AU746458B2 - A method for regulation of plant lignin composition - Google Patents

A method for regulation of plant lignin composition Download PDF

Info

Publication number
AU746458B2
AU746458B2 AU36399/00A AU3639900A AU746458B2 AU 746458 B2 AU746458 B2 AU 746458B2 AU 36399/00 A AU36399/00 A AU 36399/00A AU 3639900 A AU3639900 A AU 3639900A AU 746458 B2 AU746458 B2 AU 746458B2
Authority
AU
Australia
Prior art keywords
plant
promoter
gene
chimeric polynucleotide
nucleic acid
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Ceased
Application number
AU36399/00A
Other versions
AU3639900A (en
Inventor
Clint Chapple
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Purdue Research Foundation
Original Assignee
Purdue Research Foundation
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Purdue Research Foundation filed Critical Purdue Research Foundation
Priority to AU36399/00A priority Critical patent/AU746458B2/en
Publication of AU3639900A publication Critical patent/AU3639900A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of AU746458B2 publication Critical patent/AU746458B2/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Ceased legal-status Critical Current

Links

Description

I~
S&F Ref: 428367D1
AUSTRALIA
PATENTS ACT 1990 COMPLETE SPECIFICATION FOR A STANDARD PATENT
ORIGINAL
Name and Address of Applicant: Actual Inventor(s): Address for Service: Invention Title: Purdue Research Foundation Office of Technology Transfer 1063 Hovde Hall West Lafayette Indiana 47907 United States of America Clint Chapple Spruson Ferguson St Martins Tower 31 Market Street Sydney NSW 2000 A Method for Regulation of Plant Lignin Composition The following statement is a full description of this invention, including the best method of performing it known to me/us:- IP Australia Documents received on: 4 2 4 MAY 2000 Batch No: L 1 5845c
TITLE
A METHOD FOR REGULATION OF PLANT LIGNIN COMPOSITION FIELD OF INVENTION The present method relates to the field of molecular biology and the regulation of protein synthesis through the introduction of foreign genes into plant genomes. More specifically, the method relates to the modification of plant lignin composition in a plant cell by the introduction of a foreign plant gene encoding an active ferulate-5-hydroxylase (F5H) enzyme. Plant transformants harborifig the gene demonstrate increased levels ofsyringyl monomer residues in their lignin, a trait that is thought to render the polymer more susceptible to delignification.
BACKGROUND
Lignin is one of the major products of the general phenylpropanoid pathway, and is one of the most abundant organic molecules in the biosphere (Crawford, (1981) Lignin Biodegradation and Transformation, New York: John Wiley and Sons). In nature, lignification provides rigidity to wood and is in large part responsible for the structural integrity of plant tracheary elements. Lignin is well suited to these capacities because of its physical characteristics and its resistance to biochemical degradation. Unfortunately, this same resistance to 20 degradation has a significant impact on the utilization oflignocellulosic plant material (Whetten et al., Forest Ecol. Management 43, 301, (1991)).
The monomeric composition oflignin has significant effects on its chemical degradation during industrial pulping (Chiang et al., Tappi, 71, 173, (1988). The guaiacyl lignins (derived from ferulic acid) characteristic of softwoods such as pine, require substantially more alkali and longer incubations during pulping in comparison to the guaiacyl-syringyl lignins (derived from ferulic acid and sinapic acid) found in hardwoods such as oak. The reasons for the differences between these two lignin types has been explored by measuring the degradation of model compounds such as guaiacylglycerol-P-guaiacyl ether, syringylglycerol-0-guaiacyl ether, and syringylglycerol-3-(4-methylsyringyl) ether (Kondo et al., Holzforschung, 41, 83, (1987)) under conditions that mimic those used in the pulping process. In these experiments, the mono- and especially di-syringyl compounds were cleaved three to fifteen times faster than their corresponding diguaiacyl homologues. These model studies are in agreement with studies comparing the pulping of Douglas fir and sweetgum wood where the major differences in the rate of pulping occurred above 150 'C where arylglycerol-0-aryl ether linkages were cleaved (Chiang et al., Hol:forschung, 44, 309, (1990)).
g
I-
Another factor affecting chemical degradation of the two lignin forms may be the condensation of lignin-derived guaiacyl and syringyl residues to form diphenylmethane units. The presence of syringyl residues in hardwood lignins leads to the formation of syringyl-containing diphenylmethane derivatives that remain soluble during pulping, while the diphenylmethane units produced during softwood pulping are alkali-insoluble and thus remain associated with the cellulosic products (Chiang et al., Holzforschung, 44, 147, (1990); Chiang et al., Holzforschung, 44, 309, (1990)). Further, it is thought that the abundance of crosslinks that can occur between guaiacyl residues contributes to resistance to chemical degradation. This linkage is resistant to alkali cleavage and is much less common in lignin that is rich in syringyl residues because of the presence of the 5-O-methyl group in syringyl residues. The incorporation of syringyl residues results in what is known as "non-condensed lignin", a material that is significantly easier to pulp than condensed lignin.
Similarly, lignin composition and content in grasses is a major factor in determining the digestibility of lignocellulosic materials that are fed to livestock (Jung, H.G. Deetz, D.A. (1993) Cell wall lignification and degradability in Forage Cell Wall Structure and Digestibility Jung, D.R. Buxton, R.D.
Hatfield, and J. Ralph eds.), ASA/CSSA/SSSA Press, Madison, The 20 incorporation of the lignin polymer into the plant cell wall prevents microbial enzymes from having access to the cell wall polysaccharides that make up the wall.
As a result, these polysaccharides cannot be degraded and much of the valuable carbohydrates contained within animal feedstocks pass through the animals Sundigested. Thus, an increase in the dry matter of grasses over the growing season is counteracted by a decrease in digestibility caused principally by increased cell wall lignification. From these examples, it is clear that the modification of lignin monomer composition would be economically advantageous.
The problem to be overcome, therefore, is to develop a method for the creation of plants with increased levels of syringyl residues in their lignin to 30 facilitate its chemical degradation. Modification of the enzyme pathway responsible for the production of lignin monomers provides one possible route to solving this problem.
The mechanism(s) by which plants control lignin monomer composition has been the subject of much speculation. As mentioned earlier, gymnosperms do not synthesize appreciable amounts of syringyi lignin. In angiosperms, syringyl lignin deposition is developmentally regulated: primary xylem contains guaiacyl lignin, while the lignin of secondary xylem and sclerenchyma is guaiacyl-syringyl lignin (Venverloo. Holzforschung 25, 18 (1971); Chapple et al., Plant Cell 4, 1413,
'.F
(1992)). No plants have been found to contain purely syringyl lignin. It is still riot clear how this specificity is controlled; however, at least five possible enzymatic control sites exist, namely caffeic acid/5-hydroxyferulic acid O-methyltransferase (OMT), F5H, (hydroxy)cinnamoyl-CoA ligase (4CL), (hydroxy)cinnamoyl-CoA reductase (CCR), and (hydroxy)cinnamoyl alcohol dehydrogenase (CAD). For example, the substrate specificities of OMT (Shimada et al., Phytochemisny, 22, 2657, (1972); Shimada et al., Phytochemistry, 12, 2873, (1973); Gowri et al, Plant Physiol.. 97, 7, (1991); Bugos et al., Plant Mol. Biol. 17, 1203, (1992)) and CAD (Sarni et al., Eur. J. Biochem., 139, 259, (1984); Goffner et al., Planta., 188, 48, (1992); O'Malley et al., Plant Physiol., 98, 1364, (1992)) are correlated with the differences in lignin monomer composition seen in gymnosperms and angiosperms, and the expression of 4CL isozymes (Grand et al., Physiol. Veg. 17, 433, (1979); Grand et al., Planta., 158, 225, (1983)) has been suggested to be related to the tissue specificity oflignin monomer composition seen in angiosperms.
Although there are at least five possible enzyme targets that could be exploited, only OMT and CAD have been investigated in recent attempts to manipulate lignin monomer composition in transgenic plants (Dwivedi et al., Plant Mol. Biol. 26, 61, (1994); Halpin et al., PlantJ. 6, 339, (1994); Ni et al., 20 Transgen. Res. 3, 120 (1994); Atanassova et al., Plant J. 8, 465, (1995); S Doorsselaere et al., Plant J. 8, 855, (1995)). Most of these studies have focused on sense and antisense suppression of OMT expression. This approach has met Swith variable results, probably owing to the degree of OMT suppression achieved in the various studies. The most dramatic effects were seen by using homologous OMT constructs to suppress OMT expression in tobacco (Atanassova et al., supra) and poplar (Doorsselaere et al., supra). Both of these studies found that as a result of transgene expression, there was a decrease in the content of syringyl ignin and a concomitant appearance of 5-hydroxyguaiacyl residues. As a result of these studies, Doorsselaere et al., (WO 9305160) disclose a method for the regulation of lignin biosynthesis through the genomic incorporation of an OMT gene in either the sense or anti-sense orientation. In contrast, Dixon et al.
(WO 9423044) demonstrate the reduction of lignin content in plants transformed with an OMT gene, rather than a change in lignin monomer composition. Similar research has focused on the suppression of CAD expression. The conversion of coniferaldehyde and sinapaldehyde to their corresponding alcohols in transgenic tobacco plants has been modified with the incorporation of an A. cordata CAD gene in anti-sense orientation (Hibino et al., Biosci. Biotechnol. Biochem., 59, 929, (1995)). A similar effort aimed at antisense inhibition of CAD expression generated a lignin with increased aldehyde content, but only a modest change in lignin monomer composition (Halpin et al., supra). This research has resulted in the disclosure of methods for the reduction of CAD activity using sense and anti-sense expression of a cloned CAD gene to effect inhibition of endogenous CAD expression in tobacco [Boudet et al., 5,451,514) and Walter et al., (WO 9324638); Bridges et al., (CA 2005597)].
None of these strategies increased the syringyl content of lignin, a trait that is correlated with improved digestibility and chemical degradability of lignocellulosic material (Chiang et al., supra; Chiang and Funaoka, Holzforschung 44, 309 (1990); Jung et al., supra).
Although F5H is also a key enzyme in the biosynthesis of syringyl lignin monomers it has not been exploited to date in efforts to engineer lignin quality. In fact, since the time of its discovery over 30 years ago(Higuchi et al., Can. J. Biochem. Physiol., 41,613, (1963)) there has been only one demonstration of the activity of F5H published (Grand, FEBS Lett. 169, 7, (1984)). Grand demonstrated that F5H from poplar was a 1 5 cytochrome P450-dependent monooxygenase (P450) as analyzed by the classical criteria of dependence on NADPH and light-reversible inhibition by carbon monoxide. Grand further demonstrated that F5H is associated with the endoplasmic reticulum of the cell.
The lack of attention given to F5H in recent years may be attributed in general to the difficulties associated with dealing with membrane-bound enzymes, and specifically to the lability of F5H when treated with the detergents necessary for solubilization (Grand, supra). The most recent discovery surrounding the F5H gene has been made by Chapple et al., (supra) who reported a mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana L. Heynh namedfahl that is deficient in the accumulation of sinapic acid-derived metabolites, including the guaiacyl- S syringyl lignin typical of angiosperms. This locus, termed FAH1, encodes F5H. The i 25 cloning of the gene encoding F5H would provide the opportunity to test the hypothesis that F5H is a useful target for the engineering of lignin monomer composition.
In spite of sparse information about F5H in the published literature, Applicant has been successful in the isolation, cloning, and sequencing of the F5H gene. Applicant has also demonstrated that the stable integration of the F5H gene into the plant genome, where the expression of the F5H gene is under the control of a promoter other than the gene's endogenous promoter, leads to an altered regulation of lignin biosynthesis.
