What is it about?
Plant-associated bacteria have been previously shown to produce a class of plant hormones called gibberellins. However, while plant pathogenic bacteria usually produce a bioactive gibberellin, symbiotic, nitrogen-fixing bacteria (rhizobia) that associate with plants typically only have the capability to produce a non-bioactive intermediate. Here, we show that some rhizobia contain a functional enzyme, CYP115, that catalyzes the reaction necessary to produce bioactive gibberellin, but that the presence and distribution of this gene in rhizobia is limited.
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Why is it important?
Although the reaction catalyzed by CYP115 is simple (a hydroxylation reaction), it results in the transformation of a non-bioactive gibberellin precursor into a potently active gibberellin hormone. In the context of plant-microbe interactions this is quite significant; production of a non-bioactive precursor may not have as profound an impact as the direct production of the active hormone, which has been shown to enact significant changes in plant growth and development.
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This page is a summary of: Characterization of CYP115 As a Gibberellin 3-Oxidase Indicates That Certain Rhizobia Can Produce Bioactive Gibberellin A4, ACS Chemical Biology, February 2017, American Chemical Society (ACS),
DOI: 10.1021/acschembio.6b01038.
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