Synergistic metabolism in hybrid corn indicates bottlenecks in the carotenoid pathway and leads to the accumulation of extraordinary levels of the nutritionally important carotenoid zeaxanthin

Author

Naqvi, Shaista

Zhu, Changfu

Farré Martinez, Gemma

Sandmann, Gerhard

Capell Capell, Teresa

Christou, Paul

Publication date

2016-11-17T10:21:37Z

2016-11-17T10:21:37Z

2025-01-01

2011



Abstract

Lutein and zeaxanthin cannot be synthesized de novo in humans, and althoughlutein is abundant in fruit and vegetables, good dietary sources of zeaxanthin arescarce. Certain corn varieties provide adequate amounts because the ratio of endo-sperm b : e lycopene cyclase activity favours the b-carotene ⁄ zeaxanthin branch ofthe carotenoid pathway. We previously described a transgenic corn line expressingthe early enzymes in the pathway (including lycopene b-cyclase) and therefore accu-mulating extraordinary levels of b-carotene. Here, we demonstrate that introgressingthe transgenic mini-pathway into wild-type yellow endosperm varieties gives rise tohybrids in which the b : e ratio is altered additively. Where the b : e ratio in thegenetic background is high, introgression of the mini-pathway allows zeaxanth in production at an unprecedented 56 lg ⁄ g dry weight. This result shows that meta-bolic synergy between endogenous and heterologous pathways can be used toenhance the levels of nutritionally important metabolites.


This research was supported by the Ministry of Science and Innovation, Spain (BFU2007-61413 and BIO2007-30738-E) and European Research Council Advanced Grant (BIOFORCE).

Document Type

article
publishedVersion

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Metabolic engineering; Carotenoid profile; Transgenic corn; Hybrid corn

Publisher

Wiley

Related items

MIECI/PN2004-2007/BFU2007-61413

MIECI/PN2004-2007/BIO2007-30738-E

Reproducció del document publicat a https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-7652.2010.00554.x

Plant Biotechnology Journal, 2011, vol. 9, núm. 3, p. 384-393

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

Rights

(c) Wiley, 2011

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