[R:\LIBVV]45198.doc:ais Summary of the Invention.
In a first embodiment of the invention there is provided an isolated nucleic acid fragment encoding an enzyme that functions in a plant to alter the guaiacyl:syringyl lignin monomer ratios in the plant, the fragment selected from the group consisting of: a nucleic acid fragment encoding an enzyme having the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO:2; a nucleic acid fragment encoding an enzyme having an amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO:2 encompassing amino acid substitutions, additions and deletions that do not eliminate the function of the enzyme; the nucleic acid fragment of SEQ ID NO:1; the nucleic acid fragment of SEQ ID NO:3; and a nucleic acid fragment of SEQ ID NO:1 or SEQ ID NO:3 encompassing base changes that do not eliminate the function of the encoded enzyme.
In a further embodiment, the invention provides a chimeric polynucleotide causing i15 altered guaiacyl:syringyl lignin monomer ratios in a plant cell transformed with the chimeric polynucleotide, comprising the nucleic-acid fragment defined above operably linked in either sense or antisense orientation to a regulatory sequence.
Also provided is a method of altering the guaiacyl:syringyl lignin monomer ratios in a plant relative to the ratios of an untransformed plant, comprising transforming a plant 20 with the chimeric polynucleotide defined above to provide a transformed plant, wherein the transformed plant expresses the chimeric polynucleotide, and wherein the guaiacyl:syringyl lignin monomer ratio is altered in the plant.
In a preferred form the method includes transforming a cell, tissue or organ from a suitable host plant with the chimeric gene described above wherein the chimeric gene is S 25 expressed; (ii) selecting transformed cells, cell callus, somatic embryos, or seeds which contain the chimeric gene; (iii) regenerating whole plants from the transformed cells, cell callus, somatic embryos, or seeds selected in step (iv) selecting whole plants regenerated in step (iii) which have a phenotype characterized by an ability of the whole plant to accumulate compounds derived from sinapic acid or an altered syringyl lignin monomer content relative to an untransformed host plant.
The invention additionally provides a method of altering the content or composition of lignin in a plant, comprising stably incorporating the chimeric polynucleotide defined above into the genome of the plant by transformation means whereby the incorporated A,-,chimeric polynucleotide expresses the enzyme and whereby guaiacyl:syringyl lignin monomer content or composition is altered from that of the untransformed host plant.
Brief Description of the Figures and Sequence Listing Figure 1 illustrates the biosynthesis of monomeric lignin precursors via the general phenylpropanoid pathway.
Figure 2 is an illustration of the pBIC20-F5H cosmid and the F5H overexpression construct (pGA482-35S-F5H) in which the F5H gene is expressed under the control of the constitutive cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter.
Figure 3 shows an analysis of sinapic acid-derived secondary metabolites in wild 0o type, thefahl-2 mutant, and independently-derived transgeneicfahl-2 plants
S**
[R:\LIBVV]45198.doc:ais carrying the T-DNA derived from the pBIC20-F5H cosmid, or the pGA482-35S-FSH overexpression construct.
Figure 4 shows the impact of F5H overexpression by comparing the steady state levels of F5H mRNA in wild type, thefahl-2 mutant, and independentlyderived transgenicfahl-2 plants carrying the T-DNA derived from the 35S-F5H overexpression construct.
Figure 5 shows a GC analysis oflignin nitrobenzene oxidation products toillustrate the impact of F5H overexpression on lignin monomer composition in the wild type, thefahl-2 mutant, and afahl-2 mutant carrying the T-DNA derived from the 35S-FSH overexpression construct.
Figure 6 illustrates a Southern blot analysis comparing hybridization of the cDNA to EcoRI digested genomic DNA isolated from wild type Arabidopsis thaliana and a number offahl mutants.
Figure 7 is a Northern blot analysis comparing hybridization of the cDNA to RNA isolated from wild type Arabidopsis thaliana and a number offahl mutants.
Figure 8 shows the genomic nucleotide (SEQ ID NO.:3) and amino acid (SEQ ID NO.:2) sequences of the Arabidopsis F5H gene and the FSH enzyme that .it encodes.
20 Applicant(s) have provided three sequence listings in conformity with 37 C.F.R. 1.821-1.825 and Appendices A and B ("Requirements for Application Disclosures Containing Nucleotides and/or Amino Acid Sequences") and in conformity with "Rules for the Standard Representation of Nucleotide and Amino Acid Sequences in Patent Applications" and Annexes I and II to the Decision of the President of the EPO, published in Supplement No 2. to OJ EPO, 12/1992.
The sequence of the Arabidopsis thaliana F5H cDNA is given in SEQ ID NO.:1 and the sequence of the Arabidopsis thaliana F5H genomic clone is given in SEQ ID NO.:3. The sequence of the F5H protein is given in SEQ ID NO.:2.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION 30 The present invention provides a gene that encodes F5H, a key enzyme in lignin biosynthesis. The invention further provides a method for altering the lignin composition in plants by transforming plants with the F5H gene wherein the gene is expressed and causes an increased conversion of ferulic acid to sinapic acid thereby increasing the syringyl content of the lignin polymer.
The effect in plants of lignin compositions containing higher syringyl monomer content is that the lignin is more susceptible to chemical delignification.
This is of particular use in the paper and pulp industries where vast amounts of energy and time are consumed in the delignification process. Woody plants transformed with an active F5H gene would offer a significant advantage in the delignification process over conventional paper feedstocks. Similarly, modification of the lignin composition in grasses by the insertion and expression of a heterologus F5H gene offers a unique method for increasing the digestibility of livestock feed. Maximizing the digestibility of grasses in this manner offers great potential economic benefit to the farm and agricultural industries.
Plants to which the Invention may be Applied The invention provides a gene and a chimeric gene construct useful for the transformation of plant tissue for the alteration of lignin monomer composition.
Plants suitable in the present invention comprise plants that naturally lack syringyl lignin or those that accumulate lignin with a high guaiacyl:syringyl ratio. Plants suitable in the present invention also comprise plants whose lignin could be modified using antisense transformation constructs that reduce the syringyl content of the transgenic plants' lignin if such an alteration were desirable.
Suitable plants may include but are not limited to alfalfa (Medicago sp.), rice (Oryza maize (Zea mays), oil seed rape (Brassica forage grasses, and also tree crops such as eucalyptus (Eucalyptus pine (Pinus spruce (Picea sp.) and poplar (Populus as well as Arabidopsis sp. and tobacco (Nicotiana sp.).
20 Definitions As used herein the following terms may be used for interpretation of the claims and specification.
The term "FAHI" refers to the locus or chromosomal location at which the gene is encoded. The term "FAHI" refers to the wild type allele of the gene 25 encoding the F5H gene. The term "fahl" refers to any mutant version of that gene that leads to an altered level of enzyme activity, syringyl lignin content or sinapate ester content that can be measured by thin layer chromatography, high performance liquid chromatography, or by in vivo fluorescence.
"Gene" refers to a nucleic acid fragment that expresses a specific protein, including regulatory sequences preceding non-coding) and following noncoding) the coding region. "Native" gene refers to the gene as found in nature with its own regulatory sequences.
A "chimeric gene" refers to a gene comprising heterogeneous regulatory and coding sequences.
An "endogenous gene" refers to the native gene normally found in its natural location in the genome.
A "foreign gene" or "transgene" refers to a gene not normally found in the host organism but one that is introduced by gene transfer.
The term "promoter" refers to a DNA sequence in a gene, usually upstream to its coding sequence, which controls the expression of the coding sequence by providing the recognition site for RNA polymerase and other factors required for proper transcription. A promoter may also contain DNA sequences that are involved in the binding of protein factors which control the effectiveness of transcription initiation in response to physiological or developmental conditions.
The term "operably linked" refers to nucleic acid sequences on a single nucleic acid molecule which are associated so that the function of one is affected by the other.
As used herein, suitable "regulatory sequences" refer to nucleotide sequences located upstream within, and/or downstream of a coding sequence, which control the transcription and/or expression of the coding sequences in conjunction with the protein biosynthetic apparatus of the cell. These regulatory sequences include promoters, translation leader sequences, transcription termination sequences, and polyadenylation sequences.
The term "T-DNA" refers to the DNA that is transferred into the plant genome from a T-DNA plasmid carried by a strain ofAgrobacterium tumefaciens that is used to infect plants for the purposes of plant transformation.
The term "T-DNA plasmid" refers to a plasmid carried by Agrobacteriurn tumefaciens that carries an origin of replication, selectable markers such as antibiotic resistance, and DNA sequences referred to as right and left borders that are required for plant transformation. The DNA sequence that is transferred during this process is that which is located between the right and left T-DNA border sequences present on a T-DNA plasmid. The DNA between these borders can be manipulated in such a way that any desired sequence can be inserted into the plant genome.
The term "ferulate-5-hydroxylase" or "F5H" will refer to an enzyme in the plant phenylpropanoid biosynthetic pathway which catalyzes the conversion of ferulate to 5-hydroxyferulate and permits the production ofsinapic acid and its 30 subsequent metabolites, including sinapoylmalate and syringyl lignin.
The terms "encoding" and "coding" refer to the process by which a gene, through the mechanisms of transcription and translation, provides the information to a cell from which a series of amino acids can be assembled into a specific amino acid sequence to produce an active enzyme. It is understood that the process of encoding a specific amino acid sequence includes DNA sequences that may involve base changes that do not cause a change in the encoded amino acid, or which involve base changes which may alter one or more amino acids, but do not affect the functional properties of the protein encoded by the DNA sequence. It is therefore understood that the invention encompasses more than the specific exemplary sequences. Modifications to the sequence, such as deletions, insertions, or substitutions in the sequence which produce silent changes that do not substantially affect the functional properties of the resulting protein molecule are also contemplated. For example, alterations in the gene sequence which reflect the degeneracy of the genetic code, or which result in the production of a chemically equivalent amino acid at a given site, are contemplated. Thus, a codon for the amino acid alanine, a hydrophobic amino acid, may be substituted by a codon encoding another less hydrophobic residue, such as glycine, or a more hydrophobic residue, such as valine, leucine, or isoleucine. Similarly, changes which result in substitution of one negatively charged residue for another, such as aspartic acid for glutamic acid, or one positively charged residue for another, such as lysine for arginine, can also be expected to produce a biologically equivalent product.
Nucleotide changes which result in alteration of the N-terminal and C-terminal portions of the protein molecule would also not be expected to alter the activity of the protein. In some cases, it may in fact be desirable to make mutants of the sequence in order to study the effect of alteration on the biological activity of the protein. Each of the proposed modifications is well within the routine skill in the art, as is determination of retention of biological activity in the encoded products.
