A Phospholipase C-Like Protein From Increases Hydroxy Fatty Acids Accumulation in Transgenic Seeds of .

Front Plant Sci

Department of Plant Sciences and Plant Pathology, Montana State University, Bozeman, MT, United States.

Published: November 2018

There have been strong interests in producing unusual fatty acids in oilseed crops to provide renewable industrial feedstock. Results are so far largely disappointing since much lower amounts of such fatty acids accumulate in genetically engineered seeds than in their original natural sources. It has been suggested that the flux of unusual fatty acids through phosphatidylcholine (PC) represents a major bottleneck for high accumulation of such fatty acids in triacylglycerol (TAG). We show here that a phospholipase C-like protein (RcPLCL1) from castor bean, which accumulates nearly 90% of the hydroxylated ricinoleic acid in its seed TAG, increases the amount of hydroxy fatty acids (HFAs) when co-expresses with the fatty acid hydroxylase (RcFAH12) in transgenic seed of . RcPLCL1 shows hydrolyzing activities on both PC and phosphatidylinositol substrates in our assay conditions. The PC-PLC activity of the RcPLCL1 may have increased the efficiency of HFA-PC to diacylglycerol conversion, which explains our observation of increased HFA contents in TAG concomitant with decreased HFA in the membrane lipid PC during seed development. Consequently, this may also alleviate the potential detrimental effect of HFA on germination of the engineered camelina seeds. Our results provide new knowledge that will help design effective strategies to engineer high levels of HFAs in transgenic oilseeds.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6221933PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2018.01576DOI Listing

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