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1.
Plants (Basel) ; 8(12)2019 Dec 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31835394

ABSTRACT

Increasing demands for food and resources are challenging existing markets, driving a need to continually investigate and establish crop varieties with improved yields and health benefits. By the later part of the century, current estimates indicate that a >50% increase in the yield of most of the important food crops including wheat, rice and barley will be needed to maintain food supplies and improve nutritional quality to tackle what has become known as 'hidden hunger'. Improving the nutritional quality of crops has become a target for providing the micronutrients required in remote communities where dietary variation is often limited. A number of methods to achieve this have been investigated over recent years, from improving photosynthesis through genetic engineering, to breeding new higher yielding varieties. Recent research has shown that growing plants under elevated [CO2] can lead to an increase in Vitamin C due to changes in gene expression, demonstrating one potential route for plant biofortification. In this review, we discuss the current research being undertaken to improve photosynthesis and biofortify key crops to secure future food supplies and the potential links between improved photosynthesis and nutritional quality.

2.
J Agric Food Chem ; 63(38): 8472-7, 2015 Sep 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26373576

ABSTRACT

Grape canes are byproducts of viticulture containing valuable bioactive stilbenoids including monomers and oligomers of E-resveratrol. Although effective contents in stilbenoids are known to be highly variable, the determining factors influencing this composition remain poorly understood. As stilbenoids are locally induced defense compounds in response to phytopathogens, this study assessed the impact of downy mildew infection during the growing season on the stilbenoid composition of winter-harvested grape canes. The spatial distribution between pith, conducting tissues, and cortex of E-piceatannol, E-resveratrol, E-ε-viniferin, ampelopsin A, E-miyabenol C, Z/E-vitisin B, hopeaphenol, and isohopeaphenol in grape canes from infected vineyards was strongly altered. In conducting tissues, representing the main site of stilbenoid accumulation, E-ε-viniferin content was higher and E-resveratrol content was lower. These findings suppose that the health status in vineyards could modify the composition of stilbenoids in winter-harvested grape canes and subsequently the potential biological properties of the valuable extracts.


Subject(s)
Plant Diseases/microbiology , Plant Extracts/chemistry , Stilbenes/chemistry , Vitis/chemistry , Plant Extracts/metabolism , Seasons , Stilbenes/metabolism , Vitis/metabolism , Vitis/microbiology
3.
J Agric Food Chem ; 63(5): 1631-8, 2015 Feb 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25598452

ABSTRACT

Grape canes are vineyard waste products containing valuable phytochemicals of medicine and agriculture interest. Grape canes storage is critical for the accumulation of these bioactive compounds. In the present study, we investigated the changes in stilbenoid phytochemical composition during grape cane storage and the influence of the temperature on final concentrations. A strong increase in the concentration of the monomer E-resveratrol (approximately 40-fold) was observed during the first 6 weeks of storage at 20 °C in eight different grape varieties without any change in oligomer concentrations. The E-resveratrol accumulation was temperature-dependent with an optimal range at 15-20 °C. A 2 h heat-shock treatment aiming at protein denaturation inhibited E-resveratrol accumulation. The constitutive expression of key genes involved in the stilbene precursor biosynthesis along with an induction of stilbene synthase (STS) expression during the first weeks of storage contribute to a de novo biosynthesis of E-resveratrol in pruned wood grapes.


Subject(s)
Plant Extracts/biosynthesis , Plant Stems/chemistry , Stilbenes/metabolism , Vitis/metabolism , Waste Products/analysis , Acyltransferases/genetics , Acyltransferases/metabolism , Plant Extracts/analysis , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Plant Stems/metabolism , Resveratrol , Stilbenes/analysis , Temperature , Vitis/chemistry , Vitis/enzymology , Vitis/genetics
4.
J Plant Physiol ; 169(8): 825-9, 2012 May 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22459325

ABSTRACT

Cytosolic background fluorescence is often observed when native low-abundance peroxisomal proteins carrying a weak peroxisomal targeting sequence are expressed as fluorescent fusion protein using a strong constitutive promoter in transiently transformed plant cells. This cytosolic fluorescence usually comes from the strong expression of the low-abundance proteins exceeding the peroxisome import efficiency. This often results in a misinterpretation of the protein subcellular localization, as there is doubt as to whether proteins are dually targeted to the cytosol and peroxisome or are exclusively localized to peroxisomes. To circumvent this experimental difficulty, the protein peroxisome import study can be optimized by de novo protein synthesis inhibition in transiently transformed cells using the translation inhibitor cycloheximide. This approach was used here successfully for the study of the subcellular localization of distinct plant isoprenoid biosynthetic enzymes, allowing us to clearly demonstrate that 5-phosphomevalonate kinase, mevalonate 5-diphosphate decarboxylase and a short isoform of farnesyl diphosphate synthase from Catharanthus roseus are exclusively localized to peroxisomes.


Subject(s)
Catharanthus/enzymology , Cycloheximide/metabolism , Peroxisomes/enzymology , Protein Transport/physiology , Terpenes/metabolism , Carboxy-Lyases/metabolism , Catharanthus/cytology , Cells, Cultured , Cytosol/metabolism , Geranyltranstransferase/metabolism , Phosphotransferases (Phosphate Group Acceptor)/metabolism , Plant Growth Regulators/metabolism , Plant Proteins/biosynthesis , Plants, Genetically Modified/enzymology
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