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Featured researches published by Shuai Gao.


Phytochemistry | 2015

Cloning and functional characterization of a 4-coumarate CoA ligase from liverwort Plagiochasma appendiculatum

Shuai Gao; Hai-Na Yu; Rui-Xue Xu; Ai-Xia Cheng; Hong-Xiang Lou

Plant phenylpropanoids represent a large group of secondary metabolites which have played an important role in terrestrial plant life, beginning with the evolution of land plants from primitive green algae. 4-Coumarate: coenzyme A ligase (4CL) is a provider of activated thioester substrates within the phenylpropanoid synthesis pathway. Although 4CLs have been extensively characterized in angiosperm, gymnosperm and moss species, little is known of their functions in liverworts. Here, a 4CL homolog (designated as Pa4CL1) was isolated from the liverwort species Plagiochasma appendiculatum. The full-length cDNA sequence of Pa4CL1 contains 1644bp and is predicted to encode a protein with 547amino acids. The gene products were 40-50% identical with 4CL sequences reported in public databases. The recombinant protein was heterologously expressed in Escherichia coli and exhibited a high level of 4CL activity, catalyzing formation of hydroxycinnamate-CoA thioesters by a two-step reaction mechanism from corresponding hydroxycinnamic acids. Kinetic analysis indicated that the most favorable substrate for Pa4CL1 is p-coumaric acid. The transcription of Pa4CL1 was induced when P. appendiculatum thallus was treated with either salicylic acid or methyl jasmonate.


FEBS Letters | 2014

Functional characterization of a Plagiochasma appendiculatum flavone synthase I showing flavanone 2-hydroxylase activity

Xiao-Juan Han; Yi-Feng Wu; Shuai Gao; Hai-Na Yu; Rui-Xue Xu; Hong-Xiang Lou; Ai-Xia Cheng

FNS I is a 2‐oxoglutarate dependent dioxygenase (2‐ODD) found mainly in species of the Apiaceae family. Here, an FNS I cDNA sequence was isolated from the liverwort Plagiochasma appendiculatum (Aytoniaceae) and characterized. The recombinant protein exhibited high FNS I activity catalyzing the conversion of naringenin to apigenin and 2‐hydroxynaringenin. The critical residue for flavanone‐2‐hydroxylation activity was Tyr240, as identified from homology modeling and site‐directed mutagenesis. The recombinant protein also showed some flavonol synthase activity, as it can convert dihydrokaempferol to kaempferol. When the Leu311 residue was mutated to Phe, the enzymes capacity to convert dihydrokaempferol to kaempferol was substantially increased. PaFNS I represents a 2‐ODD in which a hydrophobic π‐stacking interaction between the key residue and the naringenin A‐ring determines 2‐hydroxyflavanone formation.


Plant Physiology and Biochemistry | 2016

Functional characterization of a Mg2+-dependent O-methyltransferase with coumarin as preferred substrate from the liverwort Plagiochasma appendiculatum

Rui-Xue Xu; Shuai Gao; Yu Zhao; Hong-Xiang Lou; Ai-Xia Cheng

Coumarins (1,2-benzopyrones), which originate via the phenylpropanoid pathway, are found ubiquitously in plants and make an essential contribution to the health of the plant. Some natural coumarins have been used as human therapeutics. However, the details of their biosynthesis are still largely unknown. Scopoletin is derived from either esculetin or feruloyl CoA according to the plant species involved. Here, a gene encoding a O-methyltransferase (PaOMT2) was isolated from the liverwort species Plagiochasma appendiculatum (Aytoniaceae) through transcriptome sequencing. The purified recombinant enzyme catalyzed the methylation of esculetin, generating scopoletin and isoscopoletin. Kinetic analysis shows that the construct from the second Met in PaOMT2 had a catalytic efficiency for esculetin (Kcat/Km) of about half that of the full length PaOMT2, while the Kms of two enzymes were similar. The catalytic capacities of the studied protein suggest that two routes to scopoletin might co-exist in liverworts in that the enzyme involved in the methylation process participates in both paths, but especially the route from esculetin. The transient expression of a PaOMT2-GFP fusion in tobacco demonstrated that PaOMT2 is directed to the cytoplasm.


