Metabolic engineering of ketocarotenoid biosynthesis in higher plants

Author

Zhu, Changfu

Naqvi, Shaista

Capell Capell, Teresa

Christou, Paul

Publication date

2016-04-12T13:55:49Z

2025-01-01

2009



Abstract

Ketocarotenoids such as astaxanthin and canthaxanthin have important applications in the nutraceutical, cosmetic, food and feed industries. Astaxanthin is derived from b-carotene by 3-hydroxylation and 4-ketolation at both ionone end groups. These reactions are catalyzed by b-carotene hydroxylase and b-carotene ketolase, respectively. The hydroxylation reaction is widespread in higher plants, but ketolation is restricted to a few bacteria, fungi, and some unicellular green algae. The recent cloning and characterization of b-carotene ketolase genes in conjunction with the development of effective co-transformation strategies permitting facile co-integration of multiple transgenes in target plants provided essential resources and tools to produce ketocarotenoids in planta by genetic engineering. In this review, we discuss ketocarotenoid biosynthesis in general, and characteristics and functional properties of b-carotene ketolases in particular. We also describe examples of ketocarotenoid engineering in plants and we conclude by discussing strategies to efficiently convert b-carotene to astaxanthin in transgenic plants.


This work was supported by the Ministry of Education and Science (MEC), Spain (BFU2007-61413), the Ramon y Cajal program (MEC, Spain) and a grant from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No.: 30870222). SN is a recipient of a Ph.D. fellowship from MEC (BES-2005-9161).

Document Type

article
publishedVersion

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Carotenoids; Ketocarotenoids; Astaxanthin

Publisher

Elsevier

Related items

MIECI/PN2004-2007/BFU2007-61413

Reproducció del document publicat a https://doi.org/10.1016/j.abb.2008.10.029

Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics, 2009, vol. 483, p. 182-190

Rights

(c) Elsevier, 2009

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