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1.
Plant Physiol Biochem ; 208: 108470, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38422576

ABSTRACT

Camelinasativa has considerable promise as a dedicated industrial oilseed crop. Its oil-based blends have been tested and approved as liquid transportation fuels. Previously, we utilized metabolomic and transcriptomic profiling approaches and identified metabolic bottlenecks that control oil production and accumulation in seeds. Accordingly, we selected candidate genes for the metabolic engineering of Camelina. Here we targeted the overexpression of Camelina PDCT gene, which encodes the phosphatidylcholine: diacylglycerol cholinephosphotransferase enzyme. PDCT is proposed as a gatekeeper responsible for the interconversions of diacylglycerol (DAG) and phosphatidylcholine (PC) pools and has the potential to increase the levels of TAG in seeds. To confirm whether increased CsPDCT activity in developing Camelina seeds would enhance carbon flux toward increased levels of TAG and alter oil composition, we overexpressed the CsPDCT gene under the control of the seed-specific phaseolin promoter. Camelina transgenics exhibited significant increases in seed yield (19-56%), seed oil content (9-13%), oil yields per plant (32-76%), and altered polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) content compared to their parental wild-type (WT) plants. Results from [14C] acetate labeling of Camelina developing embryos expressing CsPDCT in culture indicated increased rates of radiolabeled fatty acid incorporation into glycerolipids (up to 64%, 59%, and 43% higher in TAG, DAG, and PC, respectively), relative to WT embryos. We conclude that overexpression of PDCT appears to be a positive strategy to achieve a synergistic effect on the flux through the TAG synthesis pathway, thereby further increasing oil yields in Camelina.


Subject(s)
Brassicaceae , Phosphatidylcholines , Phosphatidylcholines/metabolism , Triglycerides/metabolism , Brassicaceae/genetics , Brassicaceae/metabolism , Fatty Acids/metabolism , Seeds/genetics , Seeds/metabolism , Carbon Cycle , Plant Oils/metabolism , Plants, Genetically Modified/metabolism
2.
J Exp Bot ; 64(16): 5195-205, 2013 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24098048

ABSTRACT

The growing pollen tube is central to plant reproduction and is a long-standing model for cellular tip growth in biology. Rapid osmotically driven growth is maintained under variable conditions, which requires osmosensing and regulation. This study explores the mechanism of water entry and the potential role of osmosensory regulation in maintaining pollen growth. The osmotic permeability of the plasmalemma of Lilium pollen tubes was measured from plasmolysis rates to be 1.32±0.31×10(-3) cm s(-1). Mercuric ions reduce this permeability by 65%. Simulations using an osmotic model of pollen tube growth predict that an osmosensor at the cell membrane controls pectin deposition at the cell tip; inhibiting the sensor is predicted to cause tip bursting due to cell wall thinning. It was found that adding mercury to growing pollen tubes caused such a bursting of the tips. The model indicates that lowering the osmotic permeability per se does not lead to bursting but rather to thickening of the tip. The time course of induced bursting showed no time lag and was independent of mercury concentration, compatible with a surface site of action. The submaximal bursting response to intermediate mercuric ion concentration was independent of the concentration of calcium ions, showing that bursting is not due to a competitive inhibition of calcium binding or entry. Bursting with the same time course was also shown by cells growing on potassium-free media, indicating that potassium channels (implicated in mechanosensing) are not involved in the bursting response. The possible involvement of mercury-sensitive water channels as osmosensors and current knowledge of these in pollen cells are discussed.


Subject(s)
Ion Channels/metabolism , Lilium/metabolism , Mercury/metabolism , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Pollen/metabolism , Water/metabolism , Calcium/metabolism , Cell Wall/metabolism , Lilium/growth & development , Osmosis , Pollen/growth & development , Pollen Tube/growth & development , Pollen Tube/metabolism , Potassium/metabolism
3.
PLoS One ; 7(5): e36585, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22615784

