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1.
High erucic acid rapeseed (HEAR) oil is of interest for industrial purposes because erucic acid (22:1) and its derivatives are important renewable raw materials for the oleochemical industry. Currently available cultivars contain only about 50% erucic acid in the seed oil. A substantial increase in erucic acid content would significantly reduce processing costs and could increase market prospects of HEAR oil. It has been proposed that erucic acid content in rapeseed is limited because of insufficient fatty acid elongation, lack of insertion of erucic acid into the central sn-2 position of the triaclyglycerol backbone and due to competitive desaturation of the precursor oleic acid (18:1) to linoleic acid (18:2). The objective of the present study was to increase erucic content of HEAR winter rapeseed through over expression of the rapeseed fatty acid elongase gene (fae1) in combination with expression of the lysophosphatidic acid acyltransferase gene from Limnanthes douglasii (Ld-LPAAT), which enables insertion of erucic acid into the sn-2 glycerol position. Furthermore, mutant alleles for low contents of polyunsaturated fatty acids (18:2 + 18:3) were combined with the transgenic material. Selected transgenic lines showed up to 63% erucic acid in the seed oil in comparison to a mean of 54% erucic acid of segregating non-transgenic HEAR plants. Amongst 220 F2 plants derived from the cross between a transgenic HEAR line and a non-transgenic HEAR line with a low content of polyunsaturated fatty acids, recombinant F2 plants were identified with an erucic acid content of up to 72% and a polyunsaturated fatty acid content as low as 6%. Regression analysis revealed that a reduction of 10% in polyunsaturated fatty acids content led to a 6.5% increase in erucic acid content. Results from selected F2 plants were confirmed in the next generation by analysing F4 seeds harvested from five F3 plants per selected F2 plant. F3 lines contained up to 72% erucic acid and as little as 4% polyunsaturated fatty acids content in the seed oil. The 72% erucic acid content of rapeseed oil achieved in the present study represents a major breakthrough in breeding high erucic acid rapeseed.  相似文献   

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Sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.) seed oil with high palmitic acid content has enhanced thermo-oxidative stability, which makes it well suited to high-temperature uses. CAS-5 is a sunflower mutant line that accumulates over 25 % palmitic acid in its seed oil, compared to 5–8 % in conventional cultivars. The objective of this study was to investigate the molecular basis of the high-palmitic acid trait in CAS-5 through both candidate gene and QTL mapping approaches. An F2 population derived from the cross between CAS-5 and the conventional line HA-89 was developed. A 3-ketoacyl-ACP synthase II (KASII) locus on a telomeric region of linkage group (LG) 9 of the sunflower genetic map was found to co-segregate with palmitic acid content in this population. The KASII locus explained the vast majority of the phenotypic variation (98 %) of the trait. Two minor QTL affecting palmitic acid content were also found on the lower half of LG 9 and on LG 17. Additionally, QTL associated with other major fatty acids (stearic, oleic, and linoleic acid) were identified on LG 1, 6, and 10. This result may reflect untapped genetic variation that could exist among sunflower cultivars for genes determining fatty acid composition. In addition to demonstrating the major role of a KASII locus in the accumulation of high levels of palmitic acid in CAS-5 seeds, this study stressed the importance of characterizing genes with minor effects on fatty acid profile in order to establish optimal breeding strategies for modifying fatty acid composition in sunflower seed oil.  相似文献   

4.
Maturation of mustard (Sinapis alba) seed proceeds with a sharp decrease in the amounts of palmitic and linoleic acids in the total lipids up to 6 weeks after flowering (WAF). Concomitantly, the concentration of oleic acid increases, reaching a plateau at 4 WAF, which is followed by chain elongation of oleic acid to gadoleic and erucic acids. Compositional changes in constituent fatty acids of individual lipid classes indicate that the very long-chain monounsaturated fatty acids (C20 and C22), as opposed to common long-chain fatty acids (C16 and C18), are metabolized to triacylglycerols mainly by esterification to preformed diacylglycerols and monoacylglycerols, rather than via esterification to glycerol-3-phosphate or lysophosphatidic acids.  相似文献   

5.
Lipids from cultured cells, leaves and seeds of two varieties each of soybean (Glycine max) and oil seed rape (Brassica napus) were separated into neutral lipids, glycolipids and phospholipids and their fatty acids were analysed. Usually, the fatty acid composition differed between corresponding fractions from cultured cells, leaves and seeds. Differences were least marked in (i) the phospholipids from cultured cells and leaves of soybean and (ii) the neutral lipids from cultured cells and seeds of rape. In the cultured cells, the fatty acid composition of the phospholipids differed from that of the glycolipids and neutral lipids, and fatty acids of chain length greater than C18 comprised a large proportion of the fatty acids of the glycolipids.  相似文献   

