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Silencing of beta-carotene hydroxylase increases total carotenoid and beta-carotene levels in potato tubers

TitoloSilencing of beta-carotene hydroxylase increases total carotenoid and beta-carotene levels in potato tubers
Tipo di pubblicazioneArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Anno di Pubblicazione2007
AutoriDiretto, Gianfranco, Welsch R., Tavazza Raffaela, Mourgues F., Pizzichini Daniele, Beyer P., and Giuliano Giovanni
RivistaBMC Plant Biology
Volume7
ISSN14712229
Parole chiavearticle, beta carotene, beta carotene hydroxylase, beta-carotene hydroxylase, Carotenoid, Carotenoids, Complementary, complementary DNA, DNA, enzymology, gene amplification, gene silencing, Genetic, genetic transcription, genetics, lycopene, metabolism, mixed function oxidase, Mixed Function Oxygenases, molecular genetics, Molecular Sequence Data, Plant, plant DNA, potato, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction, reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction, Rhizobium, Solanum tuberosum, Transcription, tubulin, ubiquitin, unclassified drug, Violaceae
Abstract

Background: Beta-carotene is the main dietary precursor of vitamin A. Potato tubers contain low levels of carotenoids, composed mainly of the xanthophylls lutein (in the beta-epsilon branch) and violaxanthin (in the beta-beta branch). None of these carotenoids have provitamin A activity. We have previously shown that tuber-specific silencing of the first step in the epsilon-beta branch, LCY-e, redirects metabolic flux towards beta-beta carotenoids, increases total carotenoids up to 2.5-fold and beta-carotene up to 14-fold. Results: In this work, we silenced the non-heme beta-carotene hydroxylases CHY1 and CHY2 in the tuber. Real Time RT-PCR measurements confirmed the tuber-specific silencing of both genes CHY silenced tubers showed more dramatic changes in carotenoid content than LCY-e silenced tubers, with beta-carotene increasing up to 38-fold and total carotenoids up to 4.5-fold. These changes were accompanied by a decrease in the immediate product of beta-carotene hydroxylation, zeaxanthin, but not of the downstream xanthophylls, viola- and neoxanthin. Changes in endogenous gene expression were extensive and partially overlapping with those of LCY-e silenced tubers: CrtlSO, LCY-b and ZEP were induced in both cases, indicating that they may respond to the balance between individual carotenoid species. Conclusion: Together with epsilon-cyclization of lycopene, beta-carotene hydroxylation is another regulatory step in potato tuber carotenogenesis. The data are consistent with a prevalent role of CHY2, which is highly expressed in tubers, in the control of this step. Combination of different engineering strategies holds good promise for the manipulation of tuber carotenoid content.

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URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-33947417743&doi=10.1186%2f1471-2229-7-11&partnerID=40&md5=841ea52b9d42f34b7cd10b5d7ce32418
DOI10.1186/1471-2229-7-11
Citation KeyDiretto2007