Modulating seed β-ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein synthase II level converts the composition of a temperate seed oil to that of a palm-like tropical oil
0301 basic medicine
2. Zero hunger
Heterozygote
Genotype
Models, Genetic
Arabidopsis Proteins
Fatty Acids
Homozygote
Arabidopsis
Palm Oil
Genes, Plant
03 medical and health sciences
3-Oxoacyl-(Acyl-Carrier-Protein) Synthase
Seeds
Plant Oils
RNA Interference
Transgenes
Oils
Alleles
Plant Proteins
DOI:
10.1073/pnas.0611141104
Publication Date:
2007-03-06T01:44:34Z
AUTHORS (5)
ABSTRACT
β-Ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein (ACP) synthase II (KASII) elongates 16:0-ACP to 18:0-ACP in the plastid, where it competes with three other enzymes at the first major branch point in fatty acid biosynthesis. Despite its key metabolic location, the influence of KASII in determining seed oil composition remains unclear, in part because the biochemical consequences of the
fab1-1
mutation were unresolved. Thus,
fab1-1
, and a newly identified knockout allele,
fab1-2
, were analyzed in the context of the hypothesis that modulating KASII activity is sufficient to convert the composition of a temperate seed oil into that of a palm-like tropical oil. No homozygous
fab1-2
individuals were identified in progeny of self-fertilized heterozygous
fab1-2
plants, ≈1/4 of which aborted before the torpedo stage, suggesting that
fab1-2
represents a complete loss of function and results in lethality when homozygous. Consistent with this hypothesis, homozygous
fab1-2
plants were identified when a
fab1-1
transgene was introduced, demonstrating that
fab1-1
encodes an active KASII. Strong seed-specific hairpin-RNAi reductions in
FAB1
expression resulted in abortion of ≈1/4 of the embryos in an apparent phenocopy of
fab1-2
homozygosity. In less severe
FAB1
hairpin-RNAi individuals, embryos developed normally and exhibited a 1:2:1 segregation ratio for palmitate accumulation. Thus, early embryo development appears sensitive to elevated 16:0, whereas at later stages, up to 53% of 16:0, i.e., a 7-fold increase over wild-type levels, is tolerated. These results resolve the role of KASII in seed metabolism and demonstrate that modulation of
Arabidopsis
KASII levels is sufficient to convert its temperate oilseed composition to that of a palm-like tropical oil.
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