ABSTRACT

Pollen tube growth is central to the sexual reproduction of plants and is a longstanding model for cellular tip growth. For rapid tip growth, cell wall deposition and hardening must balance the rate of osmotic water uptake, and this involves the control of turgor pressure. Pressure contributes directly to both the driving force for water entry and tip expansion causing thinning of wall material. Understanding tip growth requires an analysis of the coordination of these processes and their regulation. Here we develop a quantitative physiological model which includes water entry by osmosis, the incorporation of cell wall material and the spreading of that material as a film at the tip. Parameters of the model have been determined from the literature and from measurements, by light, confocal and electron microscopy, together with results from experiments made on dye entry and plasmolysis in Lilium longiflorum. The model yields values of variables such as osmotic and turgor pressure, growth rates and wall thickness. The model and its predictive capacity were tested by comparing programmed simulations with experimental observations following perturbations of the growth medium. The model explains the role of turgor pressure and its observed constancy during oscillations; the stability of wall thickness under different conditions, without which the cell would burst; and some surprising properties such as the need for restricting osmotic permeability to a constant area near the tip, which was experimentally confirmed. To achieve both constancy of pressure and wall thickness under the range of conditions observed in steady-state growth the model reveals the need for a sensor that detects the driving potential for water entry and controls the deposition rate of wall material at the tip.


Subject(s)
Lilium/physiology , Models, Theoretical , Osmosis , Pollen
4.
Plant Physiol ; 153(3): 915-24, 2010 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20442274

ABSTRACT

The biosynthesis of cell wall polymers involves enormous fluxes through central metabolism that are not fully delineated and whose regulation is poorly understood. We have established and validated a liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry method using multiple reaction monitoring mode to separate and quantify the levels of plant cell wall precursors. Target analytes were identified by their parent/daughter ions and retention times. The method allows the quantification of precursors at low picomole quantities with linear responses up to the nanomole quantity range. When applying the technique to Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) T87 cell cultures, 16 hexose-phosphates (hexose-Ps) and nucleotide-sugars (NDP-sugars) involved in cell wall biosynthesis were separately quantified. Using hexose-P and NDP-sugar standards, we have shown that hot water extraction allows good recovery of the target metabolites (over 86%). This method is applicable to quantifying the levels of hexose-Ps and NDP-sugars in different plant tissues, such as Arabidopsis T87 cells in culture and fenugreek (Trigonella foenum-graecum) endosperm tissue, showing higher levels of galacto-mannan precursors in fenugreek endosperm. In Arabidopsis cells incubated with [U-(13)C(Fru)]sucrose, the method was used to track the labeling pattern in cell wall precursors. As the fragmentation of hexose-Ps and NDP-sugars results in high yields of [PO(3)](-)/or [H(2)PO(4)](-) ions, mass isotopomers can be quantified directly from the intensity of selected tandem mass spectrometry transitions. The ability to directly measure (13)C labeling in cell wall precursors makes possible metabolic flux analysis of cell wall biosynthesis based on dynamic labeling experiments.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis/metabolism , Biopolymers/metabolism , Cell Wall/chemistry , Isotope Labeling/methods , Tandem Mass Spectrometry/methods , Trigonella/metabolism , Arabidopsis/cytology , Biopolymers/chemistry , Calibration , Carbon Isotopes , Chromatography, Ion Exchange , Chromatography, Liquid , Hexoses/metabolism , Metabolic Networks and Pathways , Nucleosides/metabolism , Organ Specificity , Plant Extracts/metabolism , Reference Standards
6.
Plant J ; 52(2): 296-308, 2007 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17683473

ABSTRACT

The efficiency with which developing sunflower embryos convert substrates into seed storage reserves was determined by labeling embryos with [U-(14)C6]glucose or [U-(14)C5]glutamine and measuring their conversion to CO2, oil, protein and other biomass compounds. The average carbon conversion efficiency was 50%, which contrasts with a value of over 80% previously observed in Brassica napus embryos (Goffman et al., 2005), in which light and the RuBisCO bypass pathway allow more efficient conversion of hexose to oil. Labeling levels after incubating sunflower embryos with [U-(14)C4]malate indicated that some carbon from malate enters the plastidic compartment and contributes to oil synthesis. To test this and to map the underlying pattern of metabolic fluxes, separate experiments were carried out in which embryos were labeled to isotopic steady state using [1-(13)C1]glucose, [2-(13)C1]glucose, or [U-(13)C5]glutamine. The resultant labeling in sugars, starch, fatty acids and amino acids was analyzed by NMR and GC-MS. The fluxes through intermediary metabolism were then quantified by computer-aided modeling. The resulting flux map accounted well for the labeling data, was in good agreement with the observed carbon efficiency, and was further validated by testing for agreement with gas exchange measurements. The map shows that the influx of malate into oil is low and that flux through futile cycles (wasting ATP) is low, which contrasts with the high rates previously determined for growing root tips and heterotrophic cell cultures.


