Formation of Flavonoid Metabolons: Functional Significance of Protein-Protein Interactions and Impact on Flavonoid Chemodiversity

Flavonoids are a class of plant specialized metabolites with more than 6,900 known structures and play important roles in plant survival and reproduction. These metabolites are derived from -coumaroyl-CoA the sequential actions of a variety of flavonoid enzymes, which have been proposed to form weak...

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Published inFrontiers in plant science Vol. 10; p. 821
Main Authors Nakayama, Toru, Takahashi, Seiji, Waki, Toshiyuki
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A 09.07.2019
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Summary:Flavonoids are a class of plant specialized metabolites with more than 6,900 known structures and play important roles in plant survival and reproduction. These metabolites are derived from -coumaroyl-CoA the sequential actions of a variety of flavonoid enzymes, which have been proposed to form weakly bound, ordered protein complexes termed flavonoid metabolons. This review discusses the impacts of the formation of flavonoid metabolons on the chemodiversity of flavonoids. Specific protein-protein interactions in the metabolons of and other plant species have been studied for two decades. In many cases, metabolons are associated with the ER membrane, with ER-bound cytochromes P450 hypothesized to serve as nuclei for metabolon formation. Indeed, cytochromes P450 have been found to be components of flavonoid metabolons in rice, snapdragon, torenia, and soybean. Recent studies illustrate the importance of specific interactions for the efficient production and temporal/spatial distribution of flavonoids. For example, in diverse plant species, catalytically inactive type-IV chalcone isomerase-like protein serves as an enhancer of flavonoid production its involvement in flavonoid metabolons. In soybean roots, a specific isozyme of chalcone reductase (CHR) interacts with 2-hydroxyisoflavanone synthase, to which chalcone synthase (CHS) can also bind, providing a mechanism to prevent the loss of the unstable CHR substrate during its transfer from CHS to CHR. Thus, diversification in chemical structures and temporal/spatial distribution patterns of flavonoids in plants is likely to be mediated by the formation of specific flavonoid metabolons specific protein-protein interactions.
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This article was submitted to Plant Metabolism and Chemodiversity, a section of the journal Frontiers in Plant Science
Reviewed by: Taira Miyahara, Chiba University, Japan; Stefan Martens, Fondazione Edmund Mach, Italy
Edited by: Kazuki Saito, RIKEN Center for Sustainable Resource Science (CSRS), Japan
ISSN:1664-462X
1664-462X
DOI:10.3389/fpls.2019.00821