Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9607651 | Metabolic Engineering | 2005 | 17 Pages |
Abstract
Tocochromanols (tocopherols and tocotrienols) are important lipid soluble antioxidants and are an essential part of the mammalian diet. Oilseeds are particularly rich in tocochromanols with an average concentration 10-fold higher than other plant tissues. Here we describe a systematic approach to identify rate-limiting reactions in the tocochromanol biosynthetic pathway, and the application of this knowledge to engineer tocochromanol biosynthesis in oilseed crops. Seed-specific expression of genes encoding limiting tocochromanol pathway enzymes in soybean increased total tocochromanols up to 15-fold from 320 ng/mg in WT seed to 4800 ng/mg in seed from the best performing event. Although WT soybean seed contain only traces of tocotrienols, these transgenic soybean accumulated up to 94% of their tocochromanols as tocotrienols. Upon crossing transgenic high tocochromanol soybean with transgenic high α-tocopherol soybean, the vitamin E activity in the best performing F2-seed was calculated to be 11-fold higher than the average WT soybean seed vitamin E activity.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Bioengineering
Authors
Balasulojini Karunanandaa, Qungang Qi, Ming Hao, Susan R. Baszis, Pamela K. Jensen, Yun-Hua H. Wong, Jian Jiang, Mylavarapu Venkatramesh, Kenneth J. Gruys, Farhad Moshiri, Dusty Post-Beittenmiller, James D. Weiss, Henry E. Valentin,