Dual activity of anthocyanidin reductase supports the dominant plant proanthocyanidin extension unit pathway.
Ji Hyung JunNan LuMaite Docampo PalaciosXiaoqiang WangRichard A DixonPublished in: Science advances (2021)
Proanthocyanidins (PAs) are plant natural products important for agriculture and human health. They are polymers of flavan-3-ol subunits, commonly (-)-epicatechin and/or (+)-catechin, but the source of the in planta extension unit that comprises the bulk of the polymer remains unclear, as does how PA composition is determined in different plant species. Anthocyanidin reductase (ANR) can generate 2,3-cis-epicatechin as a PA starter unit from cyanidin, which itself arises from 2,3-trans-leucocyanidin, but ANR proteins from different species produce mixtures of flavan-3-ols with different stereochemistries in vitro. Genetic and biochemical analyses here show that ANR has dual activity and is involved not only in the production of (-)-epicatechin starter units but also in the formation of 2,3-cis-leucocyanidin to serve as (-)-epicatechin extension units. Differences in the product specificities of ANRs account for the presence/absence of PA polymerization and the compositions of PAs across plant species.