What is it about?
Acceptor substrates flexibility of previously characterized flavonol 7-O-rhamnosyltransferase (AtUGT89C1) from Arabidopsis thaliana was explored with an endogenous nucleotide diphosphate sugar and five different classes of flavonoids (flavonols, flavones, flavanones, chalcone and stilbenes) through a biotransformation approach. In contrast to the previous reports, this study highlights the expanded acceptor substrate promiscuity of AtUGT89C1 for the regiospecific glycosylation of diverse class of flavonoids at 7-hydroxyl position using microbial thymidine diphosphate (TDP)-L-rhamnose as sugar donor instead of uridine diphosphate-L-rhamnose. We examine the biocatalytic potential of AtUGT89C1 using endogenous sugar (TDP-L-rhamnose) from E. coli to generate a library of flavonoid 7-O-rhamnosides.
Featured Image
Why is it important?
It is important for the biosynthesis and post modification of flavonoids using simple whole cell biotransformation reaction catalyzed by AtUGT89C1.
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: Expanded acceptor substrates flexibility study of flavonol 7-O-rhamnosyltransferase, AtUGT89C1 from Arabidopsis thaliana, Carbohydrate Research, December 2015, Elsevier,
DOI: 10.1016/j.carres.2015.09.010.
You can read the full text:
Contributors
The following have contributed to this page







