Identification of α-tomatine 23-hydroxylase involved in the detoxification of a bitter glycoalkaloid

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Abstract

Tomato plants (Solanum lycopersicum) contain steroidal glycoalkaloid α-tomatine, which functions as a chemical barrier to pathogens and predators. α-Tomatine accumulates in all tissues and at particularly high levels in leaves and immature green fruits. The compound is toxic and causes a bitter taste, but its presence decreases through metabolic conversion to nontoxic esculeoside A during fruit ripening. This study identifies the gene encoding a 23-hydroxylase of α-tomatine, which is a key to this process. Some 2-oxoglutarate-dependent dioxygenases were selected as candidates for the metabolic enzyme, and Solyc02g062460, designated Sl23DOX, was found to encode α-tomatine 23-hydroxylase. Biochemical analysis of the recombinant Sl23DOX protein demonstrated that it catalyzes the 23-hydroxylation of α-tomatine and the product spontaneously isomerizes to neorickiioside B, which is an intermediate in α-tomatine metabolism that appears during ripening. Leaves of transgenic tomato plants overexpressing Sl23DOX accumulated not only neorickiioside B but also another intermediate, lycoperoside C (23-O-acetylated neorickiioside B). Furthermore, the ripe fruits of Sl23DOX-silenced transgenic tomato plants contained lower levels of esculeoside A but substantially accumulated α-tomatine. Thus, Sl23DOX functions as α-tomatine 23-hydroxylase during the metabolic processing of toxic α- tomatine in tomato fruit ripening and is a key enzyme in the domestication of cultivated tomatoes.

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Nakayasu, M., Akiyama, R., Kobayashi, M., Lee, H. J., Kawasaki, T., Watanabe, B., … Mizutani, M. (2020). Identification of α-tomatine 23-hydroxylase involved in the detoxification of a bitter glycoalkaloid. Plant and Cell Physiology, 61(1), 21–28. https://doi.org/10.1093/pcp/pcz224

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