20 Moreover, the skilled artisan recognizes that sequences encompassed by this S.invention are also defined by their ability to hybridize, under stringent conditions (2X SSC, 0.1% SDS, 65 with the sequences exemplified herein.
The term "expression", as used herein, refers to the production of the protein product encoded by a gene. "Overexpression" refers to the production of a gene product in transgenic organisms that exceeds levels of production in normal or non-transformed organisms.
"Transformation" refers to the transfer of a foreign gene into the genome of a host organism and its genetically stable inheritance. Examples of methods of plant transformation include Agrobacterium-mediated transformation and particleaccelerated or "gene gun" transformation technology as described in U.S. 5,204,253 The term "plasmid rescue" will refer to a technique for circularizing restriction enzyme-digested plant genomic DNA that carries T-DNA fragments bearing a bacterial origin of replication and antibiotic resistance (encoded by the (3-lactamase gene of E. coli) such that this circularized fragment can be propagated as a plasmid in a bacterial host cell such as E. coli.
The term "lignin monomer composition" refers to the relative ratios of guaiacyl monomer and syringyl monomer found in lignified plant tissue.
The Phenvlpropanoid Biosynthetic Pathway The lignin biosynthetic pathway is well researched and the principal pathways are illustrated in Figure 1. Lignin biosynthesis is initiated by the conversion of phenylalanine into cinnamate through the action of phenylalanine ammonia lyase (PAL). The second enzyme of the pathway is cinnamate-4hydroxylase (C4H), a cytochrome P450-dependent monooxygenase (P450) which is responsible for the conversion of cinnamate to p-coumarate. The second hydroxylation of the pathway is catalyzed by a relatively ill-characterized enzyme, p-coumarate-3-hydroxylase (C3H), whose product is caffeic acid. Caffeic acid is subsequently O-methylated by OMT to form ferulic acid, a direct precursor of lignin. The last hydroxylation reaction of the general phenylpropanoid pathway is catalyzed by F5H. The 5-hydroxyferulate produced by F5H is then O-methylated by OMT, the same enzyme that carries out the O-methylation of caffeic acid. This dual specificity of OMT has been confirmed by the cloning of the OMT gene, and expression of the protein in E. coli (Bugos et al., (1991) supra; Gowri et al., (1991) supra).
The committed steps of lignin biosynthesis are catalyzed by 4CL, (hydroxy)cinnamoyl CoA reductase (CCR) and CAD, which ultimately generate coniferyl alcohol from ferulic acid and sinapoyl alcohol from sinapic acid.
Coniferyl alcohol and sinapoyl alcohol are polymerized by extracellular oxidases to yield guaiacyl lignin and syringyl lignin respectively, although syringyl lignin is more accurately described as a co-polymer of both monomers.
Although ferulic acid, sinapic acid, and in some cases p-coumaric acid are channeled into lignin biosynthesis, in some plants these compounds are precursors 25 for other secondary metabolites. In Arabidopsis, sinapic acid serves as a precursor S. for lignin biosynthesis but it is also channeled into the synthesis of soluble sinapic acid esters. In this pathway, sinapic acid is converted to sinapoylglucose which serves as an intermediate in the biosynthesis of sinapoylmalate (Figure Sinapic acid and its esters are fluorescent and may be use as a marker of plants deficient in 30 those enzymes needed to produce sinapic acid (Chapple et al., supra).
Identification of the FAHI Locus and fahl Alleles A series of mutants of Arabidopsis that fail to accumulate sinapoylmalate have been identified and have been collectively termedfahl mutants. The fluorescent nature of sinapoylmalate permits the facile identification of sinapic acid esters by thin layer chromatography (TLC) followed by observation under ultraviolet (UV) light). The fluorescence of sinapoylmalate can also be visualized in vivo because sinapoylmalate is accumulated in the adaxial leaf epidermis. Wild type Arabidopsis exhibits a pale blue fluorescence under UV whilefahl mutants
J
appear dark red because of the lack of the blue fluorescence of sinapoylmalate and the fluorescence of chlorophyll in the subtending mesophyll (Chapple et al., supra).
A TLC-based mutant screen of 4.200 ethyl methanesulfonate-mutagenized Arabidopsis plants identified a number of independent mutant lines that accumulated significantly lower levels ofsinapoylmalate. The mutations in these lines were identified asfahl-I throughfahl-5. The in vivo UV-fluorescence visual screen was used to identify more mutant lines carrying thefahl mutation. Two of these mutants (fahl-6 andfahl-7) were selected from EMS-mutagenized populations. One mutant line (fahl-8) was selected from among a mutant population generated by fast-neutron bombardment (Nilan, R. A. Nucl. Sci. Absir., 28(3), 5940 (1973); Kozer et al., Genet. Pol., 26(3),367, (1985)). A final mutant line, (fahl-9) was identified using the same technique from a T-DNA tagged population of plants. Before further analysis, each mutant line was backcrossed at least twice to the wild type and homozygous lines were established.
To determine whether the newly isolated mutant lines were defective at the same locus, that is, within the gene encoding F5I, genetic complementation experiments were performed. In these tests, each mutant line was crossed to fahl-2 which is known to be defective in F5H. In each case, the newly isolated mutant line was used as the female parent and was fertilized with pollen from a 20 fahl-2 homozygous mutant. A reciprocal cross was also performed usingfahl-2 as the female parent, and the new mutant line as the pollen donor. The seeds from these crosses were collected several weeks later, and were planted for subsequent analysis. The progeny were analyzed for sinapoylmalate production by TLC, high pressure liquid chromatography and by observation under UV light. From these 25 crosses, all of the Fl progeny examined were sinapoylmalate-deficient, indicating that all of the mutations identified were allelic.
Thefahl-9 line was selected for further study because of the presence of the T-DNA insertion within the F5H gene. The T-DNA insertion within the FAHI locus facilitated the cloning of the flanking Arabidopsis DNA which could then be used to retrieve the wild type F5H gene from cDNA and genomic libraries (Meyer et al., Proc. Natl. Acad Sci. USA, 93, 6869 (1996)).
Cloning of the FAH1 Locus A fragment of DNA from the FAH1 locus was isolated from the T-DNA taggedfahl-9 mutant using the technique of plasmid rescue (Meyer et al., supra).
The technique of plasmid rescue is common and well known in the art and may be used to isolate specific alleles from T-DNA transformed plants (Behringer, et al., Plant Mol. Biol. Rep.,10, 190,(1992)). Briefly, the vector used to generate the T-DNA tagged population of Arabidopsis carries sequences required for autonomous replication of DNA in bacteria and sequences that confer antibiotic resistance. Once this DNA is integrated into the plant genome, specific restriction endonuclease digests can be employed to generate fragments that can be circularized, ligated, and transformed into E. coli. Circularized DNA from the T-DNA will generate functional plasmids that confer antibiotic resistance to their bacterial hosts such that they can be identified by growth on selective media.
Those plasmids that are generated from the sequences including the right and left borders will also carry with them the plant genomic sequences flanking the T-DNA insertion. Plasmids generated from either of the T-DNA borders that carry flanking DNA sequences can be identified by analyzing the products of diagnostic restriction enzyme digests on agarose gels. The plasmids with flanking sequences can then serve as a starting point for cloning plant sequences that share homology to the DNA at the point of T-DNA insertion (Behringer, et al., supra).
Plasmid rescue was conducted using EcoRI-digested DNA prepared from homozygousfahl-9 plants. EcoRI-digested genomic DNA was ligated and then electroporated into competent DH5a E. coli. DNA from rescued plasmids was further digested with both EcoRI and Sail and the digests were analyzed by gel S" electrophoresis to identify plasmids that contained flanking Arabidopsis DNA. A SSaclI-EcoRI fragment from this rescued plasmid was used to identify an F5H clone from an Arabidopsis cDNA library (Newman, T. et al., Plant. PhysioL 106, 1241, (1994)).
DNA Sequencing of the F5H cDNA and genomic clones Sequence analysis of the F5H cDNA and genomic clones was performed on plasmid DNA manually using a United States Biochemical Sequenase Kit v. 2.0, on a DuPont Genesis® 2000 sequencer or on an Applied Biosystems 373A DNA sequencer, using standard vector-based sequencing oligonucleotides or customsynthesized oligonucleotides as appropriate. The sequence of the Arabidopsis thaliana F5H cDNA is given in SEQ ID NO.:1 and the sequence of the Arabidopsis thaliana F5H genomic clone is given in SEQ ID NO.:3.
The F5H cDNA contains a 1560 bp open reading frame that encodes a protein with a molecular weight of 58,728. The putative ATG initiation codon is flanked by an A at -3 and a G at in keeping with the nucleotides commonly found flanking the initiator methionine in plant mRNAs (Lutcke et al., EMBO J. 6, 43, (1987)). Immediately following the inferred initiator methionine is a 17 amino acid sequence containing nine hydroxy amino acids (Figure The subsequent fifteen amino acid sequence is rich in hydrophobic amino acids; eleven hydrophobic residues comprised of phenylalanine, isoleucine, leucine and valine residues. This hydrophobic stretch is immediately followed by an Arg-Arg-Arg-Arg putative stop transfer sequence. F5H also shares significant sequence identity with other P450s.
Most notable is the stretch between Pro-450 and Gly-460. This region contains eight residues that comprise the heme-binding domain and are highly conserved among most P450s, one exception being allene oxide synthase from Linum usitatissimum (Song et al., Proc. Natl. Acad Sci. USA 90. 8519, (1993)). The Pro-450 to Gly-460 region contains Cys-458 in F5H, which by analogy is most likely the heme binding ligand in this enzyme.
Transformation of fahl-2 Arabidopsis and Restoration of Sinapovimalate Accumulation The identity of the F5H gene was confirmed by complementation of the fahl-2 mutant with a genomic clone and a construct where the F5H genomic coding sequence was expressed under the control of the cauliflower mosaic virus promoter. Briefly, the F5H cDNA was used as a probe to screen a transformation competent library (Meyer et al., (1994) Science, 264, 1452-1455) for genomic clones. Using this method, a cosmid clone (pBIC20-F5H) was isolated that carried a 17kb genomic insert containing the inferred start and stop codons of the F5H gene (Figure The portion of this cosmid carrying the open reading frame was excised from the cosmid and subcloned into a vector in which it was operably linked to the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter 20 (pGA482-35S-F5H) (Figure Both the original cosmid and this derivative plasmid construct were electroporated into Agrobacterimum tumefaciens and were used to transformfahl-2 mutants. Success of the transformations was evidenced by TLC assays demonstrating sinapoylmalate accumulation in leaf tissues of the fahl-2 transformants carrying the T-DNA from the pBIC20-F5H cosmid or the pGA482-35S-F5H plasmid (Figure These data clearly indicated that the gene encoding F5H had been identified.
Modification of Lienin Composition in Plants Transformed With F5H Under the Control of the Cauliflower Mosaic Virus 35S Promoter "Arabidopsis plants homozygous for thefahl-2 allele were transformed with Agrobacterium carrying the pGA482-3 5 S-F5H plasmid which contains the chimeric F5H gene under the control of the constitutive cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter (Odell. et al., Nature 313, 810-812, (1985)). Independent homozygous transformants carrying the F5H transgene at a single genetic locus were identified by selection on kanamycin-containing growth media, grown up in soil and plant tissue was analyzed for lignin monomer composition. Nitrobenzene oxidation analysis of the lignin in wild type, fahl-2, and transformants carrying the T-DNA from the pGA482-35S-F5H construct revealed that F5H overexpression as measured by northern blot analysis (Figure 4) led to a significant increase in syringyl content of the transgenic lignin (Figure The lignin of the plants demonstrated a syringyl content as high as 29 rnol% as opposed to the svringyl content of the wild type lignin which was 18 mol% (Table 1) (Example These data clearly demonstrate that overexpression of the F5H gene is useflul for the alteration of lignin composition in transgenic plants.
