M. Ryder, M. Tate, G. Jones
Aug 10, 1984
Citations
3
Influential Citations
65
Citations
Journal
The Journal of biological chemistry
Abstract
Opines are unusual compounds found specifically in plant crown gall tumors. Genes for their synthesis and catabolism reside in agrobacteria as tumor-inducing (Ti) plasmid DNA. Only a small Ti-plasmid segment (24 kilobase pairs), the T-DNA, is transferred to the plant cell where it commonly codes for enzymes involved in the biosynthesis of nitrogenous opines such as nopaline (N2-(1,3-D-dicarboxypropyl)-L-arginine) as well as the tumor phenotype. Ellis and Murphy, (Ellis, J.G., and Murphy, P.J. (1981) Mol. Gen. Genet. 181, 36-43) reported the existence of the phosphorylated opines, agrocinopines A and B in tumors containing nopaline. Pure agrocinopine A has now been isolated in a yield of 0.05-0.06 g/100 g, fresh weight, from such tumors. Physical, chemical, and biological data establish the structure of agrocinopine A as an unusual non-nitrogenous opine of sucrose and L-arabinose with a phosphodiester linkage from the 2-hydroxyl of the arabinose to the 4-hydroxyl of the fructose moiety in sucrose. Agrocinopine B is the corresponding phosphodiester, in which the glucose has been hydrolyzed from the sucrose portion of agrocinopine A. Borohydride reduction of the free L-arabinose anomeric carbon of agrocinopine A, to the corresponding arabinitol derivative eliminates the characteristic inhibition zone enhancement produced by both agrocinopines A and B in the agrocin 84 (a fraudulent adenine nucleotide) bioassay. Because of the limited number of genes in the T-DNA, a generalization is proposed, whereby all opines will be found to comprise two common plant cell constituents linked in an uncommon manner by the minimum number of enzymes.