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Dive into the research topics where Liliana Surmacz is active.

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Featured researches published by Liliana Surmacz.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2011

Polyisoprenoids - Secondary metabolites or physiologically important superlipids?

Liliana Surmacz; Ewa Swiezewska

The polyisoprenoid alcohols (dolichols and polyprenols) are found in all living organism, from bacteria to mammals. In animal and yeast cells polyisoprenoids are derived from the cytoplasmic mevalonate (MVA) pathway while in plants two biosynthetic pathways, the MVA and the plastidial methylerythritol phosphate (MEP) pathway provide precursors for polyisoprenoid biosynthesis. The key enzymes of polyisoprenoid synthesis are cis-prenyltransferases (CTPs), responsible for construction of the long hydrocarbon skeleton. CPTs elongate a short all-trans precursor, oligoprenyl diphosphate, by sequential addition of the desired number of isopentenyl diphosphate molecules which results in formation of a stretch of cis units. Several genes encoding CPT have been cloned from bacteria, plants and mammals. Interestingly, in Arabidopsis, the tissue-specific expression of ten putative cis-prenyltransferases was observed. In contrast to polyisoprenoid phosphates serving as cofactors in the biosynthesis of glycoproteins, glucosyl phosphatidyl inositol (GPI) anchor or bacterial peptidoglycan, the biological importance of polyprenols and dolichols still remains a question of debate besides their function of reservoir of substrates for kinase. These extremely hydrophobic superlipids are postulated to be involved in intracellular traffic of proteins and in cellular defense against adverse environmental conditions. Recent publications show a direct link between the dolichol biosynthetic pathway and congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG). These discoveries highlighting the cellular significance of polyisoprenoids simultaneously establish the background for future pharmacological interventions. Our mini-review summarizes the results of recent studies on polyisoprenoids.


Physiologia Plantarum | 2009

Role of polyisoprenoids in tobacco resistance against biotic stresses

Agnieszka Bajda; Dorota Konopka-Postupolska; Magdalena Krzymowska; Jacek Hennig; Karolina Skorupinska-Tudek; Liliana Surmacz; Jacek Wójcik; Zdzislaw Matysiak; Tadeusz Chojnacki; Ewa Skórzyńska-Polit; M. Drazkiewicz; Pawel Patrzylas; Monika Tomaszewska; Magdalena Kania; Malgorzata Swist; Witold Danikiewicz; Wieslawa Piotrowska; Ewa Swiezewska

Infection with avirulent pathogens, tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) or Pseudomonas syringae pv. tabaci induced accumulation of polyisoprenoid alcohols, solanesol and a family of polyprenols [from polyprenol composed of 14 isoprene units (Pren-14) to -18, with Pren-16 dominating] in the leaves of resistant tobacco plants Nicotiana tabacum cv. Samsun NN. Upon TMV infection, solanesol content was increased seven- and eight-fold in the inoculated and upper leaves, respectively, while polyprenol content was increased 2.5- and 2-fold in the inoculated and upper leaves, respectively, on the seventh day post-infection. Accumulation of polyisoprenoid alcohols was also stimulated by exogenously applied hydrogen peroxide but not by exogenous salicylic acid (SA). On the contrary, neither inoculation of the leaves of susceptible tobacco plants nor wounding of tobacco leaves caused an increase in polyisoprenoid content. Taken together, these results indicate that polyisoprenoid alcohols might be involved in plant resistance against pathogens. A putative role of accumulated polyisoprenoids in plant response to pathogen attack is discussed. Similarly, the content of plastoquinone (PQ) was increased two-fold in TMV-inoculated and upper leaves of resistant plants. Accumulation of PQ was also stimulated by hydrogen peroxide, bacteria (P. syringae) and SA. The role of PQ in antioxidant defense in cellular membranous compartments is discussed in the context of the enzymatic antioxidant machinery activated in tobacco leaves subjected to viral infection. Elevated activity of several antioxidant enzymes (ascorbate peroxidase, guaiacol peroxidase, glutathione reductase and superoxide dismutase, especially the CuZn superoxide dismutase isoform) and high, but transient elevation of catalase was found in inoculated leaves of resistant tobacco plants but not in susceptible plants.


