Biofortification of plants with altered antioxidant content and composition: genetic engineering strategies

Author

Changfu, Zhu

Sanahuja Solsona, Georgina

Yuan, Dawei

Farré Martinez, Gemma

Arjó Pont, Gemma

Berman Quintana, Judit

Zorrilla López, Uxue

Banakar, Raviraj

Bai, Chao

Pérez Massot, Eduard

Bassie Rene, Ludovic

Capell Capell, Teresa

Christou, Paul

Publication date

2016-04-12T13:55:38Z

2016-04-12T13:55:38Z

2013



Abstract

Antioxidants are protective molecules that neutralize reactive oxygen species and prevent oxidative damage to cellular components such as membranes, proteins and nucleic acids, therefore reducing the rate of cell death and hence the effects of ageing and ageing-related diseases. The fortification of food with antioxidants represents an overlap between two diverse environments, namely fortification of staple foods with essential nutrients that happen to have antioxidant properties (e.g. vitamins C and E) and the fortification of luxury foods with healthpromoting but non-essential antioxidants such as flavonoids as part of the nutraceuticals/ functional foods industry. Although processed foods can be artificially fortified with vitamins, minerals and nutraceuticals, a more sustainable approach is to introduce the traits for such health-promoting compounds at source, an approach known as biofortification. Regardless of the target compound, the same challenges arise when considering the biofortification of plants with antioxidants, that is the need to modulate endogenous metabolic pathways to increase the production of specific antioxidants without affecting plant growth and development and without collateral effects on other metabolic pathways. These challenges become even more intricate as we move from the engineering of individual pathways to several pathways simultaneously. In this review, we consider the state of the art in antioxidant biofortification and discuss the challenges that remain to be overcome in the development of nutritionally complete and health-promoting functional foods.


Research at the Universitat de Lleida is supported by MICINN, Spain (BFU2007-61413; BIO2011-23324; BIO02011-22525; PIM2010PKB-00746); Acciones complementarias, BIO2007- 30738-E, BIO2011-22525, MICINN, Spain; European Union Framework 7 Program-SmartCell Integrated Project 222716; European Union Framework 7 European Research Council IDEAS Advanced Grant (to PC) Program-BIOFORCE; COST Action FA0804: Molecular farming: plants as a production platform for high value proteins; Centre CONSOLIDER on Agrigenomics funded by MICINN, Spain.

Document Type

article
publishedVersion

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Biofortification; Antioxidants; Genetic engineering

Publisher

Wiley Open Access

Related items

MIECI/PN2004-2007/BFU2007-61413

MICINN/PN2008-2011/BIO2011-23324

MICINN/PN2008-2011/BIO2011-22525

MICINN/PN2008-2011/PIM2010PKB-00746

MIECI/PN2004-2007/BIO2007-30738-E

Reproducció del document publicat a https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-7652.2012.00740.x

Plant Biotechnology Journal, 2013, vol. 11, p. 129-141

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/FP7/222716

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/FP7/232933

Rights

(c) Changfu et al., Society for Experimental Biology, Association of Applied Biologists and Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2013

This item appears in the following Collection(s)