Phytochemistry | 2015

Functional characterization of a plastidal cation-dependent O-methyltransferase from the liverwort Plagiochasma appendiculatum

Rui-Xue Xu; Yu Zhao; Shuai Gao; Yu-Ying Zhang; Dan-Dan Li; Hong-Xiang Lou; Ai-Xia Cheng

Caffeoyl CoA O-methyltransferases (CCoAOMTs), known to be involved in phenylpropanoid metabolism and lignin synthesis, have been characterized from several higher plant species, which also harbor CCoAOMT-like enzymes responsible for methylation of a variety of flavonoids, anthocyanins, coumarins and phenylpropanoids. Here, a gene encoding a CCoAOMT (PaOMT1) was isolated from a sequenced cDNA library of the liverwort species Plagiochasma appendiculatum, a species belonging to the Family Aytoniaceae. The full-length cDNA sequence of PaOMT1 contains 909 bp, and is predicted to encode a protein with 302 amino acids. The gene products were 40-50% identical to CCoAOMT sequences of other plants. Experiments based on recombinant PaOMT1 showed that the enzyme was able to methylate phenylpropanoids, flavonoids and coumarins, with a preference for the flavonoid quercetin (19). Although the substrate selectivity and biochemical feature of PaOMT1 is similar to CCoAOMT-like enzymes, the sequence alignment results indicated PaOMT1 is closer to true CCoAOMT enzymes. A phylogenetic analysis indicated that PaOMT1 is intermediate between true CCoAOMTs and CCoAOMT-like enzymes. The transient expression of a PaOMT1-GFP fusion in tobacco demonstrated that PaOMT1 is directed to the plastids. PaOMT1 may represent an ancestral form of higher plant true CCoAOMT and CCoAOMT-like enzymes. This is the first time an O-methyltransferase was characterized in liverworts.


Plant Physiology and Biochemistry | 2018

Structural and biochemical characterization of the plant type III polyketide synthases of the liverwort Marchantia paleacea

Hai-Na Yu; Xin-Yan Liu; Shuai Gao; Bin Sun; Hongbo Zheng; Mei Ji; Ai-Xia Cheng; Hong-Xiang Lou

Chalcone synthases (CHSs) of the type III polyketide synthases (PKSs), catalyze the formation of a tetraketide intermediate from a CoA-tethered starter and malonyl-CoA but use different cyclization mechanisms to produce distinct chemical scaffolds. Herein, we characterized CHS and CHS-like enzymes (designated MpCHS and MpCHSL1, 2 and 3) from Marchantia paleacea and determined the crystal structure of MpCHSL1. MpCHS catalyzed a Claisen condensation to form chalcone, while MpCHSLs catalyzed the formation of lactonized α-pyrones in vitro. Based on the structural, mutational and in vitro biochemical analyses, we established that MpCHSL1 is structurally and functionally closer to prototype CHS than stilbene synthase, and characterized the structural basis for the functional diversity of the type III PKSs. A chalcone-forming mutant of MpCHSL1 was build directed by the structural information. These findings pave the way for future studies to elucidate the functional diversity of type III PKSs in liverwort.


Plant and Cell Physiology | 2018

A bHLH Transcription Factor Regulates Bisbibenzyl Biosynthesis in the Liverwort Plagiochasma appendiculatum

