Progress in manipulating ascorbic acid biosynthesis and accumulation in plants

被引:189
作者
Ishikawa, T
Dowdle, J
Smirnoff, N
机构
[1] Univ Exeter, Sch Biosci, Exeter EX4 4QD, Devon, England
[2] Shimane Univ, Fac Life & Environm Sci, Matsue, Shimane 6908504, Japan
关键词
D O I
10.1111/j.1399-3054.2006.00640.x
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
L-Ascorbic acid ( vitamin C) is synthesized from hexose sugars. It is an antioxidant and redox buffer, as well as an enzyme cofactor, so it has multiple roles in metabolism and in plant responses to abiotic stresses and pathogens. Plant-derived ascorbate also provides the major source of vitamin C in the human diet. An understanding of how ascorbate metabolism is controlled should provide a basis for engineering or otherwise manipulating its accumulation. Biochemical and molecular genetic evidence supports synthesis from GDP-D-mannose via L-galactose (D-Man/L-Gal pathway) as a significant source of ascorbate. More recently, evidence for pathways via uronic acids has been obtained: overexpression of myo-inositol oxygenase, D-galacturonate reductase and L-gulono-1,4-lactone oxidase all increase leaf ascorbate concentration. Interestingly, this has proved more effective in pathway engineering than overexpressing various D-Man/L-Gal pathway genes. Ascorbate oxidation generates the potentially unstable dehydroascorbate, and the overexpression of glutathione-dependent dehydroascorbate reductase has resulted in increased ascorbate. Ascorbate is catabolized to products such as oxalate, L-threonate and L-tartrate. The enzymes involved have not been identified, so catabolism is not yet amenable to manipulation. In the examples of pathway engineering so far, the increase in ascorbate has been modest on an absolute or proportional basis. Therefore, a deeper understanding of ascorbate metabolism is needed to achieve larger increases. Identifying genes that control ascorbate accumulation by techniques such as analysis of quantitative trait loci (QTL) or activation tagging may hold promise, particularly if regulatory genes can be identified.
引用
收藏
页码:343 / 355
页数:13
相关论文
共 100 条
[1]   Engineering increased vitamin C levels in plants by overexpression of a D-galacturonic acid reductase [J].
Agius, F ;
González-Lamothe, R ;
Caballero, JL ;
Muñoz-Blanco, J ;
Botella, MA ;
Valpuesta, V .
NATURE BIOTECHNOLOGY, 2003, 21 (02) :177-181
[2]   LIGHT-DEPENDENT REDUCTION OF DEHYDROASCORBATE AND UPTAKE OF EXOGENOUS ASCORBATE BY SPINACH-CHLOROPLASTS [J].
ANDERSON, JW ;
FOYER, CH ;
WALKER, DA .
PLANTA, 1983, 158 (05) :442-450
[3]   L-ASCORBIC ACID BIOSYNTHESIS IN HIGHER PLANTS FROM L-GULONO-1,4-LACTONE AND L-GALACTONO-1,4-LACTONE [J].
BAIG, MM ;
KELLY, S ;
LOEWUS, F .
PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 1970, 46 (02) :277-+
[4]   The timing of senescence and response to pathogens is altered in the ascorbate-deficient Arabidopsis mutant vitamin c-1 [J].
Barth, C ;
Moeder, W ;
Klessig, DF ;
Conklin, PL .
PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 2004, 134 (04) :1784-1792
[5]   Ascorbate biosynthesis in mitochondria is linked to the electron transport chain between complexes III and IV [J].
Bartoli, CG ;
Pastori, GM ;
Foyer, CH .
PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 2000, 123 (01) :335-343
[6]   UPTAKE OF L-ASCORBATE BY INTACT SPINACH-CHLOROPLASTS [J].
BECK, E ;
BURKERT, A ;
HOFMANN, M .
PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 1983, 73 (01) :41-45
[7]  
Buettner GR, 2004, VITAMIN C: FUNCTION AND BIOCHEMISTRY IN ANIMALS AND PLANTS, P173
[8]   The ascorbic acid redox state controls guard cell signaling and stomatal movement [J].
Chen, Z ;
Gallie, DR .
PLANT CELL, 2004, 16 (05) :1143-1162
[9]   Increasing vitamin C content of plants through enhanced ascorbate recycling [J].
Chen, Z ;
Young, TE ;
Ling, J ;
Chang, SC ;
Gallie, DR .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2003, 100 (06) :3525-3530
[10]   L-ascorbic acid metabolism in the ascorbate-deficient Arabidopsis mutant vtc1 [J].
Conklin, PL ;
Pallanca, JE ;
Last, RL ;
Smirnoff, N .
PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 1997, 115 (03) :1277-1285