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1.
BMC Biotechnol ; 15: 28, 2015 Apr 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25926043

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Starch is biosynthesised by a complex of enzymes including various starch synthases and starch branching and debranching enzymes, amongst others. The role of all these enzymes has been investigated using gene silencing or genetic knockouts, but there are few examples of overexpression due to the problems of either cloning large genomic fragments or the toxicity of functional cDNAs to bacteria during cloning. The aim of this study was to investigate the function of potato STARCH BRANCHING ENZYME II (SBEII) using overexpression in potato tubers. RESULTS: A hybrid SBEII intragene consisting of potato cDNA containing a fragment of potato genomic DNA that included a single intron was used in order to prevent bacterial translation during cloning. A population of 20 transgenic potato plants exhibiting SBEII overexpression was generated. Compared with wild-type, starch from these tubers possessed an increased degree of amylopectin branching, with more short chains of degree of polymerisation (DP) 6-12 and particularly of DP6. Transgenic lines expressing a GRANULE-BOUND STARCH SYNTHASE (GBSS) RNAi construct were also generated for comparison and exhibited post-transcriptional gene silencing of GBSS and reduced amylose content in the starch. Both transgenic modifications did not affect granule morphology but reduced starch peak viscosity. In starch from SBEII-overexpressing lines, the increased ratio of short to long amylopectin branches facilitated gelatinisation, which occurred at a reduced temperature (by up to 3°C) or lower urea concentration. In contrast, silencing of GBSS increased the gelatinisation temperature by 4°C, and starch required a higher urea concentration for gelatinisation. In lines with a range of SBEII overexpression, the magnitude of the increase in SBEII activity, reduction in onset of gelatinisation temperature and increase in starch swollen pellet volume were highly correlated, consistent with reports that starch swelling is greatly dependent upon the amylopectin branching pattern. CONCLUSION: This work reports the first time that overexpression of SBEII has been achieved in a non-cereal plant. The data show that overexpression of SBEII using a simple single-intron hybrid intragene is an effective way to modify potato starch physicochemical properties, and indicate that an increased ratio of short to long amylopectin branches produces commercially beneficial changes in starch properties such as reduced gelatinisation temperature, reduced viscosity and increased swelling volume.


Subject(s)
1,4-alpha-Glucan Branching Enzyme/chemistry , 1,4-alpha-Glucan Branching Enzyme/metabolism , Amylopectin/chemistry , Plants, Genetically Modified/metabolism , Solanum tuberosum/metabolism , 1,4-alpha-Glucan Branching Enzyme/genetics , Amylopectin/metabolism , Carbohydrate Conformation , Plants, Genetically Modified/genetics , Solanum tuberosum/genetics , Starch Synthase/genetics , Starch Synthase/metabolism
2.
Plant Physiol ; 160(3): 1357-72, 2012 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22930749

ABSTRACT

Senescence is genetically controlled and activated in mature tissues during aging. However, immature plant tissues also display senescence-like symptoms when continuously exposed to adverse energy-depleting conditions. We used detached dark-held immature inflorescences of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) to understand the metabolic reprogramming occurring in immature tissues transitioning from rapid growth to precocious senescence. Macroscopic growth of the detached inflorescences rapidly ceased upon placement in water in the dark at 21°C. Inflorescences were completely degreened by 120 h of dark incubation and by 24 h had already lost 24% of their chlorophyll and 34% of their protein content. Comparative transcriptome profiling at 24 h revealed that inflorescence response at 24 h had a large carbon-deprivation component. Genes that positively regulate developmental senescence (ARABIDOPSIS NAC DOMAIN CONTAINING PROTEIN92) and shade-avoidance syndrome (PHYTOCHROME INTERACTING FACTOR4 [PIF4] and PIF5) were up-regulated within 24 h. Mutations in these genes delayed degreening of the inflorescences. Their up-regulation was suppressed in dark-held inflorescences by glucose treatment, which promoted macroscopic growth and development and inhibited degreening of the inflorescences. Detached inflorescences held in the dark for 4 d were still able to reinitiate development to produce siliques upon being brought out to the light, indicating that the transcriptional reprogramming at 24 h was adaptive and reversible. Our results suggest that the response of detached immature tissues to dark storage involves interactions between carbohydrate status sensing and light deprivation signaling and that the dark-adaptive response of the tissues appears to utilize some of the same key regulators as developmental senescence.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis/growth & development , Arabidopsis/genetics , Carbon/deficiency , Inflorescence/growth & development , Inflorescence/genetics , Transcriptome/genetics , Arabidopsis/drug effects , Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics , Arabidopsis Proteins/metabolism , Carbohydrate Metabolism/drug effects , Carbohydrate Metabolism/genetics , Darkness , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental/drug effects , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant/drug effects , Genes, Plant/genetics , Glucose/pharmacology , Inflorescence/drug effects , Models, Biological , Organ Specificity/drug effects , Organ Specificity/genetics , Plant Growth Regulators/pharmacology , Plant Leaves/drug effects , Plant Leaves/genetics , Plant Leaves/growth & development , RNA, Messenger/genetics , RNA, Messenger/metabolism , Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction , Reproducibility of Results , Signal Transduction/drug effects , Signal Transduction/genetics , Software , Time Factors , Transcription Factors/metabolism , Transcriptome/drug effects , Up-Regulation/drug effects , Up-Regulation/genetics
3.
J Agric Food Chem ; 59(20): 10987-94, 2011 Oct 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21942920