Yi-Feng Wu; Yu Zhao; Xin-Yan Liu; Shuai Gao; Ai-Xia Cheng; Hong-Xiang Lou

Liverworts, a section of the bryophyte plants which pioneered the colonization of terrestrial habitats, produce cyclic bisbibenzyls as secondary metabolites. These compounds are generated via the phenylpropanoid pathway, similar to flavonoid biosynthesis, for which basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) transcription factors have been identified as one of the important regulators in higher plants. Here, a bHLH gene homolog (PabHLH) was isolated from the liverwort species Plagiochasma appendiculatum and its contribution to bisbibenzyl biosynthesis was explored. Variation in the abundance of PabHLH transcript mirrored that of tissue bisbibenzyl content in three different liverwort tissues. A phylogenetic analysis based on the bHLH domain sequence suggested that the gene encodes a member of bHLH subgroup IIIf, which clusters proteins involved in flavonoid synthesis. The genes transient expression in onion epidermal cells implied that its product localized to the nucleus, and a transactivation assays in yeast showed that it was able to activate transcription. In both callus and thallus, the overexpression of PabHLH boosted bisbibenzyl accumulation, while also up-regulating PaPAL, Pa4CL1, PaSTCS1 and two genes encoding P450 cytochromes, and its RNA interference (RNAi)-induced suppression down-regulated the same set of genes and reduced the accumulation of bisbibenzyls. The abundance of PaCHS and PaFNSI transcript was related to flavonoid accumulation in transgenic thallus. PabHLH represents a candidate for the metabolic engineering of bisbibenzyl content.


Plant Physiology and Biochemistry | 2018

Isolation and functional characterization of hydroxycinnamoyltransferases from the liverworts Plagiochasma appendiculatum and Marchantia paleacea

Yi-Feng Wu; Yu Zhao; Xin-Yan Liu; Shuai Gao; Ai-Xia Cheng; Hong-Xiang Lou

Hydroxycinnamoyl-CoA shikimate/quinate hydroxycinnamoyl transferase (HCT, EC: 2.3.1.133) is a key metabolic entry point for the synthesis of monolignols in vascular plants; however, little is known about HCT in liverworts. Here, the isolation and characterization of HCTs encoded by the two liverwort species, Plagiochasma appendiculatum and Marchantia paleacea, are described. The sequences of the two enzymes harbor features typical of BAHD family members, except for the presence of a stretch of >100 residues that are not represented in higher plant HCTs. When truncated versions of both genes, which were constructed to clarify the significance of these extra residues, were investigated, it became apparent that the full-length and the truncated gene products shared similar catalytic activity and recognized the same substrates in vitro. They also functioned equivalently in vivo either when transiently expressed in tobacco to cause a higher total production of CGA (5-CQA) and 4-CQA or stably expressed in liverworts to accumulate the lignin-like contents. A structural model of MpHCT suggests that its active site bind to its substrate similar to that of Arabidopsis thaliana HCT. While truncated forms of HCT were deposited in the nucleocytoplasm, the full-length versions occurred exclusively in the cytoplasm. The conclusion is that liverworts produce bona fide HCTs that represent a point of departure in studying the evolution of lignin synthesis in plants.


FEBS Letters | 2016

Enzymatic production of oroxylin A and hispidulin using a liverwort flavone 6‐O‐methyltransferase

Yu-Ying Zhang; Rui-Xue Xu; Shuai Gao; Ai-Xia Cheng

Oroxylin A and hispidulin, compounds which are abundant in both Scutellaria and liverwort species, are important lead compounds for the treatment of ischemic cerebrovascular disease. Their enzymatic synthesis requires an O‐methyltransferase able to interact with the related flavonoids 6‐OH group, but such an enzyme has yet to be identified in plants. Here, the gene encoding an O‐methyltransferase (designated PaF6OMT) was isolated from the liverwort species Plagiochasma appendiculatum. A test of alternative substrates revealed that its strongest preferences were baicalein and scutellarein, which were converted into, respectively, oroxylin A and hispidulin. Allowed a sufficient reaction time, the conversion rate of these two substrates was, respectively, 90% and 100%. PaF6OMT offers an enzymatic route to the synthesis of oroxylin A and hispidulin.


Plant Cell Reports | 2015

Functional characterization of a chalcone synthase from the liverwort Plagiochasma appendiculatum

Hai-Na Yu; Lei Wang; Bin Sun; Shuai Gao; Ai-Xia Cheng; Hong-Xiang Lou


Plant Cell Tissue and Organ Culture | 2014

Molecular cloning and functional characterization of a phenylalanine ammonia-lyase from liverwort Plagiochasma appendiculatum

Hai-Na Yu; Xin-Yan Liu; Shuai Gao; Xiao-Juan Han; Ai-Xia Cheng; Hong-Xiang Lou

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