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Erucic acid is a valuable industrial fatty acid with many applications. The main producers of this acid are today high erucic rapeseed (Brassica napus) and mustard (Brassica juncea), which have 45%–50% of erucic acid in their seed oils. Crambe abyssinica is an alternative promising producer of this acid as it has 55%–60% of erucic acid in its oil. Through genetic modification (GM) of three genes, we have previously increased the level of erucic acid to 71% (68 mol%) in Crambe seed oil. In this study, we further investigated different aspects of oil biosynthesis in the developing GM Crambe seeds in comparison with wild‐type (Wt) Crambe, rapeseed and safflower (Carthamus tinctorius). We show that Crambe seeds have very low phosphatidylcholine‐diacylglycerol interconversion, suggesting it to be the main reason why erucic acid is limited in the membrane lipids during oil biosynthesis. We further show that GM Crambe seeds have slower seed development than Wt, accompanied by slower oil accumulation during the first 20 days after flowering (DAF). Despite low accumulation of erucic acid during early stages of GM seed development, nearly 86 mol% of all fatty acids accumulated between 27 and 50 DAF was erucic acid, when 40% of the total oil is laid down. Likely bottlenecks in the accumulation of erucic acid during early stages of GM Crambe seed development are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Increasing oil content and improving the fatty acid composition in the seed oil are important breeding goals for rapeseed (Brassica napus L.). The objective of the study was to investigate a possible relationship between fatty acid composition and oil content in an oilseed rape doubled haploid (DH) population. The DH population was derived from a cross between the German cultivar Sollux and the Chinese cultivar Gaoyou, both having a high erucic acid and a very high oil content. In total, 282 DH lines were evaluated in replicated field experiments in four environments, two each in Germany and in China. Fatty acid composition of the seed oil was analyzed by gas liquid chromatography and oil content was determined by NIRS. Quantitative trait loci (QTL) for fatty acid contents were mapped and their additive main effects were determined by a mixed model approach using the program QTLMapper. For all fatty acids large and highly significant genetic variations among the genotypes were observed. High heritabilities were determined for oil content and for all fatty acids (h 2 = 0.82 to 0.94), except for stearic acid content (h 2= 0.38). Significant correlations were found between the contents of all individual fatty acids and oil content. Closest genetic correlations were found between oil content and the sum of polyunsaturated fatty acids (18:2 + 18:3; r G = −0.46), the sum of monounsaturated fatty acids (18:1 + 20:1 + 22:1; r G = 0.46) and palmitic acid (16:0; r G = −0.34), respectively. Between one and eight QTL for the contents of the different fatty acids were detected. Together, their additive main effects explained between 28% and 65% of the genetic variance for the individual fatty acids. Ten QTL for fatty acid contents mapped within a distance of 0 to 10 cM to QTL for oil content, which were previously identified in this DH population. QTL mapped within this distance to each other are likely to be identical. The results indicate a close interrelationship between fatty acid composition and oil content, which should be considered when breeding for increased oil content or improved oil composition in rapeseed.  相似文献   

9.
Acyl–acyl carrier protein (ACP) thioesterases are enzymes that control the termination of intraplastidial fatty acid synthesis by hydrolyzing the acyl–ACP complexes. Among the different thioesterase gene families found in plants, the FatA-type fulfills a fundamental role in the export of the C18 fatty acid moieties that will be used to synthesize most plant glycerolipids. A reverse genomic approach has been used to study the FatA thioesterase in seed oil accumulation by screening different mutant collections of Arabidopsis thaliana for FatA knockouts. Two mutants were identified with T-DNA insertions in the promoter region of each of the two copies of FatA present in the Arabidopsis genome, from which a double FatA Arabidopsis mutant was made. The expression of both forms of FatA thioesterases was reduced in this double mutant (fata1 fata2), as was FatA activity. This decrease did not cause any evident morphological changes in the mutant plants, although the partial reduction of this activity affected the oil content and fatty acid composition of the Arabidopsis seeds. Thus, dry mutant seeds had less triacylglycerol content, while other neutral lipids like diacylglycerols were not affected. Furthermore, the metabolic flow of the different glycerolipid species into seed oil in the developing seeds was reduced at different stages of seed formation in the fata1 fata2 line. This diminished metabolic flow induced increases in the proportion of linolenic and erucic fatty acids in the seed oil, in a similar way as previously reported for the wri1 Arabidopsis mutant that accumulates oil poorly. The similarities between these two mutants and the origin of their phenotype are discussed in function of the results.  相似文献   

