4.7 Article

Up-regulation of lipid biosynthesis increases the oil content in leaves of Sorghum bicolor

Journal

PLANT BIOTECHNOLOGY JOURNAL
Volume 17, Issue 1, Pages 220-232

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/pbi.12959

Keywords

triacylglycerol; Sorghum bicolor; leaf; WRI1; DGAT; Oleosin

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Synthesis and accumulation of the storage lipid triacylglycerol in vegetative plant tissues has emerged as a promising strategy to meet the world's future need for vegetable oil. Sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) is a particularly attractive target crop given its high biomass, drought resistance and C-4 photosynthesis. While oilseed-like triacylglycerol levels have been engineered in the C-3 model plant tobacco, progress in C-4 monocot crops has been lagging behind. In this study, we report the accumulation of triacylglycerol in sorghum leaf tissues to levels between 3 and 8.4% on a dry weight basis depending on leaf and plant developmental stage. This was achieved by the combined overexpression of genes encoding the Zea mays WRI1 transcription factor, Umbelopsis ramanniana UrDGAT2a acyltransferase and Sesamum indicum Oleosin-L oil body protein. Increased oil content was visible as lipid droplets, primarily in the leaf mesophyll cells. A comparison between a constitutive and mesophyll-specific promoter driving WRI1 expression revealed distinct changes in the overall leaf lipidome as well as transitory starch and soluble sugar levels. Metabolome profiling uncovered changes in the abundance of various amino acids and dicarboxylic acids. The results presented here are a first step forward towards the development of sorghum as a dedicated biomass oil crop and provide a basis for further combinatorial metabolic engineering.

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