Abstract:
Leucaena leucocephala is one of the most versatile, fast growing commercially
important trees for paper and pulp industry in India, contributing for about 1/4th of
the total raw material supplied to the industry. L. leucocephala is traditionally
high in lignin content which must be removed from pulp involving various
chemical and energy intensive processes, which in turn release various toxic
pollutants and damage the polysaccharide components of wood. There is
currently intense interest to reduce, modify or alter lignin content of L.
leucocephala to be used as model plant in paper industry. Phenylpropanoid
pathway is operative in plants and responsible for the production of a variety of
compounds including lignin. Cinnamate 4-Hydroxylase (C4H) catalyzes the
second step of phenylpropanoid pathway and hydroxylates trans-cinnamic acid
at the para position. C4H plays central role in lignification as it catalyzes slow
reaction early in the pathway, which branches after the action of C4H.
To have a better understanding of the role of C4H in L. leucocephala,
three C4H isoforms (LlC4H) were isolated from L. leucocephala and
characterized. The isoforms share more than 98% sequence identity at amino
acid level to each other. These isoforms contained all the conserved sequences
found in P450 superfamily and C4H from other plants. Phylogenetic analysis
grouped LlC4H with class I C4Hs, some members of which are functionally well
characterized. Southern hybridization study suggested that there may be 4-6
C4H isoforms in Leucaena genome with some isoforms may be tandemely
arranged.
Three isoforms of C4H were expressed in Escherichia coli, strain
Rosetta (DE3) and one isoform was purified from inclusion body. LlC4H proteins
are highly hydrophobic and hence they profusely formed inclusion body in
bacteria. C4H bound very weakly to the Ni-NTA matrix and was difficult to obtain
in pure form from inclusion body. Under the optimized conditions, yield of
purified C4H from inclusion body varied between 50-100 μg/mL. Secondary and
vi
tertiary structure comparison between the LlC4H isoforms suggested that all the
isoforms are identical in their secondary and tertiary structure.
Tissue and age specific Quantitative Real Time (Q-RT) PCR study
suggested that C4H transcripts were highly abundant in root tissues followed by
stem and leaves. Maximum transcript level at any time in any tissue was
observed in 30 day old root tissue. Among the tissues investigated,
demonstrable C4H activity was found maximum in 1 year old stem tissues. C4H
was found to be stress responsive and its transcript level increased in response
to external abiotic stimuli (salt stress, methyl jasmonate stress and UV-C stress).
Tissue-wise quantitative comparison of lignin from developing seedling stage to
one year old tree stage indicated that while acid insoluble lignin increased with
age, acid soluble lignin first decreased and then slightly increased.
Transgenic L. leucocephala and tobacco plants with reduced C4H
expression were raised using modified pCAMBIA1301 vector harbouring partial
L. leucocephala C4H in antisense orientation. Careful study of transcript level of
different phenylpropanoid pathway genes in transgenics, down-regulated for
C4H activity showed coordinated down-regulation and gave indication that C4H
might be catalyzing rate limiting step early in the pathway. Transgenic plants had
reduced lignin content consistent with its role in lignification.