ABSTRACT

Methylselenocysteine (MeSeCys) is an amino acid derivative that possesses potent anticancer activity in animals. Plants that can tolerate growth on soils with high Se content, known as Se hyperaccumulators, do so by converting inorganic Se to MeSeCys by the enzyme selenocysteine methyltransferase (SMT). A cDNA encoding the SMT from a Se hyperaccumulator was overexpressed in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum). Transgenic plants were provided with selenite or selenate to the roots during fruit development, and liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry was used to show that MeSeCys accumulated in the fruit but not in the leaves. Depending on the transgenic line and Se treatment, up to 16% of the total Se in the fruit was present as MeSeCys. MeSeCys was produced more effectively from selenite on a percentage conversion basis, but greater accumulation of MeSeCys could be achieved from selenate due to its better translocation from the roots. MeSeCys was heat stable and survived processing of the fruit to tomato juice.


Subject(s)
Antineoplastic Agents/metabolism , Cysteine/analogs & derivatives , Fruit/metabolism , Methyltransferases/genetics , Organoselenium Compounds/metabolism , Plants, Genetically Modified/metabolism , Solanum lycopersicum/metabolism , Antineoplastic Agents/analysis , Cysteine/analysis , Cysteine/metabolism , Food, Fortified/analysis , Fruit/chemistry , Gene Expression , Organoselenium Compounds/analysis , Selenic Acid , Selenium/analysis , Selenium/metabolism , Selenium Compounds/administration & dosage , Selenium Compounds/metabolism , Selenocysteine/analogs & derivatives , Sodium Selenite/administration & dosage , Sodium Selenite/metabolism
4.
Planta ; 229(3): 709-21, 2009 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19082620

ABSTRACT

Galactose was the major non-cellulosic neutral sugar present in the cell walls of 'Mitchell' petunia (Petunia axillaris x P. axillaris x P. hybrida) flower petals. Over the 24 h period associated with flower opening, there was a doubling of the galactose content of polymers strongly associated with cellulose and insoluble in strong alkali ('residual' fraction). By two days after flower opening, the galactose content of both the residual fraction and a Na(2)CO(3)-soluble pectin-rich cell wall fraction had sharply decreased, and continued to decline as flowers began to wilt. In contrast, amounts of other neutral sugars showed little change over this time, and depolymerisation of pectins and hemicelluloses was barely detectable throughout petal development. Size exclusion chromatography of Na(2)CO(3)-soluble pectins showed that there was a loss of neutral sugar relative to uronic acid content, consistent with a substantial loss of galactose from rhamnogalacturonan-I-type pectin. beta-Galactosidase activity (EC 3.2.1.23) increased at bud opening, and remained high through to petal senescence. Two cDNAs encoding beta-galactosidase were isolated from a mixed stage petal library. Both deduced proteins are beta-galactosidases of Glycosyl Hydrolase Family 35, possessing lectin-like sugar-binding domains at their carboxyl terminus. PhBGAL1 was expressed at relatively high levels only during flower opening, while PhBGAL2 mRNA accumulation occurred at lower levels in mature and senescent petals. The data suggest that metabolism of cell wall-associated polymeric galactose is the major feature of both the opening and senescence of 'Mitchell' petunia flower petals.


