Enhanced levels of S-linalool by metabolic engineering of the terpenoid pathway in spike lavender leaves |
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Affiliation: | 1. Institute of Chemistry, University of Agriculture, Balicka Street 122, 30-149 Cracow, Poland;2. Department of Food Analysis and Evaluation of Food Quality, Faculty of Food Technology, University of Agriculture in Cracow, Balicka Street 122, 30-149 Cracow, Poland |
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Abstract: | Transgenic Lavandula latifolia plants overexpressing the linalool synthase (LIS) gene from Clarkia breweri, encoding the LIS enzyme that catalyzes the synthesis of linalool were generated. Most of these plants increased significantly their linalool content as compared to controls, especially in the youngest leaves, where a linalool increase up to a 1000% was observed. The phenotype of increased linalool content observed in young leaves was maintained in those T1 progenies that inherit the LIS transgene, although this phenotype was less evident in the flower essential oil. Cross-pollination of transgenic spike lavender plants allowed the generation of double transgenic plants containing the DXS (1-deoxy-d-xylulose-5-P synthase), coding for the first enzyme of the methyl-d-erythritol-4-phosphate pathway, and LIS genes. Both essential oil yield and linalool content in double DXS-LIS transgenic plants were lower than that of their parentals, which could be due to co-suppression effects linked to the structures of the constructs used. |
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Keywords: | Essential oils Linalool synthase Metabolic engineering Monoterpenes |
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