Isolation of Cells Specialized in Anticancer Alkaloid Metabolism by Fluorescence-Activated Cell Sorting

Plant Physiol. 2016 Aug;171(4):2371-8. doi: 10.1104/pp.16.01028. Epub 2016 Jun 29.

Abstract

Plant specialized metabolism often presents a complex cell-specific compartmentation essential to accomplish the biosynthesis of valuable plant natural products. Hence, the disclosure and potential manipulation of such pathways may depend on the capacity to isolate and characterize specific cell types. Catharanthus roseus is the source of several medicinal terpenoid indole alkaloids, including the low-level anticancer vinblastine and vincristine, for which the late biosynthetic steps occur in specialized mesophyll cells called idioblasts. Here, the optical, fluorescence, and alkaloid-accumulating properties of C. roseus leaf idioblasts are characterized, and a methodology for the isolation of idioblast protoplasts by fluorescence-activated cell sorting is established, taking advantage of the distinctive autofluorescence of these cells. This achievement represents a crucial step for the development of differential omic strategies leading to the identification of candidate genes putatively involved in the biosynthesis, pathway regulation, and transmembrane transport leading to the anticancer alkaloids from C. roseus.

MeSH terms

  • Catharanthus / cytology
  • Catharanthus / metabolism*
  • Cell Separation / methods*
  • Flow Cytometry / methods*
  • Mesophyll Cells / cytology
  • Mesophyll Cells / metabolism
  • Plant Leaves / cytology
  • Plant Leaves / metabolism
  • Secologanin Tryptamine Alkaloids / metabolism*
  • Vinblastine / metabolism*

Substances

  • Secologanin Tryptamine Alkaloids
  • Vinblastine