Rational metabolic engineering of oilseed fatty acid composition
Lead Research Organisation:
Rothamsted Research
Department Name: UNLISTED
Abstract
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Technical Summary
Objective: To modify the oil composition of a target plant species in a predictable manner
There is continued interested in using vegetable oils for a range of different applications, including nutrition, industrial uses (e.g. lubricants) and more recently as biofuels (i.e. biodiesel). Considerable progress has been made over the last ten years in taking forward earlier biochemical models for plant lipid biosynthesis, predominantly through the use of genetic and metabolic engineering approaches. This has resulted in a framework model for the underlying biosynthetic routes for any given fatty acid, further underpinned by the molecular characterisation of the genes encoding the primary biosynthetic activities. However, a plethora of transgenic experiments indicate that our understanding of lipid synthesis and accumulation is at best partial, as witnessed by the relatively few examples of heterologous fatty acids accumulating to high levels in transgenic plants. For example, plants engineered to synthesis long chain polyunsaturated fatty acids such as those found in fish oils fail to efficiently accumulate these compounds, instead accumulating to high levels biosynthetic intermediates.
Therefore, the primary aim of this project is to identify (via biochemistry, reverse genetics and transgenesis) the endogenous factors which contribute to the channelling of fatty acids from their site of synthesis, through various stages of modification through to their ultimate site of deposition (triacyglcerols in seeds, but also membrane lipids). The identification of such factors (most likely to representing acyl-exchange enzymes) will allow the refining of our model of plant lipid synthesis and deposition and facilitate genetic interventions (GM or non-GM) to modify seed oil composition for any particular desired end-use.
There is continued interested in using vegetable oils for a range of different applications, including nutrition, industrial uses (e.g. lubricants) and more recently as biofuels (i.e. biodiesel). Considerable progress has been made over the last ten years in taking forward earlier biochemical models for plant lipid biosynthesis, predominantly through the use of genetic and metabolic engineering approaches. This has resulted in a framework model for the underlying biosynthetic routes for any given fatty acid, further underpinned by the molecular characterisation of the genes encoding the primary biosynthetic activities. However, a plethora of transgenic experiments indicate that our understanding of lipid synthesis and accumulation is at best partial, as witnessed by the relatively few examples of heterologous fatty acids accumulating to high levels in transgenic plants. For example, plants engineered to synthesis long chain polyunsaturated fatty acids such as those found in fish oils fail to efficiently accumulate these compounds, instead accumulating to high levels biosynthetic intermediates.
Therefore, the primary aim of this project is to identify (via biochemistry, reverse genetics and transgenesis) the endogenous factors which contribute to the channelling of fatty acids from their site of synthesis, through various stages of modification through to their ultimate site of deposition (triacyglcerols in seeds, but also membrane lipids). The identification of such factors (most likely to representing acyl-exchange enzymes) will allow the refining of our model of plant lipid synthesis and deposition and facilitate genetic interventions (GM or non-GM) to modify seed oil composition for any particular desired end-use.
Planned Impact
unavailable
Organisations
People |
ORCID iD |
Johnathan Napier (Principal Investigator) |
Publications

Bach L
(2008)
The very-long-chain hydroxy fatty acyl-CoA dehydratase PASTICCINO2 is essential and limiting for plant development.
in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

Bach L
(2011)
Very-long-chain fatty acids are required for cell plate formation during cytokinesis in Arabidopsis thaliana.
in Journal of cell science

Beaudoin F
(2009)
Functional characterization of the Arabidopsis beta-ketoacyl-coenzyme A reductase candidates of the fatty acid elongase.
in Plant physiology

Bourdenx B
(2011)
Overexpression of Arabidopsis ECERIFERUM1 promotes wax very-long-chain alkane biosynthesis and influences plant response to biotic and abiotic stresses.
in Plant physiology


Lu C
(2011)
New frontiers in oilseed biotechnology: meeting the global demand for vegetable oils for food, feed, biofuel, and industrial applications.
in Current opinion in biotechnology

Napier J
(2010)
Tailoring plant lipid composition: designer oilseeds come of age
in Current Opinion in Plant Biology

Napier JA
(2010)
As simple as ACB--new insights into the role of acyl-CoA-binding proteins in Arabidopsis.
in The New phytologist

Ruiz-López N
(2009)
The synthesis and accumulation of stearidonic acid in transgenic plants: a novel source of 'heart-healthy' omega-3 fatty acids.
in Plant biotechnology journal

Sayanova O
(2011)
Transgenic oilseed crops as an alternative to fish oils.
in Prostaglandins, leukotrienes, and essential fatty acids
Description | We have developed GM plants which make omega-3 fish oils |
Exploitation Route | By infringing our IP? |
Sectors | Agriculture Food and Drink |
Description | Developing GM plants with the capacity to make novel oils, including fish oils |
First Year Of Impact | 2009 |
Sector | Agriculture, Food and Drink |
Impact Types | Societal Economic |