatine iminohydrolase cDNA in yeast. Inspection of the whole pathway suggests that the arginine decarboxylase, agmatine iminohydrolase, N‐carbamoylputrescine amidohydrolase route to putrescine in plants was inherited from the cyanobacterial ancestor of the chloroplast. However, the rest of the pathway including ornithine decarboxylase and spermidine synthase was probably inherited from bacterial genes present in the original host cell, common ancestor of plants and animals, that acquired the cyanobacterial endosymbiont. An exception is S‐adenosylmethionine decarboxylase, which may represent a eukaryote‐specific enzyme form.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010
Frances L. Shaw; Katherine A. Elliott; Lisa N. Kinch; Christine Fuell; Margaret A. Phillips; Anthony J. Michael
Polyamines are small flexible organic polycations found in almost all cells. They likely existed in the last universal common ancestor of all extant life, and yet relatively little is understood about their biological function, especially in bacteria and archaea. Unlike eukaryotes, where the predominant polyamine is spermidine, bacteria may contain instead an alternative polyamine, sym-homospermidine. We demonstrate that homospermidine synthase (HSS) has evolved vertically, primarily in the α-Proteobacteria, but enzymatically active, diverse HSS orthologues have spread by horizontal gene transfer to other bacteria, bacteriophage, archaea, eukaryotes, and viruses. By expressing diverse HSS orthologues in Escherichia coli, we demonstrate in vivo the production of co-products diaminopropane and N1-aminobutylcadaverine, in addition to sym-homospermidine. We show that sym-homospermidine is required for normal growth of the α-proteobacterium Rhizobium leguminosarum. However, sym-homospermidine can be replaced, for growth restoration, by the structural analogues spermidine and sym-norspermidine, suggesting that the symmetrical or unsymmetrical form and carbon backbone length are not critical for polyamine function in growth. We found that the HSS enzyme evolved from the alternative spermidine biosynthetic pathway enzyme carboxyspermidine dehydrogenase. The structure of HSS is related to lysine metabolic enzymes, and HSS and carboxyspermidine dehydrogenase evolved from the aspartate family of pathways. Finally, we show that other bacterial phyla such as Cyanobacteria and some α-Proteobacteria synthesize sym-homospermidine by an HSS-independent pathway, very probably based on deoxyhypusine synthase orthologues, similar to the alternative homospermidine synthase found in some plants. Thus, bacteria can contain alternative biosynthetic pathways for both spermidine and sym-norspermidine and distinct alternative pathways for sym-homospermidine.
Biochemical Society Transactions | 2003
Colin Hanfrey; Marina Franceschetti; Melinda J. Mayer; Crista Illingworth; Katherine A. Elliott; M. Collier; B. Thompson; Barry Perry; Anthony J. Michael
It is becoming apparent that control of protein synthesis by metabolites is more common than previously thought. Much of that control is exerted at the level of initiation of mRNA translation, orchestrated by upstream open reading frames (uORFs) and RNA secondary structure. S-Adenosylmethionine decarboxylase (AdoMetDC) is a key enzyme in polyamine biosynthesis and both mammalian and plant AdoMetDCs are translationally regulated by uORFs in response to polyamine levels by distinct mechanisms.
Molecular Microbiology | 2012
Matthew Burrell; Colin Hanfrey; Lisa N. Kinch; Katherine A. Elliott; Anthony J. Michael
Structural backbones of iron‐scavenging siderophore molecules include polyamines 1,3‐diaminopropane and 1,5‐diaminopentane (cadaverine). For the cadaverine‐based desferroxiamine E siderophore in Streptomyces coelicolor, the corresponding biosynthetic gene cluster contains an ORF encoded by desA that was suspected of producing the cadaverine (decarboxylated lysine) backbone. However, desA encodes an l‐2,4‐diaminobutyrate decarboxylase (DABA DC) homologue and not any known form of lysine decarboxylase (LDC). The only known function of DABA DC is, together with l‐2,4‐aminobutyrate aminotransferase (DABA AT), to synthesize 1,3‐diaminopropane. We show here that S. coelicolor desA encodes a novel LDC and we hypothesized that DABA DC homologues present in siderophore biosynthetic clusters in the absence of DABA AT ORFs would be novel LDCs. We confirmed this by correctly predicting the LDC activity of a DABA DC homologue from a Yersinia pestis siderophore biosynthetic pathway. The corollary was confirmed for a DABA DC homologue, adjacent to a DABA AT ORF in a siderophore pathway in the cyanobacterium Anabaena variabilis, which was shown to be a bona fide DABA DC. These findings enable prediction of whether a siderophore pathway will utilize 1,3‐diaminopropane or cadaverine, and suggest that the majority of bacteria use DABA AT and DABA DC for siderophore, rather than norspermidine/polyamine biosynthesis.
