2 resultados para Stenqvist Millde, Ylva

em National Center for Biotechnology Information - NCBI


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Acyl-acyl carrier protein (ACP) desaturases introduce double bonds at specific positions in fatty acids of defined chain lengths and are one of the major determinants of the monounsaturated fatty acid composition of vegetable oils. Mutagenesis studies were conducted to determine the structural basis for the substrate and double bond positional specificities displayed by acyl-ACP desaturases. By replacement of specific amino acid residues in a Δ6-palmitoyl (16:0)-ACP desaturase with their equivalents from a Δ9-stearoyl (18:0)-ACP desaturase, mutant enzymes were identified that have altered fatty acid chain-length specificities or that can insert double bonds into either the Δ6 or Δ9 positions of 16:0- and 18:0-ACP. Most notably, by replacement of five amino acids (A181T/A200F/S205N/L206T/G207A), the Δ6-16:0-ACP desaturase was converted into an enzyme that functions principally as a Δ9-18:0-ACP desaturase. Many of the determinants of fatty acid chain-length specificity in these mutants are found in residues that line the substrate binding channel as revealed by x-ray crystallography of the Δ9-18:0-ACP desaturase. The crystallographic model of the active site is also consistent with the diverged activities associated with naturally occurring variant acyl-ACP desaturases. In addition, on the basis of the active-site model, a Δ9-18:0-ACP desaturase was converted into an enzyme with substrate preference for 16:0-ACP by replacement of two residues (L118F/P179I). These results demonstrate the ability to rationally modify acyl-ACP desaturase activities through site-directed mutagenesis and represent a first step toward the design of acyl-ACP desaturases for the production of novel monounsaturated fatty acids in transgenic oilseed crops.

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Innate immunity in Drosophila is characterized by the inducible expression of antimicrobial peptides. We have investigated the development and regulation of immune responsiveness in Drosophila embryos after infection. Immune competence, as monitored by the induction of Cecropin A1-lacZ constructs, was observed first in the embryonic yolk. This observation suggests that the yolk plays an important role in the humoral immune response of the developing embryo by synthesizing antimicrobial peptides. Around midembryogenesis, the response in the yolk was diminished. Simultaneously, Cecropin expression became inducible in a large number of cells in the epidermis, demonstrating that late-stage embryos can synthesize their own antibiotics in the epidermis. This production likely serves to provide the hatching larva with an active antimicrobial barrier and protection against systemic infections. Cecropin expression in the yolk required the presence of a GATA site in the promoter as well as the involvement of the GATA-binding transcription factor Serpent (dGATAb). In contrast, neither the GATA site nor Serpent were necessary for Cecropin expression in the epidermis. Thus, the inducible immune responses in the yolk and in the epidermis can be uncoupled and call for distinct sets of transcription factors. Our data suggest that Serpent is involved in the distinction between a systemic response in the yolk/fat body and a local immune response in epithelial cells. In addition, the present study shows that signal transduction pathways controlling innate and epithelial defense reactions can be dissected genetically in Drosophila embryos.