TABLE I lImpact of 35S Promoter-Driven F5H Expression on Lignin Monomer Composition in Arabidops Total G unitsa Line umol R- d.w.) wild type 3.33 +-0.32 fahl-2 5.44 +-0.45 88 6.63 +-0.75 172 4.21 I-0.36 170 4.08 /0.33 122 3.74 +/0.20 108 5.40 +-0.48 107 5.74 +-0.60 180 3.85+/0.31 117 3.21 +/0.30 128 3.4.6 +-0.22 asum of vanilhn vanillic acid bu of syringaldchyde syringic acid Towa S uxutsb (j unol g'I d.w.) 0.75 0.09 n.d.
0.35 0.04 0.67 0.07 0.97 +-0.06 0.93 +-0.05 1.59 +-0.18 1.96 1 1.34 +-0.11 1.18 +-0.13 1.39 +-0.17 Total G+S units mol% S 4.09 +-0.41 5.44 +-0.45 6.99 +-0.79 4.88+/0.42 5.05 +-0.37 4.66+10.22 6.98 +10.65 7.70 +-0.89 5.19 +-0.40 4.39 +-0.43 5.05 +-0.37 18.4 +-0.91 5.06+10.17 13.7 +-0.55 19.2 +-0.56 19.9 0.86 22.7 +-0.82 25.3 +-1.23 25.8 +-0.78 28.8 +-0.92 27.5 +-1.80 ~6@S b @0 SS 0 0@ S. 0 6O 00 S 0 0
S
0* SO S S 5 050)
S
SOS.
S
0055 *0 OS 0 000 S 4~ @0
S
S
0@S* @505 S@ S 5*
S*
In a similar fashion, TI tobacco (Nicofiana tzbacum) F5H transformants were generated, grown up and analyzed for lignin monomer composition.
Nitrobenzene oxidation analysis demonstrated that the syringyl monomer content of the leaf midribs was increased from 14 mol% in the wild type to 40 mol% in the transgenic line that most highly expressed the F5H transgene (Table 2).
TABLE 2 Impact of 35S Promoter-Driven FSH Expression on Lignin Monomer Composition in Tobacco Leaf Midrib Xylem Total G unitsa Total S unitsb Total G+S units Line umol g 1 I (p±moli! I (4mol P- mol S wild type 1.40+10.26 0.23 +/0.04 1.63 0.30 14.3 +-1.09 0.86 +10.16 0.24 10.03 1.11 +/0.20 22.4 *-1.53 27 1.13 0.11 0.52 0.05 1.65 +10.16 31.3 +10.50 48 1.28 I-0.32 0.71 0.19 1,99 i--0.43 35.7 6.06 33 0.65 -10.17 0. 43 -/0.1H 1.09 10.27 40.0 1.86 asum of vaillini vamillic acid bstmui of svringaidehYde svringic acid Construction of Chimeric Genes for the Expression of F5H in Plants.
The expression of foreign genes in plants is well-established (De Blaere et al. (1987) Meth. Enz-vmol. 143:277-291) and this invention provides for a method to apply this technology to the introduction of a chimeric gene for the overexpression of the F5H gene in plants for the manipulation of lignin monomer composition. The expression of the F5H mRNAs at an appropriate level may require the use of different chimeric genes utilizing different promoters. A preferred class of heterologous hosts for the expression of the coding sequence of the F5H gene are eukaryotic hosts, particularly the cells of higher plants.
Particularly preferred among the higher plants and the seeds derived from them are alfalfa (Medicago rice (Oryza maize (Zea mays), oil seed rape (Brassica forage grasses, and also tree crops such as eucalyptus (Eucalyptus pine (Pinus spruce (Picea sp.) and poplar (Populus as well as Arabidopsis sp.
and tobacco (Nicotiana Expression in plants will use regulatory sequences functional in such plants.
The origin of the promoter chosen to drive the expression of the coding sequence is not critical as long as it has sufficient transcriptional activity to accomplish the invention by expressing translatable mRNA for the F5H gene in the desired host tissue. Preferred promoters will effectively target F5H expression to those tissues that undergo lignification. These promoters may include, but are not limited to promoters of genes encoding enzymes of the phenylpropanoid pathway such as the PAL promoter (Ohi et al., Plant Cell, 2, 837, (1990) and the 4CL promoter(Hauffed et al., Plant Cell, 3, 435, (1991).
25 Depending upon the application, it may be desirable to select promoters that are specific for expression in one or more organs of the plant. Examples include the light-inducible promoters of the small subunit of ribulose carboxylase, if the expression is desired in photosynthetic organs, or promoters active specifically in roots.
Expression of F5H Chimeric Genes in Plants Various methods of introducing a DNA sequence of transforming) into eukaryotic cells of higher plants are available to those skilled in the art (see EPO publications 0 295 959 A2 and 0 138 341 Al). Such methods include those based on transformation vectors based on the Ti and Ri plasmids of Agrobacterium spp. It is particularly preferred to use the binary type of these vectors. Ti-derived vectors transform a wide variety of higher plants, including monocotyledonous and dicotyledonous plants, such as soybean, cotton, tobacco, Arabidopsis and rape (Pacciotti et al., Bio/Technology 3, 241, (1985); Byrne et al., Plant Cell. Tissue and Organ Culture 8, 3, (1987); Sukhapinda et al., Plant Mol. Biol. 8, 209, (1987): Lorz et al., ,Wol. Gen. Genet. 199. 178, (1985). Potrvkus lol. Gen. Genet 199, 183, (1985)).
For introduction into plants the chimeric genes of the invention can be inserted into binary vectors as described in Example Other transformation methods are available to those skilled in the art, such as direct uptake of foreign DNA constructs [see EPO publication 0 295 959 A2], techniques of electroporation [see Fromm et al. (1986) Nature (London) 319:791] or high-velocity ballistic bombardment with metal particles coated with the nucleic acid constructs (see Kline et al., Nature (London) 327:70 (1987), and see U.S.
Patent No. 4,945,050). Once transformed, the cells can be regenerated by those skilled in the art.
The following Examples are meant to illustrate key embodiments of the invention but should not be construed to be limiting in any way.
EXAMPLES
GENERAL METHODS Restriction enzyme digestions, phosphorylations, ligations and transformations were done as described in Sambrook et al., Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual, Second Edition (1989) Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press.
All reagents and materials used for the growth and maintenance of bacterial cells were obtained from Aldrich Chemicals (Milwaukee, WI), DIFCO Laboratories (Detroit, MI), GIBCO/BRL (Gaithersburg, MD), or Sigma Chemical Company (St. Louis, MO) unless otherwise specified.
The meaning of abbreviations is as follows: means hour(s), "min" .means minute(s), "sec" means second(s), means day(s), "pL" means 25 microliter(s), "mL" means milliliters, means liters, means grams, "mg" means milligrams, means microgram(s), "nm" means nanometer(s), "m" means meter(s), means Einstein(s).
Plant material Arabidopsis thaliana was grown under a 16 h light/8 h dark photoperiod at 100 mE m- 2 s-I at 24 °C cultivated in Metromix 2000 potting mixture (Scotts, *Marysville OH). Mutant linesfahl-I throughfahl-5 were identified by TLC as described below. Using their red fluorescence under UV light as a marker, mutant lines fahl-6,fahl-7, andfahl-8 were selected from ethylmethane sulfonate (fahl-6, fahl-7) or fast-neutron (fahl-8) mutagenized populations of Landsberg erecta M2 35 seed. The T-DNA tagged line 3590 (fahl-9) was similarly identified in the DuPont T-DNA tagged population (Feldmann, Malmberg, Dean, (1994) Mutagenesis in Arabidopsis in Arabidopsis, M. Meyerowitz and C. R.
Somerville, eds.) Cold Spring Harbor Press). All lines were backcrossed to wild type at least twce prior to experimental use to remove un linked background mutations.
Secodar Meabolite Analsis Le ndafN extat wer Iprepared from 100 mg samples of fresh leaf tissue suspended in I ML of 50%/ methanol. Samples were vortexed briefly, then frozen at -70 OC. Samples were thawed, vortexed, and centrifuiged at 12-,000 xg for min. Sinapoylinalate content was qualitatively deterrlufed following silica gel TLC, in a mobile phase of n-butafl/lethanolirwater 1: Sinapic acid and its esters were visualized under long wave UjV light (365 rnm) by their characteistic fluorescence.
SotenAnal is For Southern analysis, DNA was extracted from leaf material (Rogers, et al., (1985) Plant. MoL BioL 5, 69), digested with restrictioni endonucleases and transferred to IHybond N+ membrane (Ainersharn, Cleveland Ohio) by standard protocols. cDNA probes were radiolabeiled with 32 P and hybidized to the target membrane in Denhardt's hybridization buffer (900 mM sodium chloride, 6 M disodiuin EDTA, 60 mM sodium phosphate pH 7.4, 0.5% SDS, 0.01% denatured herring sperm DNA and 0. 1% each p olyvMfllpyrrolidone, bovine serum albumin, and Ficoll 400) containing 50% forinanhide at 42 0 C. To remove unbound probe, membranes were washed twice at room temperature and twice at 6 5 C in 2x SSPE (300 mM4 sodium chloride, 2 mM disodium EDTA, 20 MM sodium phosphate pH 7.4) containing 0. 1% SDS, and exposed to film.
Northern A~nalyis RNA was first extracted from leaf material according to the following protocol.
For extraction of RNA, Coveys extraction buffer was prepared by dissolving 1% TIPS (triisopropyl-naphthalene sulfonate, sodium salt), 6% PAS (p-arninUfosalicylate, sodium salt) in 50 MM Tris pH 8.4 containing v/v Kirby's phenol. Kirby's phenol was prepared by neutralizinlg liquified phenol *30 containing 0. 1% 8-hydroxyquinoIdne with 0. 1 M4 Tris-HCI pH 8.8. For each R.NA preparation,~ a I g samples of plant tissue was ground in liquid nitrogen and 0 0.0*extracted in 5 mL Covey's extraction buffer containing 10 xL P3-mercaptoethanol.
The sample was extracted with 5 mnL of a 1: 1 mixture of Kirby's phenol and 0% 0chloroform, vortexed. and centrifu.ged for 20 min at 7,000 ,cg. The supernlatant was removed and the nucleic acids were precipitated with 500 LLi of 3 M sodium acetate and 5 mnL isopropanol and collected by centrifugation at 10,000 xg for mmd. The pellet was redissolved in 500 jiL water, and the RNA was precipitated onl ice with 250 l.LL 8 M LiCl, and collected by centrfgation~ at 10,000 xg for 10 min. The pellet was resuspended in 200 uL water and extracted with an equal volume of chloroform:isoamyl alcohol 1: with vortexing. After centrifugation for 2 min at 10,000 xg, the upper aqueous phase was removed, and the nucleic acids were precipitated at -20 °C by the addition of 20 uL 3 M sodium acetate and 200 pL isopropanol. The pellet was washed with 1 mL cold ethanol, dried, and resuspended in 100 4L water. RNA content was assayed spectrophotometrically at 260 nm. Samples containing 1 to 10 ug of RNA'were subjected to denaturing gel electrophoresis as described elsewhere (Sambrook et al., supra).
Extracted RNA was transferred to Hybond N membrane (Amersham, Cleveland Ohio), and probed with radiolabelled probes prepared from cDNA clones. Blots were hybridized overnight, washed twice at room temperature and once at 65 *C in 3x SSC (450 mM sodium chloride, 45 mM sodium citrate, pH 7.0) containing 0.1% SDS, and exposed to film.
Identification ofcDNA and Genomic Clones cDNA and genomic clones for F5H were identified by standard techniques using a 2.3 kb Sacll/EcoPR fragment from the rescued plasmid (pCC 1) (Example 2) as a probe. The cDNA clone pCC30 was identified in the XPRL2 library (Newman et al., (1994) supra) kindly provided by Dr. Thomas Newman (DOE Plant Research Laboratory, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI).
A genomic cosmid library ofArabidopsis thaliana (ecotype Landsberg erecta) generated in the binary cosmid vector pBIC20 (Example 3) (Meyer et al., Science 264, 1452, (1994)) was screened with the radiolabelled cDNA insert derived from pCC30. Genomic inserts in the pBIC20 T-DNA are flanked by the neomycin S: 25 phosphotransferase gene for kanamycin selection adjacent to the T-DNA right border sequence, and the P-glucuronidase gene for histochemical selection adjacent to the left border. Positive clones were characterized by restriction digestion and Southern analysis in comparison to Arabidopsis genomic DNA.
Plant transformation 30 Transformation ofArabidopsis thaliana was performed by vacuum infiltration (Bent et al., Science 265, 1856, (1994)) with minor modifications.
Briefly, 500 mL cultures of transformed Agrobacterium harboring the !"pBIC20-F5H cosmid or the pGA482-35S-F5H construct were grown to stationary phase in Luria broth containing 10 mg L- 1 rifampicin and 50 mg L- 1 kanamycin.
Cells were harvested by centrifugation and resuspended in 1 L infiltration media containing 2.2 g MS salts (Murashige and Skoog, Physiol. Plant. 15, 473, (1962)), Gamborg's B5 vitamins (Gamborg et al., Exp. Cell Res. 50, 151, (1968)), 0.5 g MES. 50 g sucrose, 44 nM benzylaminopurine, and 200 .L Silwet L-77 (OSI Specialties) at pH 5.7 Bolting Arabidopsis plants (To generation) that were 5 to cm tall were inverted into the bacterial suspension and exposed to a vacuum (>500 mm ofHg) for three to five min. Infiltrated plants were returned to standard growth conditions for seed production. Transformed seedlings (T 1 were identified by selection on MS medium containing 50 mg L- kanamycin and 200 mg L- 1 timentin (SmithKline Beecham) and were transferred to soil.