The Plant Cell | 2015

POLYPRENOL REDUCTASE2 Deficiency Is Lethal in Arabidopsis Due to Male Sterility

Adam Jozwiak; Malgorzata Gutkowska; Katarzyna Gawarecka; Liliana Surmacz; Anna Buczkowska; Małgorzata Lichocka; Julita Nowakowska; Ewa Swiezewska

Arabidopsis PPRD1 and -2, orthologs of human SRD5A3 (steroid 5α reductase type 3), encode polyprenol reductases responsible for conversion of polyprenol to dolichol. Dolichol is a required cofactor for protein glycosylation, the most common posttranslational modification modulating the stability and biological activity of proteins in all eukaryotic cells. We have identified and characterized two genes, PPRD1 and -2, which are orthologous to human SRD5A3 (steroid 5α reductase type 3) and encode polyprenol reductases responsible for conversion of polyprenol to dolichol in Arabidopsis thaliana. PPRD1 and -2 play dedicated roles in plant metabolism. PPRD2 is essential for plant viability; its deficiency results in aberrant development of the male gametophyte and sporophyte. Impaired protein glycosylation seems to be the major factor underlying these defects although disturbances in other cellular dolichol-dependent processes could also contribute. Shortage of dolichol in PPRD2-deficient cells is partially rescued by PPRD1 overexpression or by supplementation with dolichol. The latter has been discussed as a method to compensate for deficiency in protein glycosylation. Supplementation of the human diet with dolichol-enriched plant tissues could allow new therapeutic interventions in glycosylation disorders. This identification of PPRD1 and -2 elucidates the factors mediating the key step of the dolichol cycle in plant cells which makes manipulation of dolichol content in plant tissues feasible.


The Plant Cell | 2017

Polyprenols Are Synthesized by a Plastidial cis -Prenyltransferase and Influence Photosynthetic Performance

Tariq A. Akhtar; Przemysław Surowiecki; Hanna Siekierska; Magdalena Kania; Kristen Van Gelder; Kevin A. Rea; Lilia K.A. Virta; Maritza Vatta; Katarzyna Gawarecka; Jacek Wójcik; Witold Danikiewicz; Daniel Buszewicz; Ewa Swiezewska; Liliana Surmacz

A plastidial cis-prenyltransferase synthesizes a family of polyprenols that accumulate in thylakoid membranes and play a central role in the efficiency of photosynthetic performance. Plants accumulate a family of hydrophobic polymers known as polyprenols, yet how they are synthesized, where they reside in the cell, and what role they serve is largely unknown. Using Arabidopsis thaliana as a model, we present evidence for the involvement of a plastidial cis-prenyltransferase (AtCPT7) in polyprenol synthesis. Gene inactivation and RNAi-mediated knockdown of AtCPT7 eliminated leaf polyprenols, while its overexpression increased their content. Complementation tests in the polyprenol-deficient yeast ∆rer2 mutant and enzyme assays with recombinant AtCPT7 confirmed that the enzyme synthesizes polyprenols of ∼55 carbons in length using geranylgeranyl diphosphate (GGPP) and isopentenyl diphosphate as substrates. Immunodetection and in vivo localization of AtCPT7 fluorescent protein fusions showed that AtCPT7 resides in the stroma of mesophyll chloroplasts. The enzymatic products of AtCPT7 accumulate in thylakoid membranes, and in their absence, thylakoids adopt an increasingly “fluid membrane” state. Chlorophyll fluorescence measurements from the leaves of polyprenol-deficient plants revealed impaired photosystem II operating efficiency, and their thylakoids exhibited a decreased rate of electron transport. These results establish that (1) plastidial AtCPT7 extends the length of GGPP to ∼55 carbons, which then accumulate in thylakoid membranes; and (2) these polyprenols influence photosynthetic performance through their modulation of thylakoid membrane dynamics.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2015

Short-chain polyisoprenoids in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae — New companions of the old guys

Liliana Surmacz; Jacek Wójcik; Magdalena Kania; Magnus Bentinger; Witold Danikiewicz; Gustav Dallner; Przemysław Surowiecki; Piotr Cmoch; Ewa Swiezewska

Dolichols are, among others, obligatory cofactors of protein glycosylation in eukaryotic cells. It is well known that yeast cells accumulate a family of dolichols with Dol-15/16 dominating while upon certain physiological conditions a second family with Dol-21 dominating is noted. In this report we identified the presence of additional short-chain length polyprenols - all-trans Pren-7 in three yeast strains (SS328, BY4741 and L5366), Pren-7 was accompanied by traces of putative Pren-6 and -8. Moreover, in two of these strains a single polyprenol mainly-cis-Pren-11 was synthesized at the stationary phase of growth. Identity of polyprenols was confirmed by HR-HPLC/MS, NMR and metabolic labeling. Additionally, simvastatin inhibited their biosynthesis.


