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Wiley InterScience

The Plant Journal

The Plant Journal

Volume 40 Issue 6, Pages 893 - 908

Published Online: 15 Oct 2004

Journal compilation © 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd and the Society for Experimental Biology



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Arabidopsis glucosyltransferase UGT74B1 functions in glucosinolate biosynthesis and auxin homeostasis
C. Douglas Grubb 1 , Brandon J. Zipp 1 , Jutta Ludwig-Müller 2 , Makoto N. Masuno 3 , Tadeusz F. Molinski 3 and Steffen Abel 1,*
  1 Department of Plant Sciences, University of California-Davis, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616, USA,
  2 Institut für Botanik, Technische Universität Dresden, Zellescher Weg 22, D-01062, Germany, and
  3 Department of Chemistry, University of California-Davis, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616, USA
Correspondence to   *(fax +001 530 752 9659; e-mail sabel@ucdavis.edu).
Copyright 2004 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
KEYWORDS
glucosinolate pathway • glucosyltransferase • thiohydroximates • thioglycosides • auxin • secondary metabolism

ABSTRACT

Glucosinolates are a class of secondary metabolites with important roles in plant defense and human nutrition. Here, we characterize a putative UDP-glucose:thiohydroximate S-glucosyltransferase, UGT74B1, to determine its role in the Arabidopsis glucosinolate pathway. Biochemical analyses demonstrate that recombinant UGT74B1 specifically glucosylates the thiohydroximate functional group. Low Km values for phenylacetothiohydroximic acid (approximately 6 μm) and UDP-glucose (approximately 50 μm) strongly suggest that thiohydroximates are in vivo substrates of UGT74B1. Insertional loss-of-function ugt74b1 mutants exhibit significantly decreased, but not abolished, glucosinolate accumulation. In addition, ugt74b1 mutants display phenotypes reminiscent of auxin overproduction, such as epinastic cotyledons, elongated hypocotyls in light-grown plants, excess adventitious rooting and incomplete leaf vascularization. Indeed, during early plant development, mutant ugt74b1 seedlings accumulate nearly threefold more indole-3-acetic acid than the wild type. Other phenotypes, however, such as chlorosis along the leaf veins, are likely caused by thiohydroximate toxicity. Analysis of UGT74B1 promoter activity during plant development reveals expression patterns consistent with glucosinolate metabolism and induction by auxin treatment. The results are discussed in the context of known mutations in glucosinolate pathway genes and their effects on auxin homeostasis. Taken together, our work provides complementary in vitro and in vivo evidence for a primary role of UGT74B1 in glucosinolate biosynthesis.


Received 21 June 2004; revised 3 September 2004; accepted 7 September 2004.

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1365-313X.2004.02261.x About DOI

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