Subject(s)
Cell Wall/metabolism , Galactose/metabolism , Petunia/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Cellular Senescence , Chemical Fractionation , DNA, Complementary , Flowers/growth & development , Flowers/metabolism , Flowers/ultrastructure , Molecular Sequence Data , Petunia/growth & development , Petunia/ultrastructure , Plant Proteins/chemistry , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Polysaccharides/chemistry , RNA, Messenger/metabolism , Sequence Alignment , Sequence Analysis, Protein , beta-Galactosidase/chemistry , beta-Galactosidase/genetics , beta-Galactosidase/metabolism
5.
Transgenic Res ; 18(3): 407-24, 2009 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19051051

ABSTRACT

Tolerance to high selenium (Se) soils in Se-hyperaccumulating plant species is correlated with the ability to biosynthesise methylselenocysteine (MeSeCys), due to the activity of selenocysteine methyltransferase (SMT). In mammals, inclusion of MeSeCys in the diet reduces the incidence of certain cancers, so increasing the range of crop plants that can produce this compound is an attractive biotechnology target. However, in the non-Se accumulator Arabidopsis, overexpression of SMT does not result in biosynthesis of MeSeCys from selenate because the rate at which selenate is reduced to selenite by ATP sulfurylase (ATPS) is low. This limitation is less problematic in other species of the Brassicaceae that can produce MeSeCys naturally. We investigated the potential for biosynthesis of MeSeCys in other plant families using Nicotiana tabacum L., a member of the Solanaceae. When plants were watered with 200 microM selenate, overexpression of a SMT transgene caused a 2- to 4-fold increase in Se accumulation (resulting in increased numbers of leaf lesions and areas of necrosis), production of MeSeCys (up to 20% of total Se) and generation of volatile dimethyl diselenide derived directly from MeSeCys. Despite the greatly increased accumulation of total Se, this did not result in increased Se toxicity effects on growth. Overexpression of ATPS did not increase Se accumulation from selenate. Accordingly, lines overexpressing both ATPS and SMT did not show a further increase in total Se accumulation or in leaf toxicity symptoms relative to overexpression of SMT alone, but directed a greater proportion of Se into MeSeCys. This work demonstrates that the production of the cancer-preventing compound MeSeCys in plants outside the Brassicaceae is possible. We conclude that while the SMT gene from Se hyperaccumulators can probably be utilised universally to increase the metabolism of Se into MeSeCys, the effects of enhancing ATPS activity will vary depending on the species involved.


Subject(s)
Anticarcinogenic Agents/metabolism , Cysteine/analogs & derivatives , Methyltransferases/genetics , Nicotiana/metabolism , Plants, Genetically Modified/metabolism , Cysteine/biosynthesis , Organoselenium Compounds , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Plants, Genetically Modified/genetics , Plants, Genetically Modified/growth & development , Selenocysteine/analogs & derivatives , Sulfate Adenylyltransferase/metabolism , Nicotiana/genetics , Nicotiana/growth & development , Transgenes
6.
Funct Plant Biol ; 35(12): 1212-1223, 2008 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32688868

ABSTRACT

The activity of a 1915-bp asparagine synthetase (AS) promoter of Asparagus officinalis L. was induced in mature leaves of transgenic Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. plants when the leaves were detached and held in water for 24 h. To understand this induction by harvest, variants of the AS promoter were linked to the ß-glucuronidase GUS reporter gene. Harvest induction in the leaves required detachment and was not simply a wound response. Two regions in the AS promoter (Region A, -640 to -523; Region B, -524 to -383) were independently able to confer harvest response to the otherwise unresponsive -383AS (minimal) promoter. Region A was studied in further detail. Various truncations, deletions, or nucleotide substitutions of Region A affected activity and fold induction of the minimal promoter. However, no harvest-inducible cis-acting element within Region A was identified. Although the minimal promoter contained a dehydration-responsive element and ACGT elements similar to ABA-responsive regulatory motifs these were not needed by the upstream regulatory regions for directing harvest response. When four copies of Region A were linked to the minimal promoter it became highly active in leaves before harvest. Deletions within Region A showed that it required its complete 117 bp for driving harvest response, yet the region cannot simply be thought of as a harvest-responsive module, since its concatemerisation led to constitutive expression.

