4.7 Article

Choline Import into Chloroplasts Limits Glycine Betaine Synthesis in Tobacco: Analysis of Plants Engineered with a Chloroplastic or a Cytosolic Pathway

Journal

METABOLIC ENGINEERING
Volume 2, Issue 4, Pages 300-311

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1006/mben.2000.0158

Keywords

glycine betaine; choline; choline monooxygenase; choline oxidase; pathway modeling; Nicotiana tabacum

Funding

  1. USDA NRI CGP [98-35100-6149]
  2. C.V. Griffin, Sr. Foundation
  3. Florida Agricultural Experiment Station
  4. NSF [IBN-9813999]

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The biosynthesis of the osmoprotectant glycine betaine (GlyBet) is a target for metabolic engineering to enhance stress resistance in crops. Certain plants synthesize GlyBet in chloroplasts via a two-step oxidation of choline (Cho). In previous work, a chloroplastic GlyBet synthesis pathway was inserted into tobacco (which lacks GlyBet) by expressing spinach choline monooxygenase (CMO). The transformants had low CMO enzyme activity, and produced little GlyBet (<= 70 nmol g(-1) fresh wt). In this study, transformants with up to 100-fold higher CMO activity showed no further increase in GlyBet. In contrast, tobacco expressing a cytosolic GlyBet synthesis pathway accumulated significantly more GlyBet (430 nmol g(-1) fresh wt), suggesting that subcellular localization influences pathway flux. Modeling of the labeling kinetics of Cho metabolites observed when [C-14]Cho was supplied to engineered plants demonstrated that Cho import into chloroplasts indeed limits the flux to GlyBet in the chloroplastic pathway. A high-activity Cho transporter in the chloroplast envelope may therefore be an integral part of the GlyBet synthesis pathway in species that accumulate GlyBet naturally, and hence a target for future engineering. (C) 2000 Academic Press

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