Silencing Onion Lachrymatory Factor Synthase Causes a Significant Change in the Sulfur Secondary Metabolite Profile

Author:

Eady Colin C.1,Kamoi Takahiro1,Kato Masahiro1,Porter Noel G.1,Davis Sheree1,Shaw Martin1,Kamoi Akiko1,Imai Shinsuke1

Affiliation:

1. National Centre for Advanced Bio-Protection Technologies, Lincoln University, Christchurch 7647, New Zealand (C.C.E., T.K.); New Zealand Institute for Crop and Food Research Limited, Christchurch 8140, New Zealand (C.C.E., N.G.P., S.D., M.S.); and House Foods Corporation, Yotsukaido, Chiba 284–0033, Japan (T.K., M.K., A.K., S.I.)

Abstract

Abstract Through a single genetic transformation in onion (Allium cepa), a crop recalcitrant to genetic transformation, we suppressed the lachrymatory factor synthase gene using RNA interference silencing in six plants. This reduced lachrymatory synthase activity by up to 1,544-fold, so that when wounded the onions produced significantly reduced levels of tear-inducing lachrymatory factor. We then confirmed, through a novel colorimetric assay, that this silencing had shifted the trans-S-1-propenyl-l-cysteine sulfoxide breakdown pathway so that more 1-propenyl sulfenic acid was converted into di-1-propenyl thiosulfinate. A consequence of this raised thiosulfinate level was a marked increase in the downstream production of a nonenzymatically produced zwiebelane isomer and other volatile sulfur compounds, di-1-propenyl disulfide and 2-mercapto-3,4-dimethyl-2,3-dihydrothiophene, which had previously been reported in trace amounts or had not been detected in onion. The consequences of this dramatic simultaneous down- and up-regulation of secondary sulfur products on the health and flavor attributes of the onion are discussed.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science,Genetics,Physiology

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