7.
J Exp Bot ; 55(394): 59-68, 2004 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14645391

ABSTRACT

This study was undertaken to characterize the programmed cell death (PCD) processes that occur during detached and natural on-plant senescence and correlate them with the expression of putative regulatory genes that may be involved in the process. DNA fragmentation and TUNEL analysis of broccoli florets showed that DNA was processed into fragments of approximately 180 bp after 48 h of harvest-induced tissue senescence. Characteristic laddering patterns were also visible in Arabidopsis leaves undergoing natural on-plant senescence and during detached senescence. Several recently isolated plant proteins have been assigned a PCD role, for example, the zinc finger containing protein, LSD1 (lesion simulating disease); Bax inhibitor (BI); and serine palmitoyltransferase (SPT), an enzyme in the sphingolipid signalling pathway. Two cDNAs encoding each of these proteins were isolated from broccoli (BoBI-1, BoBI-2, BoLSD1, BoLSD2, BoSPT1, BoSPT2), and the mRNAs increased during harvest-induced senescence in floret tissue. Expression of the Arabidopsis homologues (AtBI-1, AtLSD1, AtSPT1) were also characterized during detached leaf senescence in Arabidopsis leaves. AtBI-1 expression was constitutively expressed during detached senescence, AtLSD1 expression remained constitutively low, and AtSPT1 expression increased during detached senescence.


Subject(s)
Apoptosis/genetics , Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics , Arabidopsis/genetics , Brassica/genetics , DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , Membrane Proteins/genetics , Plant Proteins/genetics , Transcription Factors/genetics , Acyltransferases/genetics , Acyltransferases/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Arabidopsis/growth & development , Arabidopsis Proteins/metabolism , Blotting, Southern , Brassica/growth & development , Cloning, Molecular , DNA, Complementary/chemistry , DNA, Complementary/genetics , DNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , In Situ Nick-End Labeling , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Molecular Sequence Data , Plant Leaves/genetics , Plant Leaves/growth & development , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Plant Shoots/genetics , Plant Shoots/growth & development , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Serine C-Palmitoyltransferase , Transcription Factors/metabolism
8.
J Exp Bot ; 54(384): 1045-56, 2003 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12598574

ABSTRACT

Harvest-induced senescence of broccoli results in tissue wilting and sepal chlorosis. As senescence progresses, chlorophyll and protein levels in floret tissues decline and endo-protease activity (measured with azo-casein) increases. Protease activity increased from 24 h after harvest for tissues held in air at 20 degrees C. Activity was lower in floret tissues from branchlets that had been held in solutions of sucrose (2% w/v) or under high carbon dioxide, low oxygen (10% CO(2), 5% O(2)) conditions. Four protease-active protein bands were identified in senescing floret tissue by zymography, and the use of chemical inhibitors of protease action suggests that some 44% of protease activity in senescing floret tissue 72 h after harvest is due to the action of cysteine and serine proteases. Four putative cysteine protease cDNAs have been isolated from broccoli floret tissue (BoCP1, BoCP2, BoCP3, BoCP4). The cDNAs are most similar (73-89% at the amino acid level) to dehydration-responsive cysteine proteases previously isolated from Arabidopsis thaliana (RD19, RD21). The mRNAs encoded by the broccoli cDNAs are expressed in floret tissue during harvest-induced senescence with mRNA accumulating within 6 h of harvest for BoCP1, 12 h of harvest for BoCP4 and within 24 h of harvest for BoCP2 and BoCP3. Induction of the cDNAs is differentially delayed when broccoli branchlets are held in solutions of water or sucrose. In addition, the expression of BoCP1 and BoCP3 is inhibited in tissue held in atmospheres of high carbon dioxide/low oxygen (10% CO(2), 5% O(2)). The putative cysteine protease mRNAs are expressed before measurable increases in endo-protease activity, loss of protein, chlorophyll or tissue chlorosis.


Subject(s)
Brassica/enzymology , Cysteine Endopeptidases/metabolism , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plant Shoots/enzymology , Water/metabolism , Abscisic Acid/pharmacology , Brassica/genetics , Brassica/growth & development , Cell Survival/drug effects , Cell Survival/physiology , Cysteine Endopeptidases/genetics , Cysteine Endopeptidases/isolation & purification , DNA, Complementary/chemistry , DNA, Complementary/genetics , Desiccation , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental/drug effects , Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic/drug effects , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant/drug effects , Molecular Sequence Data , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Plant Shoots/genetics , Plant Shoots/growth & development , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Sucrose/pharmacology , Water/pharmacology
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