Transformation of tobacco was accomplished using the leaf disk method of Horsch et al. (Science 227, 1229, (1985)).
Nitrobenzene oxidation For the determination oflignin monomer composition, stem tissue was ground to a powder in liquid nitrogen and extracted with 20 mL of 0.1 M sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.2 at 37 "C for 30 min followed by three extractions with ethanol at 80 The tissue was then extracted once with acetone and completely dried. Tissue was saponified by treatment with 1.0 M NaOH at 37 °C for 24 hours, washed three times with water, once with 80% ethanol, once with acetone, and dried. Nitrobenzene oxidation of stem tissue samples was performed with a protocol modified from liyama et al. Sci. FoodAgric. 51, 481-491.
(1990)). Samples oflignocellulosic material (5 mg each) were mixed with 500 L of 2 M NaOH and 25 p.L ofnitrobenzene. This mixture was incubated in a sealed 20 glass tube at 160 "C for 3 h. The reaction products were cooled to room temperature and 5 pL of a 20 mg mL- 1 solution of 3-ethoxy-4-hydroxybenzaldehyde in pyridine was added as an internal standard before the mixture was extracted twice with 1 mL of dichloromethane. The aqueous phase was acidified with HC1 (pH 2) and extracted twice with 900 pL of ether. The combined ether phases were dried with anhydrous sodium sulfate and the ether was evaporated in a stream of nitrogen. The dried residue was resuspended in 50 pL of pyridine, 10 jL ofBSA (N,O-bis-(trimethylsilyl)-trifluoracetamide) was added and 1 pL aliquots of the silylated products were analyzed using a Hewlet-Packard 5890 Series II gas chromatograph equipped with Supelco SPB I column (30 m x 30 0.75 mm). Lignin monomer composition was calculated from the integrated areas of the peaks representing the trimethylsilylated derivatives of vanillin, syringaldehyde, vanillic acid and syringic acid. Total nitrobenzene oxidationsusceptible guaiacyl units (vanillin and vanillic acid) and syringyl units (svringaldehyde and syringic acid) were calculated following correction for recovery efficiencies of each of the products during the extraction procedure relative to the internal standard.
EXAMPLE I IDENTIFICATION OF THE T-DNA TAGGED ALLELE OF FAHI A putatively T-DNA taggedfahl mutant was identified in a collection of T-DNA tagged lines (Feldmann et al., Mol. Gen. Genet. 208, 1, (1987)) (Dr. Tim Caspar, Dupont, Wilmington, DE) by screening adult plants under long wave UV light. A red fluorescent line (line 3590) was selected, and its progeny were assayed for sinapoylmalate content by TLC. The analyses indicated that line 3590 did not accumulate sinapoylmalate. Reciprocal crosses of line 3590 to afahl-2 homozygote, followed by analysis of the Fl generation for sinapoylmalate content demonstrated that line 3590 was a new allele of fahl, and it was designatedfahl-9.
Preliminary experiments indicated co-segregation of the kanamycinresistant phenotype of the T-DNA tagged mutant with thefahl phenotype. Selfed seed from 7 kanamycin-resistant [fahl-9 x FAH1] Fl plants segregated 1:3 for kanamycin resistance (kan"1i ve karWaestMt) and 3:1 for sinapoyhlalate deficiency (FAHl.fahl). From these lines, fahl plapts gave rise to only kafn es is a t fahl progeny. To determine the genetic distance between the T-DNA insertion and the FAH1 locus, multiple test crosses were performed between a [fahl-9 x FAH1] Fl and afahl-2 homozygote. The distance between the FAH1 locus and the T-DNA insertion was evaluated by determining the frequency at which 20 FAH1/karen e m a t i progeny were recovered in the test cross Fl. In the absence of crossover events, all kanamycin-resistant Fl progeny would be unable to accumulate sinapoylmalate, and would thus fluoresce red under UV light. In 682 kan res ist ant Fl progeny examined, no sinapoylmalate proficient plants were identified, indicating a very tight linkage between the T-DNA insertion site and the 25 FAH1 locus.
EXAMPLE 2 PLASMID RESCUE AND cDNA CLONING OF THE fahl GENE Plasmid rescue was conducted using EcoRI-digested DNA prepared from homozygousfahl-9 plants (Behringer et al., (1992), supra). Five .tg of EcoRI-digested genomic DNA was incubated with 125 U T4 DNA ligase overnight at 14 *C in a final volume of 1 mL. The ligation mixture was concentrated approximately four fold by two extractions with equal volumes of 2-butanol, and was then ethanol precipitated and electroporated into competent cells as described (Newman et al., (1994), supra).
DNA from rescued plasmids was double digested with EcoRI and Sall.
Plasmids generated from internal T-DNA sequences were identified by the presence of triplet bands at 3.8, 2.4 and 1.2 kb and were discarded. One plasmid (pCC giving rise to the expected 3.8 kb band plus a novel 5.6 kb band was T I identified as putative external right border plasmid. Using a Sac llEcoRI fragment of pCC i that appeared to represent Arabidopsis DNA, putative cDNA clones for F5H were identified. The putative F5H clone carried a 1.9 kb SalI-Nod insert, the sequence of which was determined. Blastx analysis (Altschul et al., J.
Mol. Biol. 215, 403, (1990)) indicated that this cDNA encodes a cytochrome P450-dependent monooxygenase, consistent with earlier reports that thefahl mutant is defective in F5H (Chapple et al., supra) and (ii) F5H is a cytochrome P450-dependent monooxygenase (Grand, supra).
Southern and Northern Blot analysis To determine whether the putative F5H cDNA actually represented the gene that was disrupted in the T-DNA tagged line Southern and northern analysis was used to characterize the availablefahl mutants using the putative F5H cDNA.
Figure 6 shows a Southern blot comparing hybridization of the F5H cDNA to EcoRI-digested genomic DNA isolated from wild type (ecotypes Columbia (Col), Landsberg erecta (LER), and Wassilewskija and the ninefahl alleles including the T-DNA taggedfahl-9 allele. WS is the ecotype from which the T-DNA tagged line was generated.
These data indicated the presence of a restriction fragment length polymorphism between the tagged line and the wild type. These data also indicates a restriction fragment length polymorphism in thefahl-8 allele which was generated with fast neutrons, a technique reported to cause deletion mutations.
As shown in Figure 6 the genomic DNA of thefahl-8 andfahl-9 (the T-DNA tagged line) alleles is disrupted in the region corresponding to the putative S. F5H cDNA. These data also indicate that F5H is encoded by a single gene in 25 Arabidopsis as expected considering that the mutation in thefah! mutant segregates as a single Mendelian gene. These data provide the first indication that the putative F5H cDNA corresponds to the gene that is disrupted in thefahl mutants.
Plant material homozygous for nine independently-derivedfahl alleles was surveyed for the abundance of transcript corresponding to the putative F5H cDNA *using Northern blot analysis. The data is shown in Figure 7.
.As can be seen from the data, the putative F5H mRNA was represented at similar levels in leaf tissue of Columbia, Landsberg erecta and Wassilewskija ecotypes, and in the EMS-inducedfahl-1, fahl-4, andfahl-5, as well as the fast 35 neutron-inducedfahl- 7 Transcript abundance was substantially reduced in leaves from plants homozygous for thefahl-2,fahl-3 andfahl-6, all of which were EMS-induced, the fast neutron-induced mutantfahl-8 and in the tagged linefahl-9.
The mRNA infahl-8 mutant also appears to be truncated. These data provided strong evidence that the cDNA clone that had been identified is encoded by the FAH1 locus.
EXAMPLE 3 DEMONSTRATION OF THE IDENTITY OF THE F5H cDNA BY TRANSFORMATION OF fahl MUTANT PLANTS WITH WILDTYPE AND RESTORATION OF SINAPOYLMALATE ACCUMULATION In order to demonstrate the identity of the FSH gene at the functioUal level, the transformation-competent pBIC20 cosmid library (Meyer et al., supra) was screened for corresponding genomic clones using the full length F5H cDNA as a probe. A clone (pBIC20-F5H) carrying a genomic insert of 17 kb that contains 2.2 kb of sequence upstream of the putative F5H start codon and 12.5 kb of sequence downstream of the stop codon of the F5H gene (Figure 2) was transformed into thefahl-2 mutant by vacuum infiltration. Thirty independent infiltration experiments were performed, and 167 kanamycin-resistant seedlings, representing at least 3 transformants from each infiltration, were transferred to soil and were analyzed with respect to sinapic acid-derived secondary metabolites. Of these plants, 164 accumulated sinapoylmalate in their leaf tissue as determined by TLC (Figure These complementation data indicate that the gene defective in thefall mutant is present on the binary cosmid 20 To delimit the region of DNA on the pBIC20-FSH cosmid responsible for complementation of the mutant phenotype, a 2.7 kB fragment of the F5H genomic sequence was fused downstream of the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter in the binary plasmid pGA482 and this construct (pGA482-35S-F5H) (Figure 2) was transformed into thefahl-2 mutant. The presence of sinapoylmalate in 109 out of 110 transgenic lines analyzed by TLC or by in vivo fluorescence under UV light indicated that thefahl mutant phenotype had been complemented (Figure 3).
These data provide conclusive evidence that the F5H cDNA has been identified.
EXAMPLE 4 DNA SEQUENCING OF THE F5H cDNA AND GENOMIC CLONES The F5H cDNA and a 5156 bp HindIII-XhoI fragment of the genomic clone were both fully sequenced on both strands and the sequence of the F5H protein (SEQ ID NO.:2) was inferred from the cDNA sequence (Figure 8).
The sequence of the.Arabidopsis thaliana F5H cDNA is given in SEQ ID NO.:1.
The sequence of the Arabidopsis thaliana F5H genomic clone is given in SEQ ID NO.:3.
1 EX1AMPLE MODIFICATION OF LIGNTN MONOMER COVMPOSITION
IN
TRANSGENIC PLANTS OVEREXPRESSING Generation of Transgenic Plants Ectopically Expressing the F5H Gene Using an adaptor-based cloning strategy, regulatory sequences 5' of the translation initiation site of the F5H gene were replaced with the strong constitutive cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter (Odell et al., Nature 313, 810-812. (1985)), as shown in Figure 2. The.resulting construct carries 2719 bp of the F5H genomic sequence driven by the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter fused 50 bp upstream of the inferred ATG start codon. As a result, the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter drives the expression of the F5H gene by using the transcription start site of the viral promoter and the termination signal present on the F5H genomic sequence. This expression cassette for ectopic expression of was inserted into the T-DNA of the binary vector pGA482 (An, G. (1987), Binary Ti vectors for plant transformation and promoter analysis in: Methods in enzymologv. Wu, R. ed. Academic Press, NY 1.53: 292-305) and introduced into Agrobacterium tumefaciens by electroporation.
Transgenic Arabidopsis plants of the ecotype Columbia that were homozygous for thefahl-2 (Chapple et al., supra) allele were transformed with Agrobacterium cultures harboring the pGA482-35S-F5H construct according to the method of Bent et al. (supra). Transgenic plants of the T2 and T3 generation were identified by selection on media containing kanamycin and subsequently S* transferred to soil.
Determination oflignin monomer composition of Arabidopsis stem tissue 25 Total stem tissue was harvested from 4 week old plants that had been grown in soil at 22 *C under a 16 h/8 h light/dark photoperiod. Nitrobenzene oxidation analysis generated mol% syringyl values for 9 different transformant lines (Table 1) ranging from 5.06 0.17 mol% to 28.8 0.92 mol% as opposed to the wildtype control which demonstrated a value of 18.4 0.91 mol%. The 30 fahl-2 mutant background in which the transgenic lines were generated completely lacks syringyl lignin (Table The low expression of the F5H transgene in a genetic background that lacks endogenous F5H message explains how line 88 can have syringyl lignin levels that are lower than wild type.
In addition to Arabidopsis, tobacco plants were transformed in a similar fashion with the F5H gene under control of the cauliflower mosaic virus promoter. T2 and T3 positive transformants were screened and analyzed for lignin modification and the data is given in Table 2. Nitrobenzene oxidation analysis of tobacco leaf midribs generated mol% syringyl values for 4 different transformant lines (Table 2) ranging from 22.4 1.53 mol% to 40.0 1 86 mol% as opposed to the wildtype control which demonstrated a value of 14.3 1.09 mol%.
The data in Tables I and 2 clearly demonstrate that over-e xpressiofl of the ESH gene in transgenic Plants results in the modification of lignin monomer composition. The transformed plant is reasonably expected to have syringyl lignin monomer content that is from about 0 mol%/ to about 95 mol% as measured in whole plant tisse.
