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Catabolism of glutathione conjugates in Arabidopsis thaliana: role in metabolic reactivation of the herbicide safener fenclorim.

Brazier-Hicks, M.; Evans, K.M.; Cunningham, O.D.; Hodgson, D.R.W.; Steel, P.G.; Edwards, R.

Authors

M. Brazier-Hicks

K.M. Evans

O.D. Cunningham

P.G. Steel

R. Edwards



Abstract

The safener fenclorim (4,6-dichloro-2-phenylpyrimidine) increases tolerance to chloroacetanilide herbicides in rice by enhancing the expression of detoxifying glutathione S-transferases (GSTs). Fenclorim also enhances GSTs in Arabidopsis thaliana, and while investigating the functional significance of this induction in suspension cultures, we determined that these enzymes glutathionylated the safener. The resulting S-(fenclorim)-glutathione conjugate was sequentially processed to S-(fenclorim)-γ-glutamyl-cysteine and S-(fenclorim)-cysteine (FC), the latter accumulating in both the cells and the medium. FC was then either catabolized to 4-chloro-6-(methylthio)-phenylpyrimidine (CMTP) or N-acylated with malonic acid. These cysteine derivatives had distinct fates, with the enzymes responsible for their formation being induced by fenclorim and FC. Fenclorim-N-malonylcysteine was formed from FC by the action of a malonyl-CoA-dependent N-malonyltransferase. A small proportion of the fenclorim-N-malonylcysteine then underwent decarboxylation to yield a putative S-fenclorim-N-acetylcysteine intermediate, which underwent a second round of GST-mediated S-glutathionylation and subsequent proteolytic processing. The formation of CMTP was catalyzed by the concerted action of a cysteine conjugate β-lyase and an S-methyltransferase, with the two activities being coordinately regulated. Although the fenclorim conjugates tested showed little GST-inducing activity in Arabidopsis, the formation of CMTP resulted in metabolic reactivation, with the product showing good enhancing activity. In addition, CMTP induced GSTs and herbicide-safening activity in rice. The bioactivated CMTP was in turn glutathione-conjugated and processed to a malonyl cysteine derivative. These results reveal the surprisingly complex set of competing catabolic reactions acting on xenobiotics entering the S-glutathionylation pathway in plants, which can result in both detoxification and bioactivation.

Citation

Brazier-Hicks, M., Evans, K., Cunningham, O., Hodgson, D., Steel, P., & Edwards, R. (2008). Catabolism of glutathione conjugates in Arabidopsis thaliana: role in metabolic reactivation of the herbicide safener fenclorim. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 283(30), 21102-21112. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.m801998200

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date 2008-07
Journal Journal of Biological Chemistry
Print ISSN 0021-9258
Electronic ISSN 1083-351X
Publisher American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 283
Issue 30
Pages 21102-21112
DOI https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.m801998200
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1524838