Litcius/Paper detail

Adaptation of hydroxymethylbutenyl diphosphate reductase enables volatile isoprenoid production

Mareike Bongers, Jordi Pérez-Gil, Mark P. Hodson, Lars Schrübbers, Tune Wulff, Morten Otto Alexander Sommer, Lars K. Nielsen, Claudia E. Vickers

2020eLife34 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Volatile isoprenoids produced by plants are emitted in vast quantities into the atmosphere, with substantial effects on global carbon cycling. Yet, the molecular mechanisms regulating the balance between volatile and non-volatile isoprenoid production remain unknown. Isoprenoids are synthesised via sequential condensation of isopentenyl pyrophosphate (IPP) to dimethylallyl pyrophosphate (DMAPP), with volatile isoprenoids containing fewer isopentenyl subunits. The DMAPP:IPP ratio could affect the balance between volatile and non-volatile isoprenoids, but the plastidic DMAPP:IPP ratio is generally believed to be similar across different species. Here we demonstrate that the ratio of DMAPP:IPP produced by hydroxymethylbutenyl diphosphate reductase (HDR/IspH), the final step of the plastidic isoprenoid production pathway, is not fixed. Instead, this ratio varies greatly across HDRs from phylogenetically distinct plants, correlating with isoprenoid production patterns. Our findings suggest that adaptation of HDR plays a previously unrecognised role in determining in vivo carbon availability for isoprenoid emissions, directly shaping global biosphere-atmosphere interactions.

Topics & Concepts

TerpenoidIsopentenyl pyrophosphatePhotosynthesisChemistryBiospherePyrophosphateBotanyBiologyBiochemistryEcologyEnzymePlant biochemistry and biosynthesisAntioxidant Activity and Oxidative StressPhotosynthetic Processes and Mechanisms