I
SEQUENCE L:STING GENERAL rNFORMATION:
APPLICANT:
NAME: PURDUE RESEARCH FOUNDATION STREET: 1650 ENGINEERING ADM BL2G, RCOM 328 CITY: WEST LAFAYETTE STATE: INDIANA COUNTRY: UNITED STATES OF AMERICA POSTAL CODE (ZIP) 47907-1650 TELEPHONE: 317-494-2610 TELEFAX: 317-496-1277
TELEX:
(ii) TITLE OF INVENTION: A METHOD FOR REGULATION OF PLANT LIGNIN COMPOSITION (iii) NUMBER OF SEQUENCES: 3 (iv) COMPUTER READABLE FORM: MEDIUM TYPE: DISKETTE, 3.50 INCH COMPUTER: IBM PC COMPATIBLE OPERATING SYSTEM: WINDOWS 3.1 SOFTWARE: MICROSOFT WORD 2.OC CURRENT APPLICATION DATA: APPLICATION NUMBER: FILING DATE:
CLASSIFICATION:
(vi) PRIOR APPLICATION DATA: APPLICATION NUMBER: 60/009,119 FILING DATE: DECEMBER 22, 1995 (vii) ATTORNEY/AGENT INFORMATION: NAME: THOMAS Q. HENRY REGISTRATION NO.: 28,309 REFERENCE/DOCKET NUMBER: CR-9870 •o*o* .**oo NFORMATION FOR SEQ -0 NO:-T: SEQUENCE CHA--RACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 1838 base paizs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: DNA (cONA) (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID No:!: AAAAAAAACA CTCAATATGG AGTCTTCTAT ATCACAAACA CTAAGCAAAC TATcAGATC-- 0 4 0* 0 0* *0 0 *0 0 *0 0% C'
C
0 C
CACGACGTC.
GCGAAGGCC'
GATGGACCAJ
CCATCTCCG(
AGTCCTTCA;
TCTGACTTAC
GAGAAAAGTCG
TCGTGATGAM
CGTCGGGGAG
AGCCTGCGAG
TGGAGCCTTC
AAACAAGCGG
TGAACATATG
CGATATGGTT
AGCGGATCTT
CGTTATGTTT
ATTACGGAGC
TGACAGACGA
AGAAACCCTA
TAGTATCGAC
AGGACGCGAC
AC CGGG CGTA
TAGATCGTGC
ATTACATTGC
TGATGTGTTT
r CTTGTCATC r CCATATCCT, k CTCACCCAC(
ATGGGATTC(
GTCCAAGACJ
*GACCGAGCGC
TGTGTCATG;
GTGGACAAAm
*CAAATTTTTG
AAGGGACAAG
AACGTAGCGG
CTCGTGAAGG
AAG.AAGAAGG
GATGATCTTC
CAAAATTCCA
GGAGGAACGG
CCCGAGGATC
GTTGAAGAAT
AGGATGCACC
GGTTTCTTCA
CCAACCTC-T
CCGGAT7TCA
CCGGGTATGC
TTCACGTGGA
G TTGTCTCTC'
CCCGGTCCAC(
ZGTGGTTTAG(
-TCCATAGT;
k GCGTCTTCTC ACATGGCTTl
AGGTGTTTAC
TGGTCCGGTC
CACTGACCCG
ACGAGTTCAT
ATTTCATACC
CCCGTAATGA
AGAATCAAAA
TTGCTTTTTA
TCAAACTTAC
AAACGGTAGC
TAAAACGGGT
CCGACATCGA
C.5CCGATCCC
TTCCCAAGAA
GGACTGACCC
AAGGGAGCAA
AACTAGGGT-
AATTACCTGA
r TTTCATCTT 3 AGGTTGGCC k CGCTGTCTC
GAACCGGCC.
CGCTC.ACTA(
CCGTAAAACJ
GGTCTCTTGl
CAACATAACI
AAGAACT
ATATTTCGGG
TCTAGACGGA
CGCTGTGGAT
CAGTGAAGAG
CCGTGACAAT
GTCGGCGATA
CCAACAAGAA
GAAGTTGACT
TCTCCTCCTC
.A:TCTCGTGTG
GGACACGTTT
TTTCGAGTTT
ATACGCGCTT
TGGGATGAAA
C ATCAGCTTC; C ATCATAGGC; r AAAAAGTATC k. TCACCCGAGC- F GCAACTATAG
'GGACCGTTTT
k GCTGAGTCAT 7AACGTTGGTA
*TACCGGGCAG
CAAGAGTTCT
TGGATCGATC
*TTTATTGACG
GATGGGGATG
GCCAAATTAG
ATCAAAGCAA
GAGTGGGCCT
CTCGCCGAAG
TAT CT CAAAT
CACGAAACCG
ATGATCAACG
AGAC CATCGA
AZTACCG;TTCG
GACTTAGCCG
CCAAGTGAGC
kTCACACGGCG
ACATGTTAAT
GCGGATTGTG
TGGCTCGACA
CTATAAGCTA
GGAGACAGAT
GGGCTTCAGT
AGCCTATAAA
CGTTTGGGTC
CTAAGCTTTT
CGCAAGGGAT
ATATTATCGA
TTGTCGATAC
TCAGTGAGAC
TCATCATGGA
TAACGGAGTT
TCGTTGGACT
GCACACTCAA
CGGAGGACAC
CG7TTGCCAT
GGTTTTTGGA
GGTCGGGTCG
TGGCTCATAT
TCGACATGAA
120 180 240 300 360 420 480 540 600 660 720 780 840 900 960 1020 1080 1140 1200 1260 1320 1380 1440 1500 1560 G GTCTCA!CGG CTCCTAAAGC CACGCGGCTT CI TCGCCGTGC CAACCACGCG 1, 1
CCTCA
AAAAC
TGTAT
TTCTT
AAGTA
TCTGT GCTCT=,AAG TTTATGG1TrC GAGTCACGTG GCAGGGGGTT TGGTATGTG -6 ~rGAAA AGTTTGAAGT TGCCCTCATC GAGGATTGT GGATGTCATA TGTATGTATG 16 ACACG TGTGTTCTGA TGAAAACAGA TTTGGCTCTT TGTTTGCCCT TTTTTTTTTT 17- TAATG GGGATTTTCC TTGAATGAAA TGTAACAGTA AAAATAAGAT TTTTTTCAAT 18C ATTTA GCATGTTGCA AAAAAAA AAAAAAAA 183 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:2: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 520 amino acids TYPE: amino acid STRANDEDNESS: unknown TOPOLOGY: unknown (ii) MOLECULE TYPE: protein (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:2: Met Giu Ser Ser Ile Ser Gin Thr Leu Ser Lys Leu Ser Asp Pro Thr 1 5 10 Thr Ser Leu Val Ile Vai Val Ser Leu Phe lie Phe Ile Ser Phe Ile 25 Thr Arg Arg Arg Arg Pro Pro Tyr Pro Pro Gly Pro Azg Gly Trp Pro 40 lie Ile Gly Asn Met Leu Met Met Asp Gin Leu Thr His Arg Gly Leu 50 55 Ala Asn Leu Ala Lys Lys Tyr Gly Giy Leu Cys His Leu Arg Met Gly 65 70 75 Phe Leu His Met Tyr Ala Val Ser Ser Pro Giu Vai Ala Arg Gin Vai 85 90 Leu Gin Vai Gin Asp Ser Val Phe Ser Asn Arg Pro Ala Thr Ile Ala 100 105 110 Ile Ser Tyr Leu Thr Tyr Asp Arg Ala Asp Met Ala Phe Ala His Tyr 115 120 125 Gly Pro ?he Trp Arg Gin Met Arg Lys Val Cys Val Met Lys Val Phe 130 135 140 Ser Arg Lys Arg Ala Giu Ser Trp Ala Ser Val Arg Asp Giu Val Asp )0 18 S S 5* 0 *0S* S9 S V 005S 145 Lys Met Gly Glu 150 Val Arg Ser Val 165 Ser Cys Asn Gin ?Dhe Gly Se 195 1n he 210 Ile Phe Ala Leu Thr Arg 180 185 Ala Cys Glu Lys Gly Gin 200 Ser Lys Leu Phe Gly Ala 215 Val Gly Lys Pro Ile Asn Val 170 175 Asn Ile* Thr Tyr Arg Ala Ala 190 Asp Giu Phe lie Arg Ile Leu 205 Phe Asn Val Ala Asp Phe Ile 220 Pro Tyr Phe Gly Trp Ile Asp Pro Gin Gly Ile Asn Lys Arg Leu Val 225 230 Ly; Hi Val Ala Thr 305 Thr Arg Val Tyr *o* Pro 385 Phe Arg o. Phe lie Ile Leu 465 Trp Val Thr (2) s Ala Arg Asn Asp Leu Asp Gly Phe Ile 245 250 s Mec Lys Lys Lys Glu Asn Gin Asn Ala 260 265 SAsp Thr Asp Met Val Asp Asp Leu Leu 275 280 SLys Leu Val Ser Glu Thr Ala Asp Leu G 290 295 Arg Asp Asn Ile Lys Ala Ile Ile Met A 310 3 SGlu Thr Val Ala Ser Ala Ile Glu Trp A 325 330 Ser Pro Glu Asp Leu Lys Arg Val Gin G 340 345 Gly Leu Asp Arg Arg Val Glu Glu Ser.A 355 360 Leu Lys Cys Thr Leu Lys Glu Thr Leu A 370 375 Leu Leu Leu His Glu Thr Ala Glu Asp TI 390 3 Ile Pro Lys Lys Ser Arg Val Met Ile Ai 405 410 Asp Pro Thr Ser Trp Thr Asp Pro Asp Tk 420 425 Leu Glu Pro Gly Val Pro Asp Phe Lys Gl 435 440 Pro Phe Gly Ser Gly Arg Arg Ser Cys Pr 450 455 Tyr Ala Leu Asp Leu Ala Val Ala His II 470 47 Lys Leu Pro Asp Gly Met Lys Pro Ser Gl 485 490 Phe Gly Leu Thr Ala Pro Lys Ala Thr Ar 500 505 Thr Arg Leu Ile Cys Ala Leu 515 520 INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:3: SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS: LENGTH: 5156 base pairs TYPE: nucleic acid STRANDEDNESS: single TOPOLOGY: linear 28 Asp Asp lie lie Val Asp Asp Gly 270 Ala Phe Tyr Ser 285 ;nl Asn Ser Ile 300 so Val Met Phe 15 la Leu Thr Glu In Glu Leu Ala 350 sp Ile Glu Lys 365 rg Met His Pro 380 hr Ser Ile Asp 95 sn Ala Phe Ala ir Phe Arg Pro 430 .y Ser Asn Phe 445 :o Gly Met Gin I 460 .e Leu His Cys E '5 u Leu Asp Met A 4 g Leu Phe Ala V 510 Asp Glu 255 Asp Val Glu Glu Lys Leu Gly Gly 320 Leu Leu 335 Glu Val Leu Thr Pro Ile Gly Phe 400 Ile Gly 415 Ser Arg Glu Phe .eu Gly >he Thr 480 Lsn Asp 'al Pro MOLECULE DNA (genrnr-ti) SEQUENCE DESCR' PT:Ot: SE-Q 11)C:3 AACCATTTTA TTCTGTATA7- AGGGGGACA'G
AAACATAATA
AAGCr'.ATGT
AGTAACAAAT
TTGGTTAGCA
GTCACTAAAT
AATTAGGAAT
ATAGATGGTC
A'TTAAAAACG
TAGGGGTTAA
AATAGTTTTT
ATWAATAAk
TTGTTACCAC
AAATATGATA
GGGTGGAGAC
GGTACCATAC
AGTACTACTA
GAACAGGTGG
ATTGCGATAC
ATTGTCTTT-P
TTTAATTTT;
GAACTGCGTI
ATAATTAAAN
TTCAGTAAT)
CTAAACCTAJ
ACGAAAA
TTGGcTAAA!
AATATATTT,
GATAATGCG'
CAGcTATGT GCTcGAATT
CTAGATTTC
AGTTATTAA
TTTTGcAAC
ATTACATTT
AT7TCTTAT AkG-rGTT'rTA
AAA'TTTGAT
AGTTTTAAAA
GCTTATGTTA
CCACGACCCA
TGGTTAGATT
AAATAAAATA
TTGCTTCAAA
TAAAATTTA
ATTTTTTGA
TTT-TAGAATA
ATGTGATTAT
ATGCACACALC
ALTTGTGTC-AI
AATACAGTGI
AGACAkTACAC
LTTTTTTTATC
ATACATTTGI
GGTCAAAGIT(
-ITTAAAGGAC(
k GTAATAAAT k ATGAGCATAX r TTATTTAGT S TTTAGCCAC t' TTATATCAC T CACTAATTT C AGTAAAATC C TT7AAACTA ,G TTATAGGAP A C.ArTTGTCC C AGTTTATG;
TTTTTTTAAA
ATATTCTTAA
GACACGAAGT
ATCTGATTCG
CTCTCCCATT
AAAAAAATAA
AAACACCACA
APATATCACA
AATTrTATATT
TTATTCTAAT
*CTATTATCGA
CTTATTACCT
CCTCGTGAAIG
*TTGAACTTTC
*CCTTGAGTTT
CCTACAGAGT
TTTTGTTGTC
TAGTTTACAG
TTGTGTAACG
TTCAAGTATT
~ATTACTTGP
k ATCCAAAAGC N AGAGAAAAA-1 'r TATTAAATAC T TTAGAATTT( C AATATTTTTI A AAACCCACT( C GTTTGGTAT A TTATATATT' ,A T-1ATTTCTT' ;T TTGCAAACT' kC AGATTTTTT
GAAACTAATA
TGGTAAGAAC
ACTAATTAGA
TGATCAATAT
ATTGTGCAGG
GTATTAAATT
ATTTTTGTAT
TGGAGTTCTA
ATTAATTTGT
TATTTGATAT
TTTTATTCCA
CCGTGACTTA
TCCTATGTCG
cAcccAAATc
TTTGTCTTAG
AATGTGTCTT
ATTATGCAGT
CACTGTATCT
*ATTAGTATCT
TAATTAATAT
*AAAAATCTAP
CTACCTGAAP
-AAAAATGGCC
T-GTTTTAAI
3CCAAPLCTAGI AAAGTcAAT
SCTATTTATT'
rACATAATTG'
TA!.TTTTTT
T TTAAAAGA T TATcTAACC TTTTAGGTTG
K
AGGCATATAT
T~
AACGACGATA
C'
TCAACTGAGCA
TAGCGGATAT
A
TTGT'rTCAAA GAAATATTrC
T
TTTTAATTT
GATATTATTAC
TATT'GACCTT
TGAAACTACA
ATATGATCTAC
GTTCACTTC
GGTrCCAATTT I1 cCCACTGGTr TGTrTTTAAC
GTAATCTGAT
AAATTGTGAG
CTGTCTAAGA
CTAATTAGTA
LACCTAACT GA.
AGTCATGCAC
AGTTTCTGGA
TTGTTATTAA
SCCTATACAGT
ATGAT1'CGTC r CGTATAAGTA r TTTCTTTAAW 'r TTT.1TTAGG pL ATAAATGAT T TTAATGTTTG rATATTGCA ATTcGATTT
TATGAGCTC
pLTGAAACTA
TAATACTAG
AGTATTATC
TTAACGAAA
.GAGTTTTTA
AAAAAGTAA
,GCTTTGTTT
~AGTTCGCCA
LZAACTTAAAT
TGTATCGCA
GTGATATAT
;GCAAACGAA
~AGATTGAGG
%ATGTAAGT'r rAACGACAAA rGCACAGGTA
PLACCTTGTGT
AAAAGTCATT
AACGTTCATC
GTTTGTTGAA
GATATATCGA
CATTTTTCAA
ATATTTATAT
TGTAATTccA
AGTCTACAAC
AAATTATTTC
GTTATAATTG
TTTCC-GTT
TAGTTATGAC
GGAAGAAATA
120 180 240 300 360 420 480 540 600 660 720 780 840 900 960 1020 1080 1140 1200 1260 1320 1380 1440 1500 1560 1620 1680 1740 1800 1860 1920 1980 2040 2100 In A, TTTAGGAAAA TCATACCAA A:Tk ATTT-GT GATCACAGTA
AATCAC''
CAAGATTT-TC AAAG-,AATAC: TTA.GAATC:C-- ATTAAATAAA
CGAAATTTTA
ATCAAGA-.7 7AGGAAACG;A TTAGCA ATTTlTCAT7C CTAAAATATT AATGCTAG o o 0 0 0 0 00 o o 0 GATTAA77T
AATTATTT
AT.TTAAGT,
TACCTCTC'
AATCGAAT(
TATCAGATC
TCACACGG(
ACATGTTA;
GCGGATTGI
TGGCTCGAC
CTATAAGC7
GGAGACAGA
GG.GCTTCAG
AGCTACTTC,
AAGTGAAAG'
TGTAGGTAA(
CCGGGCAGC(
AGAGTTCTC!
GATCGATCC(
TATTGACGAI
TGGGGATGTI
CAAATTAGTC
C.AAAGCAATC
TGCGTTACGT
AATTAGGAAG
TTTAATATAT
GACAAAAAAT
TTTGATTTTA
GGACGTTATG
GTTATTACGG
ACTTGACAGA
CAAAGAAACC
CACTAGTATC-
CATAGGACGC
GGAACCGGGC
TCGTAGATCG
T T-.AAATGG7 TGXAUAAT TC ATATTTTCA GAAATAT AG ATAATIACAAA AATGTCAA% rA ATCAC-ATCCC AAAATGGAi C AAkAAAAAACA CTCAATAT( C CACGACGTCT CTTGTCATC :G GCGAAGGCCT CCATATCCI T GATGGACCAA CTCACCCAC 'G CCATCTCCGC ATGGGATTC 'A AGTCCTTCAA GTCCAAGAC 'A TCTGACTTAC GACCGAGCG .T GAGAAAAGTG TGTGTCATG T TCGTGATGAA GTGGACAAA A CATATTCACC ACT CTTGCT.
r ACTCATTTCT TCTTTCTTTi 3 CCTATAAACG TCGGGGAGCj TTTGGGTCAG CCTGCGAGAJ 7AAGCTTTTTG GAGCCTTCA; ;CAAGGGATAA ACAAGCGGC2 ATTATCGATG AACATATGAP *GTCGATACCG ATATGGTTGW *AGTGAGACAG CGGATCTTCA *ATCATGGTAA TTATATTrCA AATAATACTT ATCCATTGAC GTAATTTTCT, ATTTTACTAG ATAGAAGCAT TGAATATTCA GGAGAGAGAA AAAAGAAAGA TTAGGACGTT ATATTTAATT TT=GGAGGAA CGGAAACGGT AGCCCCGAGG ATCTAAAACG CGAGTTGAAG AATCCGACAT CTAAGGATGC ACCCACCGAT GACGGTTTCT TCATTCCCAA GACC-CAACCT CTTGGACTGA GTACCGGATT TCAAAGGGAG TGCCCGGGTA TGCAACTAGG AG GATTTAGA TG SCATAATA AT ATATATGT.
AA GAAATGGZ A.A AAAGGGACC 3A ACTTTGCC'.
3G AGTCTTCT) -G TTGTCTCTC .C CCGGTCCAC :C GTGGTTTAG- :c TCCATATGT A GCGTCTTCT G ACATGGCTT A AGGTGTTTA A~ TGGTCCGGT, AL TATATATGTi lk GTATGTACT', k ATTTTTGC; kL GGGACAAGAC k. CGTAGCGGAI
'CGTGAAGGCC
LGAAGAAGGAC
6TGATCTTCTT
AAATTCC.ATC
AAAAGCACTA
CAGTTATTTT
AGAAAGCAAC
GATCTACAAT
GTGGACTAGT
CTAATTTGAT
AGCGTCGGCG
GGTCCAACAA
CGAGAAGTTG
CCCTCTCCTC
GAAATCTCGTL
CCCGGACACG
CAATTTCGAG
GTTATACGCG
A G AT 1.G A 7 TT- GTAAATAAGT A~G A7TTTT-CA ST GTACATATAT :A CACAATTTGA M' CTGACAACAT." T ATCACAAACA :T TTTCATLCTTC :G AGGTITGGCCC ;C CAATTTAGCT 'A CGCTGTCTCA C GAACCGGCCT
CGCTCACTAC
G CCGTAAAAGAC C C4GTCTCTTGT
CAATTAAACA
V' TAACATTAA C 3L CTGACCCGCAA
GAGTTCATAAG
TTCATAC CAT A CGTAATGATC T2 AATCAAAACG C GCTTTTTAC.A G AAACTTACCC GJ GTCATAGTCA TC CTCCTAAGTT TT AGATTTTAGC ATI AATTATGAAA CI GTGGATATAT TT TTTTTTATTT GA ATAGAGTGGG CC GAACTCGCCG AA, ACTTATCTCA AN CTCCACGAAA CCC GTGATGATCA AC( TTTAGACCAT CG; TTTATACCGT TCC CTTGACTTAG CCC 7 T.:kA7 AA7 2160 TCAAGJTACAT. 2220 AAGG'-.TACC7 2280 GGATGAAGAA 2340 TTATAAAACC 2400 TTCAGAAAAT 2460 CTAAGCAAAC 2520 ATCAGCTTCA 2580 ATCATAGGCA 2640 ~AAAAGTATG 2700 rCACCCGAGG 2760 GCAACTATAG 2820 3GACCGTTTT 2880 ;CTGAGTCAT 2940 CACGTTGGTA 3000 LATATGTAAA 3060 'CAAAACAAT 3120 .CATAACTTA 3180 AATCTTACA 3240 TTTCGGGTG 3300 ~GACGGATT 3360 TGTGGATGA 3420 CGAAGAGGC 3480 7GACAATAT 3540 ;TTTCTTAA 3600 TTTGTTTG 3660 GATCTTTT 3720 ,AATGAAGA 3780 AATTCTAA 3840 TTTTATTA 3900 TTAACGGA 3960 GTCGTTGG 4020 rGCACACT 4080 GCGGAGGA 4140 GCGTTTGC 4200 GGTTTTT 4260 ;GGTCGGG 4320 ;TGGCTCA 4380 TrATATTACAT
GAATGATGTG
GCGCCTCATC
GTGAAAACTG
ATGTGTATAC
TTTTTCTTTA
AATAAGTAAT
AAAAAAAAAT
ATTGTGTCAA
ATTTTACAAG
CTAAGGTTTT
GCAAATAAAT
TCATTACCTA
TGCTTCACGT
TTTGGTCTCA
TGTGCTCTTT
AAAAGTTTGA
ACGTGTGTTC
ATGGGGATTT
TTAGCATGTT
TTTTTTTTAG
TTAGGGGCTG
CCCAACAAAA
TATTAGTTT
GTATTTTATC
AAAAAAGACA
GGAAATTACC
CGGCTCCTAA
AAGTTTATGG
AGTTGCCCTC
TGATGAAAAC
TCCTTGAATG
GCAAAGATCG
TTATTTCACC
GAAGTTCGCT
GGTCGCAGAT
ATTTTCAGTT
ATATTTATGT
GAGTGGTTTC
TGATGGGATG
AGCCACGCGG
TTCGAGTCAC
ATCGAGGAT1'
AGATTTGGCT
AAATGTAACA
ATCTTGGATG
TrTTTCTmT
GGTTAAGGCT
TAAAACCACA
TACTGAGTAC
TTTTGTTAT
GTTAATTTTG
AAACCAAGTG
CTTTTCGCCG
GTGGCAGGGG
TGTGGATGTC
CTTTGTTTGC
GTAAAAATAA
AGAPACTTCTA
GTTCTGGTTG
AAATCAGAGT
TGATATT'IAT
TATT'rACTTT
AAACTCCAAA
TTTCATTAAT
AGCTCGACAT
TGCCAACCAC
GTTTGGTATG
ATATGTATGT
CC'.TTTTTTT
GATTTTTTTC
CTTAAAAAAA
TATGGTTGCC
TAAAGTTATA
AAAAAAATT
TTTATTTTTT
CATACAGGTT
CTCGLG
4440 4500 4560 4620 4680 4740 4800 4860 4920 4980 5040 5100 5156

