Literature DB >> 21049996

Tuber-specific silencing of the acid invertase gene substantially lowers the acrylamide-forming potential of potato.

Jingsong Ye1, Roshani Shakya, Pradeep Shrestha, Caius M Rommens.   

Abstract

Some popular processed foods including French fries contain small amounts of toxic acrylamide. Efforts to lower the accumulation of this reactive compound by modifying the production process have a negative effect on sensory characteristics and are not broadly applicable. This study optimized a method developed more than a decade ago to lower the accumulation of the acrylamide precursors glucose and fructose in cold-stored tubers. In contrast to the original application, which lowered hexose content by one-third through constitutive expression of an antisense copy of the cold-inducible acid invertase (Inv) gene, the current approach was based on tuber-specific expression of an Inv-derived inverted repeat. Stored tubers of transgenic plants contained as little as 2% of the reducing sugars that accumulated in controls. This decline in glucose and fructose formation is counterbalanced by increased sucrose and starch levels. However, it did not trigger any phenotypic changes and also did not affect the formation of free asparagine, ascorbic acid, phenylalanine, and chlorogenic acid. Importantly, French fries from the low-invertase tubers contained up to 8-fold reduced amounts of acrylamide. Given the important role of processed potato products in the modern Western diet, a replacement of current varieties with the low-hexose potatoes would reduce the average daily intake of acrylamide by one-fourth.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 21049996     DOI: 10.1021/jf1032262

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Agric Food Chem        ISSN: 0021-8561            Impact factor:   5.279


  6 in total

Review 1.  Prospects for potato genome editing to engineer resistance against viruses and cold-induced sweetening.

Authors:  Amir Hameed; Muhammad Aamer Mehmood; Muhammad Shahid; Shabih Fatma; Aysha Khan; Sumbal Ali
Journal:  GM Crops Food       Date:  2019-07-06       Impact factor: 3.074

2.  Alleviation of low temperature sweetening in potato by expressing Arabidopsis pyruvate decarboxylase gene and stress-inducible rd29A : A preliminary study.

Authors:  Reena Pinhero; Rinu Pazhekattu; Alejandro G Marangoni; Qiang Liu; Rickey Y Yada
Journal:  Physiol Mol Biol Plants       Date:  2011-04-20

3.  Sugar metabolism, chip color, invertase activity, and gene expression during long-term cold storage of potato (Solanum tuberosum) tubers from wild-type and vacuolar invertase silencing lines of Katahdin.

Authors:  Amy E Wiberley-Bradford; James S Busse; Jiming Jiang; Paul C Bethke
Journal:  BMC Res Notes       Date:  2014-11-16

4.  Evaluation of Plant-Derived Promoters for Constitutive and Tissue-Specific Gene Expression in Potato.

Authors:  Dmitry Miroshnichenko; Aleksey Firsov; Vadim Timerbaev; Oleg Kozlov; Anna Klementyeva; Lyubov Shaloiko; Sergey Dolgov
Journal:  Plants (Basel)       Date:  2020-11-09

5.  Vacuolar invertase gene silencing in potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) improves processing quality by decreasing the frequency of sugar-end defects.

Authors:  Xiaobiao Zhu; Craig Richael; Patrick Chamberlain; James S Busse; Alvin J Bussan; Jiming Jiang; Paul C Bethke
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-04-02       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 6.  Applications of New Breeding Technologies for Potato Improvement.

Authors:  Amir Hameed; Syed Shan-E-Ali Zaidi; Sara Shakir; Shahid Mansoor
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2018-06-29       Impact factor: 5.753

  6 in total

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