Affiliation:
1. Department of Food & Bioproduct Sciences, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada
2. Bioriginal Food & Science Corporation, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada
3. Plant Biotechnology Institute, National Research Council, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Claviceps purpurea
, the fungal pathogen that causes the cereal disease ergot, produces glycerides that contain high levels of ricinoleic acid [(
R
)-12-hydroxyoctadec-
cis
-9-enoic acid] in its sclerotia. Recently, a fatty acid hydroxylase (
C. purpurea
FAH [CpFAH]) involved in the biosynthesis of ricinoleic acid was identified from this fungus (D. Meesapyodsuk and X. Qiu, Plant Physiol.
147:
1325-1333, 2008). Here, we describe the cloning and biochemical characterization of a
C. purpurea
type II diacylglycerol acyltransferase (CpDGAT2) involved in the assembly of ricinoleic acid into triglycerides. The
CpDGAT2
gene was cloned by degenerate RT-PCR (reverse transcription-PCR). The expression of this gene restored the
in vivo
synthesis of triacylglycerol (TAG) in the quadruple mutant strain
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
H1246, in which all four TAG biosynthesis genes (
DGA1
,
LRO1
,
ARE1
, and
ARE2
) are disrupted.
In vitro
enzymatic assays using microsomal preparations from the transformed yeast strain indicated that CpDGAT2 prefers ricinoleic acid as an acyl donor over linoleic acid, oleic acid, or linolenic acid, and it prefers 1,2-dioleoyl-
sn
-glycerol over 1,2-dipalmitoyl-
sn
-glycerol as an acyl acceptor. The coexpression of CpFAH with CpDGAT2 in yeast resulted in an increased accumulation of ricinoleic acid compared to the coexpression of CpFAH with the native yeast DGAT2 (
S. cerevisiae
DGA1 [ScDGA1]) or the expression of CpFAH alone. Northern blot analysis indicated that
CpFAH
is expressed solely in sclerotium cells, with no transcripts of this gene being detected in mycelium or conidial cells. CpDGAT2 was more widely expressed among the cell types examined, although expression was low in conidiospores. The high expression of CpDGAT2 and CpFAH in sclerotium cells, where high levels of ricinoleate glycerides accumulate, provided further evidence supporting the roles of CpDGAT2 and CpFAH as key enzymes for the synthesis and assembly of ricinoleic acid in
C. purpurea.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
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