Claims (22)

1. An isolated nucleic acid fragment encoding an enzyme that functions in a plant to alter the guaiacyl:syringyl lignin monomer ratios in the plant, the fragment selected from the group consisting of: a nucleic acid fragment encoding an enzyme having the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO:2; a nucleic acid fragment encoding an enzyme having an amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO:2 encompassing amino acid substitutions, additions and deletions that do not eliminate the function of the enzyme; the nucleic acid fragment of SEQ ID NO: 1; the nucleic acid fragment of SEQ ID N0:3; an a nucleic acid fragment of SEQ ID NO: 1 or SEQ ID NO:3 encompassing base changes that do not eliminate the function of the encoded enzyme.
2. A chimeric polynucleotide causing altered guaiacyl:syringyl lignin 0 monomer ratios in a plant cell transformed with the chimeric polynucleotide, comprising the nucleic-acid fragment of Claim 1 operably linked in either sense or antisense orientation to a regulatory sequence.
3. The chimeric polynucleotide of Claim 2 wherein the regulatory sequence comprises an endogenous plant promoter effective for controlling expression of the o nucleic acid fragment.
4. The chimeric polynucleotide of Claim 2 or 3 wherein the nucleic acid fragment is operably linked in the sense orientation to the regulatory sequence.
5. The chimeric polynucleotide of any of Claims 2-4 wherein the regulatory sequence comprises a promoter that controls expression of an enzyme of a plant's phenylpropanoid pathway.
6. The chimeric polynucleotide of any of Claims 2-5 wherein the regulatory sequence comprises a promoter selected from the group consisting of the promoter for the caffeic acid/5-hydroxyferulic acid O-methyltransferase gene, the promoter for the hydroxylase gene, the promoter for the (hydroxy)cinnamoyl-CoA ligase gene, the promoter for the (hydroxy)cinnamoyl-CoA reductase gene, the promoter for the (hydroxy)cinnamoyl alcohol dehydrogenase gene, the promoter for the cinnamate-4-hydroxylase gene, the promoter for the p-coumarate-3-hydroxylase gene, the promoter for the phenylalanine ammonia lyase gene and the promoter for the p-coumaroyl CoA ligase gene.
7. The chimeric polynucleotide of any of Claims 2-6 wherein the regulatory sequence comprises a promoter selected from the group consisting of cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter, the promoter for the phenylalanine ammonia lyase gene and the promoter for the p-coumaroyl CoA ligase gene.
8. The chimeric polynucleotide of any of Claims 2-7, further comprising a second nucleic acid fragment encoding an enzyme that exhibits activity in at least one step of the phenylpropanoid pathway.
9. The chimeric polynuc!eotide of Claim 8, wherein the second nucleic acid fragment is operably linked in either sense or antisense orientation to a member selected from the group consisting of the regulatory sequence and a second regulatory sequence. The chimeric polynucleotide of Claim 8, wherein the second nucleic acid fragment is operably linked in the sense orientation to a member selected from the group consisting of the regulatory sequence or a second regulatory sequence.
11. The chimeric polynucleotide of any of Claims 2-7, further comprising a second nucleic acid fragment encoding a member selected from the group consisting of a (hydroxyl)cinnamoyl alcohol dehydrogenase enzyme and an O-methyltransferase enzyme.
12. The chimeric polynucleotide of any of Claims 2-7, further comprising a second nucleic acid fragment encoding an O-methyltransferase enzyme.
13. A transformed plant having altered guaiacyl:syringyl lignin monomer ratios relative to the ratios of an untransformed plant, comprising a host plant having incorporated therein the chimeric polynucleotide of any of Claims 2-12.
14. The transformed plant of Claim 13 wherein the host plant is selected from the group consisting of alfalfa (Medicago rice (Oryza maize (Zea mays), oil seed rape (Brassica forage grasses, tobacco (Nicotiana eucalyptus (Eucalyptus pine (Pinus spruce (Picea poplar (Populus sp.) and (Arabidopsis sp.). The transformed plant of Claim 13 wherein the host plant is a tree crop.
16. A method for altering the guaiacyl:syringyl lignin monomer ratios in a plant relative to the ratios of an untransformed plant, comprising transforming a plant with the chimeric polynucleotide of any of Claims 2-12 to provide a transformed plant, wherein the transformed plant expresses the chimeric polynucleotide, and wherein the guaiacyl:syringyl lignin monomer ratio is altered in the plant.
17. The method of Claim 16, wherein said transforming comprises: transforming a cell, tissue or organ from a host plant with the chimeric polynucleotide; (ii) selecting a transformed cell, cell callus, somatic embryo, or seed which contains the chimeric polynucleotide; (iii) regenerating a whole plant form the selected transformed cell, cell callus, somatic embryo, or seed; and (iv) selecting a regenerated whole plant which has a phenotype selected from the group consisting of accumulation of compounds derived from sinapic acid or an altered syringyl lignin monomer content relative to an untransformed host plant.
18. The method of Claim 16, wherein the nucleic acid fragment is selected from the group consisting of the sequence set forth in SEQ ID NO:1 and the sequence set forth 15 in SEQ ID NO:3.
19. A method of altering the content or composition of lignin in a plant, comprising stably incorporating the chimeric polynucleotide of any of Claims 2-12 into the genome of the plant by transformation means whereby the incorporated chimeric polynucleotide expresses the enzyme and whereby guaiacyl:syringyl lignin monomer 20 content or composition is altered from that of the untransformed host plant.
20. An isolated nucleic acid fragment substantially as hereinbefore described with S*reference to any one of the examples.
21. A chimeric polynucleotide substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to any one of the examples. 25 22. A transformed plant having altered guaiacyl:syringyl lignin monomer ratios substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to any one of the examples.
23. A method of altering the guaiacyl:syringyl lignin monomer ratios in a plant substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to any one of the examples.
24. A method of altering the content of composition of lignin in a plant substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to any one of the examples. An isolated nucleic acid fragment substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to any one of the drawings. R 26. A chimeric polynucleotide substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to any one of the drawings.
84.doc:ais 27. A method of altering the guaiacyl:syringyl lignin monomer ratios in a plant substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to any one of the drawings. 28. A method of altering the content of composition of lignin in a plant substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to any one of the drawings. Dated 20 February, 2002 Purdue Research Foundation Patent Attorneys for the Applicant/Nominated Person SPRUSON FERGUSON S o [I:\DayLib\LIBVV]45184.doc:ais
AU36399/00A 1995-12-22 2000-05-24 A method for regulation of plant lignin composition Ceased AU746458B2 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AU36399/00A AU746458B2 (en) 1995-12-22 2000-05-24 A method for regulation of plant lignin composition

