Supplement: The terminal enzymatic step in piperine biosynthesis is co-localized with the product piperine in specialized cells of black pepper (Piper nigrum L.)

DOI

Piperine (1-piperoyl piperidine) is responsible for the pungent perception of dried black pepper (Piper nigrum) fruits and essentially contributes to the aromatic properties of this spice in combination with ablend of terpenoids. The final step in piperine biosynthesis involves piperine synthase (PS), which catalyzes the reaction of piperoyl CoA and piperidine to the biologically active and pungent amide. Nevertheless, experimental data on the cellular localization of piperine and the complete biosynthetic pathway are missing. Not only co-localization of enzymes and products, but also potential transport of piperamides to the sink organs is a possible alternative. This work, which includes purification of the native enzyme, immunolocalization, laser microdissection, fluorescence microscopy, and electron microscopy combined with liquid chromatography electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry (LC-ESI-MS/MS), provides experimental evidence that piperine and PS are co-localized in specialized cells of the black pepper fruit perisperm. PS accumulates during early stages of fruit development and its level declines before the fruits are fully mature. The product piperine is co-localized to PS and can be monitored at the cellular level by its strong bluish fluorescence. Rising piperine levels during fruit maturation are consistent with the increasing numbers of fluorescent cells within the perisperm. Signal intensities of individual laser-dissected cells when monitored by LC-ESI-MS/MS indicate molar concentrations of this alkaloid. Significant levels of piperine and additional piperamides were also detected in cells distributed in the cortex of black pepper roots. In summary, the data provide comprehensive experimental evidence of and insights into cell-specific biosynthesis and storage of piperidine alkaloids, specific and characteristic for the Piperaceae. By a combination of fluorescence microscopy and LC-MS/MS analysis we localized the major piperidine alkaloids to specific cells of the fruit perisperm and the root cortex. Immunolocalization of native piperine and piperamide synthases shows that enzymes are co-localized with high concentrations of products in these idioblasts.

Waters e2695 chromatography work station equipped with a photodiode array detector (PDA) and a QDA-mass detector (Waters)

laser scanning microscope LSM 780 - Carl Zeiss

cryomicrotome 1950 - Carl Zeiss

transmission electron microscope EM900 - Carl Zeiss

Äkta Explorer FPLC - Cytiva, Freiburg

QExactive Plus mass spectrometer - Thermo Fisher Scientific

arw files (chromatogram raw data), czi Files (microscopy raw data), csv and Excel files (xlsx), raw files (protein LC-MS/MS) tiff and jpg metadata by imaging machines

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Web-RInChIKey=RNGMSRAOERGJTOQUV-NQHBIAWVHCLSFSA

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.22000/607
Related Identifier https://doi.org/10.1111/tpj.15847
Metadata Access https://www.radar-service.eu/oai/OAIHandler?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=datacite&identifier=10.22000/607
Provenance
Creator Jäckel, Luise; Schnabel, Arianne ORCID logo; Stellmach, Hagen (ORCID: 0000-0002-7206-974X); Klauß, Ulrike; Matschi, Susanne ORCID logo; Hause, Gerd ORCID logo; Vogt, Thomas ORCID logo
Publisher Vogt, Thomas
Contributor RADAR
Publication Year 2022
Funding Reference Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) grid.424150.6 GRID VO719/15-1/2
Rights Open Access; Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 4.0 International; info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/legalcode
OpenAccess true
Representation
Resource Type Supplemental data; Dataset
Format application/x-tar
Discipline Basic Biological and Medical Research; Biochemistry; Biology; Life Sciences