High throughput screening of mutants of oat that are defective in triterpene synthesis

Here we identify a suite of triterpene-deficient mutants of diploid oat by high throughput biochemical analysis. We also show that these mutants accumulate elevated levels of primary sterols, consistent with inverse regulation of the sterol and triterpene pathways. The triterpenes are a large and di...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Phytochemistry (Oxford) 2010-08, Vol.71 (11), p.1245-1252
Hauptverfasser: Qin, Bo, Eagles, John, Mellon, Fred A., Mylona, Panagiota, Peña-Rodriguez, Luis, Osbourn, Anne E.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Here we identify a suite of triterpene-deficient mutants of diploid oat by high throughput biochemical analysis. We also show that these mutants accumulate elevated levels of primary sterols, consistent with inverse regulation of the sterol and triterpene pathways. The triterpenes are a large and diverse group of plant natural products that have important functions in plant protection and food quality, and a range of pharmaceutical and other applications. Like sterols, they are synthesised from mevalonate via the isoprenoid pathway, the two pathways diverging after 2,3-oxidosqualene. During triterpene synthesis 2,3-oxidosqualene is cyclised to one of a number of potential products, the most common of these being the pentacyclic triterpene β-amyrin. Plants often produce complex mixtures of conjugated triterpene glycosides which may be derived from a single triterpene skeleton. The delineation, functional analysis and exploitation of triterpene pathways in plants therefore represent a substantial challenge. Here we have carried out high throughput screening to identify mutants of diploid oat ( Avena strigosa) that are blocked in the early steps of triterpene synthesis. We also show that mutants that are affected in the first committed step in synthesis of β-amyrin-derived triterpenes, and so are unable to cyclise 2,3-oxidosqualene to β-amyrin ( sad1 mutants), accumulate elevated levels of primary sterols. The major differences were in Δ-7-campesterol and Δ-7-avenasterol, which both increased several fold relative to wild-type levels. This is presumably due to accumulation of squalene and 2,3-oxidosqualene and consequent feedback into the sterol pathway, and is consistent with previous reports in which specific oxidosqualene cyclase inhibitors and elicitors of triterpene biosynthesis were shown to have inverse effects on the flux through the sterol and triterpene pathways.
ISSN:0031-9422
1873-3700
DOI:10.1016/j.phytochem.2010.05.016