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US009119 1995-12-22
US013388 1996-03-14
AU36399/00A AU746458B2 (en) 1995-12-22 2000-05-24 A method for regulation of plant lignin composition

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
AU14239/97A Division AU716369B2 (en) 1995-12-22 1996-12-19 A method for regulation of plant lignin composition

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
AU3639900A AU3639900A (en) 2000-08-03
AU746458B2 true AU746458B2 (en) 2002-05-02

Family

ID=3723644

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
AU36399/00A Ceased AU746458B2 (en) 1995-12-22 2000-05-24 A method for regulation of plant lignin composition

Country Status (1)

Country Link
AU (1) AU746458B2 (en)

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
AU3639900A (en) 2000-08-03

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US6489538B1 (en) Method for regulation of plant lignin composition
US6610908B1 (en) Manipulation of lignin composition in plants using a tissue-specific promoter
JP3162072B2 (en) Alteration of lignin biosynthesis in plants
US7514596B2 (en) Methods for simultaneous control of lignin content and composition, and cellulose content in plants
CA2404104C (en) Method for modifying lignin composition and increasing in vivo digestibility of forages
US10428343B2 (en) Modification of lignin biosynthesis via sense suppression
WO1994023044A1 (en) Method for reducing ligning content in plants
EP2701487B1 (en) Polynucleotides encoding enzymes from the jute lignin biosynthetic pathway
US20040049802A1 (en) Method for modifying lignin composition and increasing in vivo digestibility of forages
US7071376B2 (en) Genes encoding p-coumarate 3-hydroxylase (C3H) and methods of use
US9932602B2 (en) Modification of lignin biosynthesis
AU746458B2 (en) A method for regulation of plant lignin composition
MXPA98005066A (en) Method for regulating a composition of lignina vege
MXPA99000596A (en) Manipulation of lignin composition in plants using specific promoter of tej
CA2240832A1 (en) A method for regulation of plant lignin composition
Anterola Metabolic and transcriptional control of monolignol biosynthesis in cell suspension cultures of loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.): Implications for lignification
AU2012201233A1 (en) Modification of lignin biosynthesis (3)

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
FGA Letters patent sealed or granted (standard patent)