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First published online December 28, 2006; 10.1105/tpc.106.046227

The Plant Cell 18:3458-3475 (2006)
© 2006 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Reduction of Benzenoid Synthesis in Petunia Flowers Reveals Multiple Pathways to Benzoic Acid and Enhancement in Auxin Transport[W]

Irina Orlovaa,1, Amy Marshall-Colóna,1, Jennifer Schneppa, Barbara Wooda, Marina Varbanovab, Eyal Fridmanb, Joshua J. Blakesleea, Wendy Ann Peera, Angus S. Murphya, David Rhodesa, Eran Picherskyb and Natalia Dudarevaa,2

a Department of Horticulture and Landscape Architecture, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907
b Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109

2 To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail dudareva{at}purdue.edu; fax 765-494-0391.

In plants, benzoic acid (BA) is believed to be synthesized from Phe through shortening of the propyl side chain by two carbons. It is hypothesized that this chain shortening occurs via either a ß-oxidative or non-ß-oxidative pathway. Previous in vivo isotope labeling and metabolic flux analysis of the benzenoid network in petunia (Petunia hybrida) flowers revealed that both pathways yield benzenoid compounds and that benzylbenzoate is an intermediate between L-Phe and BA. To test this hypothesis, we generated transgenic petunia plants in which the expression of BPBT, the gene encoding the enzyme that uses benzoyl-CoA and benzyl alcohol to make benzylbenzoate, was reduced or eliminated. Elimination of benzylbenzoate formation decreased the endogenous pool of BA and methylbenzoate emission but increased emission of benzyl alcohol and benzylaldehyde, confirming the contribution of benzylbenzoate to BA formation. Labeling experiments with 2H5-Phe revealed a dilution of isotopic abundance in most measured compounds in the dark, suggesting an alternative pathway from a precursor other than Phe, possibly phenylpyruvate. Suppression of BPBT activity also affected the overall morphology of petunia plants, resulting in larger flowers and leaves, thicker stems, and longer internodes, which was consistent with the increased auxin transport in transgenic plants. This suggests that BPBT is involved in metabolic processes in vegetative tissues as well.




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