Molecular Microbiology | 2011
Robert Green; Colin Hanfrey; Katherine A. Elliott; Diane E. McCloskey; Xiaojing Wang; Sreenivas Kanugula; Anthony E. Pegg; Anthony J. Michael
We have identified gene fusions of polyamine biosynthetic enzymes S‐adenosylmethionine decarboxylase (AdoMetDC, speD) and aminopropyltransferase (speE) orthologues in diverse bacterial phyla. Both domains are functionally active and we demonstrate the novel de novo synthesis of the triamine spermidine from the diamine putrescine by fusion enzymes from β‐proteobacterium Delftia acidovorans and δ‐proteobacterium Syntrophus aciditrophicus, in a ΔspeDE gene deletion strain of Salmonella enterica sv. Typhimurium. Fusion proteins from marine α‐proteobacterium Candidatus Pelagibacter ubique, actinobacterium Nocardia farcinica, chlorobi species Chloroherpeton thalassium, and β‐proteobacterium D. acidovorans each produce a different profile of non‐native polyamines including sym‐norspermidine when expressed in Escherichia coli. The different aminopropyltransferase activities together with phylogenetic analysis confirm independent evolutionary origins for some fusions. Comparative genomic analysis strongly indicates that gene fusions arose by merger of adjacent open reading frames. Independent fusion events, and horizontal and vertical gene transfer contributed to the scattered phyletic distribution of the gene fusions. Surprisingly, expression of fusion genes in E. coli and S. Typhimurium revealed novel latent spermidine catabolic activity producing non‐native 1,3‐diaminopropane in these species. We have also identified fusions of polyamine biosynthetic enzymes agmatine deiminase and N‐carbamoylputrescine amidohydrolase in archaea, and of S‐adenosylmethionine decarboxylase and ornithine decarboxylase in the single‐celled green alga Micromonas.
Molecular Microbiology | 2015
Bin Li; Sok Ho Kim; Yang Zhang; Colin Hanfrey; Katherine A. Elliott; Steven E. Ealick; Anthony J. Michael
The polyamine spermidine is absolutely required for growth and cell proliferation in eukaryotes, due to its role in post‐translational modification of essential translation elongation factor eIF5A, mediated by deoxyhypusine synthase. We have found that free‐living ciliates Tetrahymena and Paramecium lost the eukaryotic genes encoding spermidine biosynthesis: S‐adenosylmethionine decarboxylase (AdoMetDC) and spermidine synthase (SpdSyn). In Tetrahymena, they were replaced by a gene encoding a fusion protein of bacterial AdoMetDC and SpdSyn, present as three copies. In Paramecium, a bacterial homospermidine synthase replaced the eukaryotic genes. Individual AdoMetDC–SpdSyn fusion protein paralogues from Tetrahymena exhibit undetectable AdoMetDC activity; however, when two paralogous fusion proteins are mixed, AdoMetDC activity is restored and spermidine is synthesized. Structural modelling indicates a functional active site is reconstituted by sharing critical residues from two defective protomers across the heteromer interface. Paramecium was found to accumulate homospermidine, suggesting it replaces spermidine for growth. To test this concept, a budding yeast spermidine auxotrophic strain was found to grow almost normally with homospermidine instead of spermidine. Biosynthesis of spermidine analogue aminopropylcadaverine, but not exogenously provided norspermidine, correlated with some growth. Finally, we found that diverse single‐celled eukaryotic parasites and multicellular metazoan Schistosoma worms have lost the spermidine biosynthetic pathway but retain deoxyhypusine synthase.
Plant Journal | 2007
Jie Luo; Yasutaka Nishiyama; Christine Fuell; Goro Taguchi; Katherine A. Elliott; Lionel Hill; Yoshikazu Tanaka; Masahiko Kitayama; Mami Yamazaki; Paul Bailey; Adrian J. Parr; Anthony J. Michael; Kazuki Saito; Cathie Martin