Piperonylic Acid, a Selective, Mechanism-Based Inactivator of the trans-Cinnamate 4-Hydroxylase: A New Tool to Control the Flux of Metabolites in the Phenylpropanoid Pathway

1998 
Piperonylic acid (PA) is a natural molecule bearing a methylenedioxy function that closely mimics the structure of trans -cinnamic acid. The CYP73A subfamily of plant P450s catalyzes trans -cinnamic acid 4-hydroxylation, the second step of the general phenylpropanoid pathway. We show that when incubated in vitro with yeast-expressed CYP73A1, PA behaves as a potent mechanism-based and quasi-irreversible inactivator of trans -cinnamate 4-hydroxylase. Inactivation requires NADPH, is time dependent and saturable ( K I = 17 μm, k inact = 0.064 min −1 ), and results from the formation of a stable metabolite-P450 complex absorbing at 427 nm. The formation of this complex is reversible with substrate or other strong ligands of the enzyme. In plant microsomes PA seems to selectively inactivate the CYP73A P450 subpopulation. It does not form detectable complexes with other recombinant plant P450 enzymes. In vivo PA induces a sharp decrease in 4-coumaric acid concomitant to cinnamic acid accumulation in an elicited tobacco ( Nicotiana tabacum ) cell suspension. It also strongly decreases the formation of scopoletin in tobacco leaves infected with tobacco mosaic virus.
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