4.7 Review

Can the world's favorite fruit, tomato, provide an effective biosynthetic chassis for high-value metabolites?

Journal

PLANT CELL REPORTS
Volume 37, Issue 10, Pages 1443-1450

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00299-018-2283-8

Keywords

Tomato; Metabolic engineering; Specialized metabolites; Chassis; Scale-up production

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31701255]
  2. National One Thousand Young Talents program from China
  3. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [YJ201640, 2017SCU04A11]
  4. Institute Strategic Program Understanding and Exploiting Plant and Microbial Secondary Metabolism from BBSRC [BB/J004596/1]
  5. ERA-CAPS project RegulaTomE - BBSRC [BB/ N005023/1]
  6. CAS/JIC
  7. Center of Excellence for Plant and Microbial Sciences (CEPAMS) joint foundation
  8. BBSRC [BB/N005023/1, BB/L026651/1, BB/L014130/1, BBS/E/J/000CA424, BBS/E/J/000PR9790] Funding Source: UKRI

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Tomato has a relatively short growth cycle (fruit ready to pick within 65-85 days from planting) and a relatively high yield (the average for globe tomatoes is 3-9 kg fruit per plant rising to as much as 40 kg fruit per plant). Tomatoes also produce large amounts of important primary and secondary metabolites which can serve as intermediates or substrates for producing valuable new compounds. As a model crop, tomato already has a broad range of tools and resources available for biotechnological applications, either increased nutrients for health-promoting biofortified foods or as a production system for high-value compounds. These advantages make tomato an excellent chassis for the production of important metabolites. We summarize recent achievements in metabolic engineering of tomato and suggest new candidate metabolites which could be targets for metabolic engineering. We offer a scheme for how to establish tomato as a chassis for industrial-scale production of high-value metabolites.

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