10.
Development of a designer oilseed crop with improved yield attributes and enhanced nutritional quality for the benefits of mankind and animal husbandry is now achievable with the combination of genetic engineering and plant breeding. In spite of their immense importance, the fatty acid profiles of most oilseed crops are imbalanced that necessitate the use of metabolic engineering strategies to overcome the various shortfalls in order to improve the nutritional quality of these edible oils. Indian mustard (Brassica juncea L.), being one of the important oilseed crops in Indian subcontinent naturally contains ~50 % nutritionally undesirable very long chain unsaturated fatty acids (VLCUFAs), e.g. erucic acid (C22:1). For the purpose of nutritional improvement of B. juncea seed oil, several metabolic engineering strategies have been employed to divert the carbon flux from the production of VLCUFAs to other important fatty acids. Stearic acid, being a saturated but nutritionally neutral fatty acid, is naturally inadequate in most of the conventional oil seeds. Due to its neutral effect on consumer’s health and as an important industrial ingredient, increased in planta production of stearic acid in the seed oil not only helps in reduction of production cost but also lessens the trans fatty acid production during commercial hydrogenation process. In this review metabolic engineering strategies to minimize the VLCUFAs along with increased production of stearic acid in the seed oil of B. juncea are discussed, so that further breeding attempts can be made to improve the nutritionally desirable fatty acid profile in the suitable cultivars of this important oilseed crop.  相似文献   

11.
To determine if medium and long chain fatty acids can be appropriately metabolized by species that normally produce 16 and 18 carbon fatty acids, homogenates of developing Cuphea wrightii, Carthamus tinctorius, and Crambe abyssinica seeds were incubated with radiolabeled lauric, palmitic, oleic, and erucic acids. In all three species, acyl-CoA synthetase showed broad substrate specificity in synthesis of acyl-coenzyme A (CoA) from any of the fatty acids presented. In Carthamus, two- to fivefold less of the foreign FAs, lauric, and erucic acid was incorporated into acyl-CoAs than palmitic and oleic acid. Lauric and erucic acid also supported less glycerolipid synthesis in Carthamus than palmitic and oleic acid, but the rate of acyl-CoA synthesis did not control rate of glycerolipid synthesis. In all species examined, medium and long chain fatty acids were incorporated predominantly into triacylglycerols and were almost excluded from phospholipid synthesis, whereas palmitic and oleic acid were found predominantly in polar lipids. However, the rate of esterification of unusual fatty acids to triacylglycerol is slow in species that do not normally synthesize these acyl substrates.  相似文献   

12.
The fatty acid compositions of the lipids and the lipid peroxide concentrations and rates of lipid peroxidation were determined in suspensions of liver endoplasmic reticulum isolated from rats fed on synthetic diets in which the fatty acid composition had been varied but the remaining constituents (protein, carbohydrate, vitamins and minerals) kept constant. Stock diet and synthetic diets containing no fat, 10% corn oil, herring oil, coconut oil or lard were used. The fatty acid composition of the liver endoplasmic reticulum lipid was markedly dependent on the fatty acid composition of the dietary lipid. Feeding a herring-oil diet caused incorporation of 8.7% eicosapentaenoic acid (C20:5) and 17% docosahexaenoic acid (C22:6), but only 5.1% linoleic acid (C18:2) and 6.4% arachidonic acid (C20:4), feeding a corn-oil diet caused incorporation of 25.1% C18:2, 17.8% C20:4 and 2.5% C22:6 fatty acids, and feeding a lard diet caused incorporation of 10.3% C18:2, 13.5% C20:4 and 4.3% C22:6 fatty acids into the liver endoplasmic-reticulum lipids. Phenobarbitone injection (100mg/kg) decreased the incorporation of C20:4 and C22:6 fatty acids into the liver endoplasmic reticulum of rats fed on a lard, corn-oil or herring-oil diet. Microsomal lipid peroxide concentrations and rates of peroxidation in the presence of ascorbate depended on the nature and quantity of the polyunsaturated fatty acids in the diet. The lipid peroxide content was 1.82±0.30nmol of malonaldehyde/mg of protein and the rate of peroxidation was 0.60±0.08nmol of malonaldehyde/min per mg of protein after feeding a fat-free diet, and the values were increased to 20.80nmol of malonaldehyde/mg of protein and 3.73nmol of malonaldehyde/min per mg of protein after feeding a 10% herring-oil diet in which polyunsaturated fatty acids formed 24% of the total fatty acids. Addition of α-tocopherol to the diets (120mg/kg of diet) caused a very large decrease in the lipid peroxide concentration and rate of lipid peroxidation in the endoplasmic reticulum, but addition of the synthetic anti-oxidant 2,6-di-t-butyl-4-methylphenol to the diet (100mg/kg of diet) was ineffective. Treatment of the animals with phenobarbitone (1mg/ml of drinking water) caused a sharp fall in the rate of lipid peroxidation. It is concluded that the polyunsaturated fatty acid composition of the diet regulates the fatty acid composition of the liver endoplasmic reticulum, and this in turn is an important factor controlling the rate and extent of lipid peroxidation in vitro and possibly in vivo.  相似文献   