Subject(s)
Carbon/metabolism , Helianthus/embryology , Helianthus/metabolism , Seeds/metabolism , Carbon Radioisotopes , Fatty Acids/biosynthesis , Plant Oils/metabolism , Staining and Labeling , Tissue Culture Techniques
7.
Nature ; 432(7018): 779-82, 2004 Dec 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15592419

ABSTRACT

Efficient storage of carbon in seeds is crucial to plant fitness and to agricultural productivity. Oil is a major reserve material in most seeds, and these oils provide the largest source of renewable reduced carbon chains available from nature. However, the conversion of carbohydrate to oil through glycolysis results in the loss of one-third of the carbon as CO2. Here we show that, in developing embryos of Brassica napus L. (oilseed rape), Rubisco (ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase) acts without the Calvin cycle and in a previously undescribed metabolic context to increase the efficiency of carbon use during the formation of oil. In comparison with glycolysis, the metabolic conversion we describe provides 20% more acetyl-CoA for fatty-acid synthesis and results in 40% less loss of carbon as CO2. Our conclusions are based on measurements of mass balance, enzyme activity and stable isotope labelling, as well as an analysis of elementary flux modes.


Subject(s)
Brassica napus/metabolism , Carbon/metabolism , Ribulose-Bisphosphate Carboxylase/metabolism , Seeds/metabolism , Acetyl Coenzyme A/metabolism , Biomass , Brassica napus/embryology , Brassica napus/enzymology , Carbohydrate Metabolism , Carbon Dioxide/metabolism , Color , Fatty Acids/biosynthesis , Fatty Acids/metabolism , Glycolysis , Photosynthesis , Pigmentation , Plant Oils/metabolism , Pyruvic Acid/metabolism , Seeds/embryology
8.
J Biol Chem ; 279(17): 16947-53, 2004 Apr 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14766747

ABSTRACT

Sarcosine oxidase (SOX) is known as a peroxisomal enzyme in mammals and as a sarcosine-inducible enzyme in soil bacteria. Its presence in plants was unsuspected until the Arabidopsis genome was found to encode a protein (AtSOX) with approximately 33% sequence identity to mammalian and bacterial SOXs. When overexpressed in Escherichia coli, AtSOX enhanced growth on sarcosine as sole nitrogen source, showing that it has SOX activity in vivo, and the recombinant protein catalyzed the oxidation of sarcosine to glycine, formaldehyde, and H(2) O(2) in vitro. AtSOX also attacked other N-methyl amino acids and, like mammalian SOXs, catalyzed the oxidation of l-pipecolate to Delta(1)-piperideine-6-carboxylate. Like bacterial monomeric SOXs, AtSOX was active as a monomer, contained FAD covalently bound to a cysteine residue near the C terminus, and was not stimulated by tetrahydrofolate. Although AtSOX lacks a typical peroxisome-targeting signal, in vitro assays established that it is imported into peroxisomes. Quantitation of mRNA showed that AtSOX is expressed at a low level throughout the plant and is not sarcosine-inducible. Consistent with a low level of AtSOX expression, Arabidopsis plantlets slowly metabolized supplied [(14)C]sarcosine to glycine and serine. Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis revealed low levels of pipecolate but almost no sarcosine in wild type Arabidopsis and showed that pipecolate but not sarcosine accumulated 6-fold when AtSOX expression was suppressed by RNA interference. Moreover, the pipecolate catabolite alpha-aminoadipate decreased 30-fold in RNA interference plants. These data indicate that pipecolate is the endogenous substrate for SOX in plants and that plants can utilize exogenous sarcosine opportunistically, sarcosine being a common soil metabolite.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis/enzymology , Arabidopsis/metabolism , Oxidoreductases Acting on CH-NH Group Donors/chemistry , Peroxisomes/enzymology , Sarcosine/chemistry , Amino Acid Sequence , Cucurbita/metabolism , Cysteine/chemistry , DNA, Complementary/metabolism , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Formaldehyde/chemistry , Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry , Glycine/chemistry , Hydrogen Peroxide/chemistry , Mass Spectrometry , Microbodies/metabolism , Models, Chemical , Molecular Sequence Data , Nitrogen/chemistry , Nitrogen/metabolism , Oxygen/metabolism , Peroxisomes/chemistry , Peroxisomes/metabolism , Protein Structure, Tertiary , RNA Interference , RNA, Messenger/metabolism , Recombinant Proteins/chemistry , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Serine/chemistry , Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization , Tetrahydrofolates/pharmacology
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