Plant Physiology | 2017

Modeling of Dolichol Mass Spectra Isotopic Envelopes as a Tool to Monitor Isoprenoid Biosynthesis

Adam Jozwiak; Agata Lipko; Magdalena Kania; Witold Danikiewicz; Liliana Surmacz; Agnieszka Witek; Jacek Wójcik; Konrad Zdanowski; Cezary Pączkowski; Tadeusz Chojnacki; Jarosław Poznański; Ewa Swiezewska

A new method enables quantitative analysis of the contributions of the MVA and MEP pathways to generating isoprenoids. The cooperation of the mevalonate (MVA) and methylerythritol phosphate (MEP) pathways, operating in parallel in plants to generate isoprenoid precursors, has been studied extensively. Elucidation of the isoprenoid metabolic pathways is indispensable for the rational design of plant and microbial systems for the production of industrially valuable terpenoids. Here, we describe a new method, based on numerical modeling of mass spectra of metabolically labeled dolichols (Dols), designed to quantitatively follow the cooperation of MVA and MEP reprogrammed upon osmotic stress (sorbitol treatment) in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). The contribution of the MEP pathway increased significantly (reaching 100%) exclusively for the dominating Dols, while for long-chain Dols, the relative input of the MEP and MVA pathways remained unchanged, suggesting divergent sites of synthesis for dominating and long-chain Dols. The analysis of numerically modeled Dol mass spectra is a novel method to follow modulation of the concomitant activity of isoprenoid-generating pathways in plant cells; additionally, it suggests an exchange of isoprenoid intermediates between plastids and peroxisomes.


Plant and Cell Physiology | 2018

Medium-Chain Polyprenols Influence Chloroplast Membrane Dynamics in Solanum lycopersicum

Kristen Van Gelder; Kevin A. Rea; Lilia K.A. Virta; Kenna L Whitnell; Michael Osborn; Maritza Vatta; Alexandra Khozin; Karolina Skorupinska-Tudek; Liliana Surmacz; Tariq A. Akhtar

The widespread occurrence of polyprenols throughout the plant kingdom is well documented, yet their functional role is poorly understood. These lipophilic compounds are known to be assembled from isoprenoid precursors by a class of enzymes designated as cis-prenyltransferases (CPTs), which are encoded by small CPT gene families in plants. In this study, we report that RNA interference (RNAi)-mediated knockdown of one member of the tomato CPT family (SlCPT5) reduced polyprenols in leaves by about 70%. Assays with recombinant SlCPT5 produced in Escherichia coli determined that the enzyme synthesizes polyprenols of approximately 50-55 carbons (Pren-10, Pren-11) in length and accommodates a variety of trans-prenyldiphosphate precursors as substrates. Introduction of SlCPT5 into the polyprenol-deficient yeast Δrer2 mutant resulted in the accumulation of Pren-11 in yeast cells, restored proper protein N-glycosylation and rescued the temperature-sensitive growth phenotype that is associated with its polyprenol deficiency. Subcellular fractionation studies together with in vivo localization of SlCPT5 fluorescent protein fusions demonstrated that SlCPT5 resides in the chloroplast stroma and that its enzymatic products accumulate in both thylakoid and envelope membranes. Transmission electron microscopy images of polyprenol-deficient leaves revealed alterations in chloroplast ultrastructure, and anisotropy measurements revealed a more disordered state of their envelope membranes. In polyprenol-deficient leaves, CO2 assimilation was hindered and their thylakoid membranes exhibited lower phase transition temperatures and calorimetric enthalpies, which coincided with a decreased photosynthetic electron transport rate. Taken together, these results uncover a role for polyprenols in governing chloroplast membrane dynamics.


Archive | 2012

What We Do and Do Not Know About the Cellular Functions of Polyisoprenoids

Liliana Surmacz; Ewa Swiezewska

Natural compounds classified as products of secondary metabolism are widely studied as to their potential biological role. Identification of possible cellular functions of polyisoprenoids, generally considered as secondary products, has been our focus for some 30 years already. The results of these studies for instance in the context of membrane permeability and protein modification are briefly described and discussed in this chapter.


Plant Journal | 2015

A two-component enzyme complex is required for dolichol biosynthesis in tomato

Megan I. Brasher; Liliana Surmacz; Bryan Leong; Jocelyn Pitcher; Ewa Swiezewska; Eran Pichersky; Tariq A. Akhtar


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2014

cis-Prenyltransferase AtCPT6 produces a family of very short-chain polyisoprenoids in planta

Liliana Surmacz; Danuta Plochocka; Magdalena Kania; Witold Danikiewicz; Ewa Swiezewska

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Ewa Swiezewska

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Magdalena Kania

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Jacek Wójcik

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Adam Jozwiak

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Agnieszka Witek

Polish Academy of Sciences

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