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Metabolic Engineering 2005-May

Increased levels of erucic acid in Brassica carinata by co-suppression and antisense repression of the endogenous FAD2 gene.

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Ashok Jadhav
Vesna Katavic
Elizabeth-France Marillia
E Michael Giblin
Dennis L Barton
Arvind Kumar
Cory Sonntag
Vivijan Babic
Wilfred A Keller
David C Taylor

Sleutelwoorden

Abstract

Erucic acid and its derivatives represent important industrial feedstock compounds, and there is an increasing demand for the production of high erucate oils in this regard. Our goal therefore, is to develop high erucic acid (HEA) Brassicaceae lines with increased proportions of erucic acid and very long-chain fatty acids (VLCFAs). We proposed that oleate availability may be a rate-limiting factor in the biosynthesis of erucic acid. We have tried to address this question by manipulating the expression of the endogenous FAD2 gene in B. carinata using co-supression and antisense approaches. Both methods resulted in transgenic lines exhibiting decreased proportions of polyunsaturated C18 fatty acids (18:2+18:3) and concomitant and significantly increased proportions of 18:1, 22:1 and total VLCFAs. Co-suppressed FAD2 B. carinata lines exhibited 3-18% decreases in 18:2, 22-49% decreases in 18:3 and significantly increased proportions of 18:1 (36-99%), 22:1 (12-27%) and VLCFAs (6-15%). Transgenic B. carinata lines developed using an antisense FAD2 approach exhibited decreased proportions of 18:2 and 18:3 (9-39% and 33-48%, respectively) and significantly increased proportions of 18:1 (54-130%), 22:1 (5-19%) and VLCFAs (6-21%). The possibility of using these approaches to produce prototype transgenic germplasm of the Brassicaceae accumulating seed oils with improved proportions of erucic and other VLCFAs is discussed.

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