13.
This is the first report devoted to study of the hydrocarbon composition of the extract of buds of European birch Betula pendula (family Betulacea). We have identified saturated (C16 to C28, even number of carbon atoms) and unsaturated (linoleic and linolenic) fatty acids, β-caryophyllene, α-humulene, and the components of epicuticular waxes of cover scales, such as n-alkanes (C21 to C26), esters of fatty acids (C16 to C28, even number of carbon atoms), and fatty alcohols (C18 to C30, even number of carbon atoms). The gas chromatographic retention indices of all identified compounds have been determined.  相似文献   

14.
Partial hydrolysis of triacylglycerols of high-erucic-acid seed oils from white mustard (Sinapis alba), oriental mustard (Brassica juncea) and honesty (Lunaria annua), catalysed by lipases from Candida cylindracea and Geotrichum candidum, leads to enrichment of erucic acid and other very-long-chain mono-unsaturated fatty acids (VLCMFA) in the acylglycerols (mono-, di- and triacylglycerol) while the C18 fatty acids (oleic, linoleic and linolenic) are enriched in the fatty acid fraction. Partial hydrolysis of the high-erucic-acid triacylglycerols, catalysed by lipases from porcine pancreas, Chromobacterium viscosum, Rhizopus arrhizus and Rhizomucor miehei yields fatty acids with substantially higher levels of VLCMFA, as compared to the starting material, while the C18 fatty acids are enriched in the acylglycerol fraction. Lipases from Penicillium sp. and Candida antarctica are ineffective for the fractionation of either group of fatty acids. Transesterification of the high-erucic-acid triacylglycerols with ethyl, propyl or butyl acetate or with n-butanol, catalysed by the lipase from R. miehei, leads to enrichment of VLCMFA in the alkyl (ethyl, propyl or butyl) esters, whereas the C18 fatty acids are enriched in the acetylacylglycerols and acylglycerols.  相似文献   

15.
G. Norton  J. F. Harris 《Planta》1975,123(2):163-174
Summary The growth and composition of siliquas and seeds of oilseed rape was followed over 12 weeks from shortly after anthesis to maturity. Each plant produced 220 siliquas, this number being constant throughout development. Seed numbers per siliqua fell from 19 to 9 by week 5 and declined to 7 at maturity. Hull1 and seed growth followed a sigmoid pattern, but were not in phase. Seed development could be divided into 3 phases: In Phase 1, seed weight was low and starch and ethanol soluble compounds accounted for 80% DM. Phase 2, seed growth increased and storage oil and proteins were deposited accounting for 40% and 20% DM respectively at the end of this stage. Starch, glucose and fructose were utilized in this process. Phase 3 was largely concerned with the deposition of oil and protein in fixed proportions. Seed weight more than doubled while DM composition remained constant. Sugars were transferred from the hull to the seed to support this growth.The proportion of hull lipids remained constant throughout development until shortly before maturity when MGDG and DGDG fell due to chloroplast breakdown as indicated by chlorophyll disappearance. The FA composition of the hull lipids resembled that of photosynthetic tissue. In the seeds, the neutral lipids increased from 20% of the total lipids in Phase 1 to 93% at maturity. The proportion of structural lipids declined as the storage lipids increased. In Phase 1 the FA composition of the lipid resembled that of photosynthetic tissue (high in C16:0; C18:2; C18:3). In Phase 2, FA typical of storage triglycerides (C20:1; C22:1, appeared, C18:1 transitorily increased, but C18:2 and C18:3 fell dramatically. In Phase 3, the content of C22:1 continued to rise, but the proportions of the other FA remained constant.Abbreviations DM Dry matter - MGDG Monogalactosyldiglyceride - DGDG Digalactosyldiglyceride - NL Neutral lipid - PC Phosphatidyl choline - PE Phosphatidyl ethanolamine - C16:0 Palmitic acid - C18:1 Oleic acid - C18:2 Linoleic acid - C18:3 Linolenic acid - C20:1 Eicosenoic acid - C22:1 Erucic acid - FA Fatty acid  相似文献   

