4.6 Review

Effects of Various Allelic Combinations of Starch Biosynthetic Genes on the Properties of Endosperm Starch in Rice

Journal

RICE
Volume 15, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1186/s12284-022-00570-8

Keywords

Amylopectin; Amylose; Backcrossing; Endosperm; Indica rice; Japonica rice; Starch biosynthesis; Starch branching enzyme; Starch debranching enzyme; Starch synthase

Categories

Funding

  1. Science and Technology Research Promotion Program for Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries and Food Industry [25033AB, 28029C]
  2. President's Funds of Akita Prefectural University
  3. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [16K18571, JP18K14438, 20K05961, 19H01608, 15J40176, JP18J40020]
  4. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [20K05961, 19H01608, 16K18571] Funding Source: KAKEN

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This review summarizes recent discoveries in rice starch research, including the expression patterns and variations of starch biosynthetic genes, the functions of individual isozymes, and the complementary effects of starch enzymes. The research findings are important for breeding new rice cultivars.
Rice endosperm accumulates large amounts of photosynthetic products as insoluble starch within amyloplasts by properly arranging structured, highly branched, large amylopectin molecules, thus avoiding osmotic imbalance. The amount and characteristics of starch directly influence the yield and quality of rice grains, which in turn influence their application and market value. Therefore, understanding how various allelic combinations of starch biosynthetic genes, with different expression levels, affect starch properties is important for the identification of targets for breeding new rice cultivars. Research over the past few decades has revealed the spatiotemporal expression patterns and allelic variants of starch biosynthetic genes, and enhanced our understanding of the specific roles and compensatory functions of individual isozymes of starch biosynthetic enzymes through biochemical analyses of purified enzymes and characterization of japonica rice mutants lacking these enzymes. Furthermore, it has been shown that starch biosynthetic enzymes can mutually and synergistically increase their activities by forming protein complexes. This review focuses on the more recent discoveries made in the last several years. Generation of single and double mutants and/or high-level expression of specific starch synthases (SSs) allowed us to better understand how the starch granule morphology is determined; how the complete absence of SSIIa affects starch structure; why the rice endosperm stores insoluble starch rather than soluble phytoglycogen; how to elevate amylose and resistant starch (RS) content to improve health benefits; and how SS isozymes mutually complement their activities. The introduction of active-type SSIIa and/or high-expression type GBSSI into ss3a ss4b, isa1, be2b, and ss3a be2b japonica rice mutants, with unique starch properties, and analyses of their starch properties are summarized in this review. High-level accumulation of RS is often accompanied by a reduction in grain yield as a trade-off. Backcrossing rice mutants with a high-yielding elite rice cultivar enabled the improvement of agricultural traits, while maintaining high RS levels. Designing starch structures for additional values, breeding and cultivating to increase yield will enable the development of a new type of rice starch that can be used in a wide variety of applications, and that can contribute to food and agricultural industries in the near future.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available