High-Flavonol Tomatoes Resulting from the Heterologous Expression of the Maize Transcription Factor Genes LC and C1
Arnaud G. Bovy,Ric C. H. de Vos,Mark Kemper,Elio Schijlen,Maria Almenar Pertejo,Shelagh Rachael Muir,Geoff J. Collins,Susan Robinson,Martine Elisa Verhoeyen,Steve Hughes,Celestino Santos-Buelga,Arjen J. van Tunen +11 more
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TL;DR: Comparison of flavonoid profiles and gene expression data between tomato leaves and fruit indicates that the absence of anthocyanins in LC/C1 fruit is attributable primarily to an insufficient expression of the gene encoding flavanone-3′5′-hydroxylase, in combination with a strong preference of the tomato dihydroflavonol reductase enzyme to use the Flavonoid reaction product dihydromyricetin as a substrate.
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Abstract: Flavonoids are a group of polyphenolic plant secondary metabolites important for plant biology and human nutrition. In particular flavonols are potent antioxidants, and their dietary intake is correlated with a reduced risk of cardiovascular diseases. Tomato fruit contain only in their peel small amounts of flavonoids, mainly naringenin chalcone and the flavonol rutin, a quercetin glycoside. To increase flavonoid levels in tomato, we expressed the maize transcription factor genes LC and C1 in the fruit of genetically modified tomato plants. Expression of both genes was required and sufficient to upregulate the flavonoid pathway in tomato fruit flesh, a tissue that normally does not produce any flavonoids. These fruit accumulated high levels of the flavonol kaempferol and, to a lesser extent, the flavanone naringenin in their flesh. All flavonoids detected were present as glycosides. Anthocyanins, previously reported to accumulate upon LC expression in several plant species, were present in LC/C1 tomato leaves but could not be detected in ripe LC/C1 fruit. RNA expression analysis of ripening fruit revealed that, with the exception of chalcone isomerase, all of the structural genes required for the production of kaempferol-type flavonols and pelargonidin-type anthocyanins were induced strongly by the LC/C1 transcription factors. Expression of the genes encoding flavanone-3'-hydroxylase and flavanone-3'5'-hydroxylase, which are required for the modification of B-ring hydroxylation patterns, was not affected by LC/C1. Comparison of flavonoid profiles and gene expression data between tomato leaves and fruit indicates that the absence of anthocyanins in LC/C1 fruit is attributable primarily to an insufficient expression of the gene encoding flavanone-3'5'-hydroxylase, in combination with a strong preference of the tomato dihydroflavonol reductase enzyme to use the flavanone-3'5'-hydroxylase reaction product dihydromyricetin as a substrate.
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TL;DR: This review summarizes the chemistry, biosynthesis and occurrence of the compounds involved, namely the C6-C3-C6 flavonoids-anthocyanins, dihydrochalcones, Flavan-3-ols, flavanones, flavones, Flavonols and isoflavones, and the mechanisms underlying these processes are discussed.
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Enrichment of tomato fruit with health-promoting anthocyanins by expression of select transcription factors.
Eugenio Butelli,Lucilla Titta,Marco Giorgio,Hans-Peter Mock,Andrea Matros,Silke Peterek,Elio Schijlen,Robert Hall,Arnaud G. Bovy,Jie Luo,Cathie Martin +10 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors expressed two transcription factors from snapdragon in tomato, and found that the fruit of the plants accumulated anthocyanins at levels substantially higher than previously reported for efforts to engineer Anthocyanin accumulation in tomato and at concentrations comparable to the levels found in blackberries and blueberries.
Recent advances in the transcriptional regulation of the flavonoid biosynthetic pathway
TL;DR: A better knowledge of the regulatory mechanisms of the flavonoids pathway is likely to favour the development of new biotechnological tools for the generation of value-added plants with optimized flavonoid content.
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TL;DR: Understanding of the regulation of anthocyanin synthesis in flowers and fruits is broadened, indicating that a regulatory system based on the cooperation of MYB, bHLH and WD40 proteins that control floral and fruit pigmentation is common to many dicot species.
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