A Collaborative Classroom Investigation of the Evolution of SABATH Methyltransferase Substrate Preference Shifts over 120 My of Flowering Plant History

Author:

Dubs Nicole M1,Davis Breck R1,de Brito Victor1,Colebrook Kate C1,Tiefel Ian J1,Nakayama Madison B1,Huang Ruiqi1,Ledvina Audrey E1,Hack Samantha J1,Inkelaar Brent1,Martins Talline R1,Aartila Sarah M1,Albritton Kelli S1,Almuhanna Sarah1,Arnoldi Ryan J1,Austin Clara K1,Battle Amber C1,Begeman Gregory R1,Bickings Caitlin M1,Bradfield Jonathon T1,Branch Eric C1,Conti Eric P1,Cooley Breana1,Dotson Nicole M1,Evans Cheyone J1,Fries Amber S1,Gilbert Ivan G1,Hillier Weston D1,Huang Pornkamol1,Hyde Kaitlin W1,Jevtovic Filip1,Johnson Mark C1,Keeler Julie L1,Lam Albert1,Leach Kyle M1,Livsey Jeremy D1,Lo Jonathan T1,Loney Kevin R1,Martin Nich W1,Mazahem Amber S1,Mokris Aurora N1,Nichols Destiny M1,Ojha Ruchi1,Okorafor Nnanna N1,Paris Joshua R1,Reboucas Thais Fuscaldi1,Sant’Anna Pedro Beretta1,Seitz Mathew R1,Seymour Nathan R1,Slaski Lila K1,Stemaly Stephen O1,Ulrich Benjamin R1,Van Meter Emile N1,Young Meghan L1,Barkman Todd J1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, MI, USA

Abstract

Abstract Next-generation sequencing has resulted in an explosion of available data, much of which remains unstudied in terms of biochemical function; yet, experimental characterization of these sequences has the potential to provide unprecedented insight into the evolution of enzyme activity. One way to make inroads into the experimental study of the voluminous data available is to engage students by integrating teaching and research in a college classroom such that eventually hundreds or thousands of enzymes may be characterized. In this study, we capitalize on this potential to focus on SABATH methyltransferase enzymes that have been shown to methylate the important plant hormone, salicylic acid (SA), to form methyl salicylate. We analyze data from 76 enzymes of flowering plant species in 23 orders and 41 families to investigate how widely conserved substrate preference is for SA methyltransferase orthologs. We find a high degree of conservation of substrate preference for SA over the structurally similar metabolite, benzoic acid, with recent switches that appear to be associated with gene duplication and at least three cases of functional compensation by paralogous enzymes. The presence of Met in active site position 150 is a useful predictor of SA methylation preference in SABATH methyltransferases but enzymes with other residues in the homologous position show the same substrate preference. Although our dense and systematic sampling of SABATH enzymes across angiosperms has revealed novel insights, this is merely the “tip of the iceberg” since thousands of sequences remain uncharacterized in this enzyme family alone.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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