16.
The fatty acid (FA) composition of storage lipids in the seed endosperms and embryos of two pine species, Pinus sibirica and P. sylvestris, and possible biosynthetic pathways of these acids were studied by the GLC method. Linoleic acid predominated in the embryo and endosperm lipids of both P. sibirica (43.5 and 42.6%) and P. sylvestris (44.8 and 46.8%); this was evidently determined by a high expression of the gene encoding stearoyl-Δ9 acyl-lipid desaturase and the fad2 gene encoding microsomal ω6 acyl-lipid desaturase. P. sibirica lipids of the embryo and endosperm contained more oleic acid (22.0 and 24.0%, respectively) than corresponding P. sylvestris lipids (18.7 and 14%). Storage lipids of conifer seeds contain Δ5-unsaturated FAs: taxoleic (18:2Δ5,9), ephedrenic (18:2Δ5,11), pinoleenic (18:3Δ5,9,12), skiadonic (18:3Δ5,11, 14), and coniferonic (18:4Δ5,9,12,15). In the endosperm and embryos of P. sylvestris, the content of pinolenic acid was higher (22.1 and 19.6%) than in P. sibirica seeds (19.1 and 18.6%).  相似文献   

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 Offspring of somatic hybrids between the zero-erucic acid rapeseed cv Hanna and Lesquerella fendleri were analysed regarding their fatty acid profiles. In the first back-cross generation one plant was found that produced a seed containing up to 16.5% erucic acid and 15% eicosaenoic acid (Line 1), as well as a seed having 4.3% ricinoleic acid (Line 2). This was interpreted as due to a contribution of elongase and hydroxylase genes from the L. fendleri genome since these two fatty acids are not produced in the recipient rapeseed cultivar Hanna. Crosses between Line 1 and cv Hanna resulted in the production of seeds with 35% erucic acid (F2). Furthermore, crosses between the F2 plants and the rapeseed cultivar Gulle, producing 35% erucic acid in the seeds, resulted in F3 seeds with 48% erucic acid. The highest amount of erucic acid, 61.5%, was found in the F6 generation after crossing Line 1 with a high erucic acid rapeseed line, HEAR, followed by self-fertilisation for two generations. When performing Southern-blot analysis on the F6 plants, seven of the nine analysed plants hybridised with the L. fendleri species-specific repetitive probe. The presence of the hydroxylase gene was also observed in the F6 generation of Line 1 according to Southern-blot analysis. Hybridisation with a hydroxylase probe was seen although no hydroxy fatty acids could be detected in any of the F6 plants. In parallel, Line 2 was crossed with HEAR cv Gulle and self fertilised. No hydroxy fatty acids were detected in the F2 generation of Line 2 and no specific hybridisation patterns could be found in the Southern-blot analysis. Received: 12 December 1998 / Accepted: 4 January 1999  相似文献   

20.
Biodiesel is produced worldwide as an alternative energy fuel and substitute for petroleum. Biodiesel is often obtained from vegetable oil, but production of biodiesel from plants requires additional land for growing crops and can affect the global food supply. Consequently, it is necessary to develop appropriate microorganisms for the development of an alternative biodiesel feedstock. Escherichia coli is suitable for the production of biodiesel feedstocks since it can synthesize fatty acids for lipid production, grows well, and is amenable to genetic engineering. Recombinant E. coli was designed and constructed for the production of biodiesel with improved unsaturated fatty acid contents via regulation of the FAS pathway consisting of initiation, elongation, and termination steps. Here, we investigated the effects of fabA, fabB, and fabF gene expression on the production of unsaturated fatty acids and observed that the concentration of cis-vaccenic acid, a major component of unsaturated fatty acids, increased 1.77-fold compared to that of the control strain. We also introduced the genes which synthesize malonyl-ACP used during initiation step of fatty acid synthesis and the genes which produce free fatty acids during termination step to study the effect of combination of genes in elongation step and other steps. The total fatty acid content of this strain increased by 35.7% compared to that of the control strain. The amounts of unsaturated fatty acids and cis-vaccenic acid increased by 3.27 and 3.37-fold, respectively.  相似文献   

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