| Literature DB >> 24351075 |
Hiroshi Masuda, May Sann Aung, Naoko K Nishizawa1.
Abstract
More than 2 billion people suffer from iron (Fe) deficiency, and developing crop cultivars with an increased concentration of micronutrients (biofortification) can address this problem. In this review, we describe seven transgenic approaches, and combinations thereof, that can be used to increase the concentration of Fe in rice seeds. The first approach is to enhance the Fe storage capacity of grains through expression of the Fe storage protein ferritin under the control of endosperm-specific promoters. Using this approach, the concentration of Fe in the seeds of transformants was increased by approximately 2-fold in polished seeds. The second approach is to enhance Fe translocation by overproducing the natural metal chelator nicotianamine; using this approach, the Fe concentration was increased by up to 3-fold in polished seeds. The third approach is to enhance Fe influx to the endosperm by expressing the Fe(II)-nicotianamine transporter gene OsYSL2 under the control of an endosperm-specific promoter and sucrose transporter promoter, which increased the Fe concentration by up to 4-fold in polished seeds. The fourth approach is introduction of the barley mugineic acid synthesis gene IDS3 to enhance Fe uptake and translocation within plants, which resulted in a 1.4-fold increase in the Fe concentration in polished seeds during field cultivation. In addition to the above approaches, Fe-biofortified rice was produced using a combination of the first, second, and third approaches. The Fe concentration in greenhouse-grown T2 polished seeds was 6-fold higher and that in paddy field-grown T3 polished seeds was 4.4-fold higher than in non-transgenic seeds without any reduction in yield. When the first and fourth approaches were combined, the Fe concentration was greater than that achieved by introducing only the ferritin gene, and Fe-deficiency tolerance was observed. With respect to Fe biofortification, the introduction of multiple Fe homeostasis genes is more effective than the introduction of individual genes. Moreover, three additional approaches, i.e., overexpression of the Fe transporter gene OsIRT1 or OsYSL15, overexpression of the Fe deficiency-inducible bHLH transcription factor OsIRO2, and knockdown of the vacuolar Fe transporter gene OsVIT1 or OsVIT2, may be useful to further increase the Fe concentration of seeds.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24351075 PMCID: PMC3878263 DOI: 10.1186/1939-8433-6-40
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rice (N Y) ISSN: 1939-8425 Impact factor: 4.783
Figure 1Seven transgenic approaches to Fe biofortification of rice. The pathway inside the gray dashed-line rectangle shows the biosynthetic pathway for mugineic acid family phytosiderophores (MAs) in graminaceous plants. SAMS, S-Adenosyl-methionine synthase; NAS, NA synthase; NAAT, NA aminotransferase; DMA, 2′-deoxymugineic acid; DMAS, DMA synthase; IDS3, MA synthase (dioxygenase that catalyzes the hydroxylation of DMA and epiHDMA at the 2′ position); Ferritin, iron storage protein; OsYSL2, Fe(II)-NA and Mn(II)-NA transporter; OsIRO2, Fe deficiency-inducible bHLH transcription factor related to Fe homeostasis in rice; OsIRT1, ferric transporter; OsYSL15, Fe(III)-DMA transporter; TOM1, MA transporter. Rice lacks the two dioxygenase genes (IDS2 and IDS3) and secretes only DMA. Approach 1: Enhancing Fe accumulation in seeds by introducing the Fe storage protein, ferritin gene, SoyferH1, SoyferH2 or Pvferritin, under the control of endosperm-specific promoters. Approach 2: Enhancing Fe transport within the plant body by the overexpression of NAS. Approach 3: Enhancing Fe influx to seeds by expression of the Fe(II)-NA transporter gene OsYSL2 under the control of the OsSUT1 promoter. Approach 4: Enhancing Fe uptake and translocation by introduction of the phytosiderophore synthase gene IDS3. Approach 5: Enhanced Fe uptake from soil by overexpression of the Fe transporter gene OsIRT1 or OsYSL15. Approach 6: Enhanced Fe uptake and translocation by overexpression of the OsIRO2 gene. Approach 7: Enhanced Fe translocation from flag leaves to seeds by knockdown of the vacuolar Fe transporter gene OsVIT1 or OsVIT2. The ferritin image was kindly provided by Dr. David S. Goodsell (Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, CA, USA) and the RCSB PDB.
Approaches of Fe biofortification of rice: single transgenic approaches
| Soil cultivation in greenhouse | 2 fold (polished seeds) | Goto et al. | |||
| Enhancement of Fe storage in rice seeds by | |||||
| 3 fold (brown seeds) | |||||
| Soil cultivation in greenhouse | 1.5 fold (brown seeds) | Qu et al. | |||
| Soil cultivation in greenhouse | 2.2 fold (brown seeds) | Lucca et al. | |||
| Soil cultivation in greenhouse | 3.7 fold (polished seeds) | Vasconcelos et al. | |||
| (High Fe breeder line) | |||||
| Soil cultivation in greenhouse | 2.1 fold (polished seeds) | Paul et al. | |||
| Soil cultivation in greenhouse | 2 fold (polished seeds) | Masuda et al. | |||
| Enhancement of Fe translocation by overexpression of | |||||
| Activation tag line of | Soil culture in greenhouse | 3 fold (polished seeds) | Lee et al. | ||
| Soil cultivation in greenhouse | 4 fold (polished seeds) | Johnson et al. | |||
| Soil cultivation in greenhouse | 4 fold (polished seeds) | Ishimaru et al. | |||
| Enhancement of Fe transportation by Fe transporter | |||||
| Barley | Andosol soil in paddy field | 1.4 fold (polished seeds) | Masuda et al. | ||
| Enhancement of Fe uptake and translocation by | |||||
| Calcareous soil in paddy field | 1.3 fold (brown seeds) | Suzuki et al. | |||
| Paddy field | 1.7 fold (leaves) | Lee et al. | |||
| Overexpression of Fe transporter | 1.1 fold (brown seeds) | ||||
| Paddy field | 1.3 fold (brown seeds) | Lee et al. | |||
| Calcareous soil in greenhouse | 3 fold (brown seeds) | Ogo et al. | |||
| Overexpression of transcription factor | |||||
| Hydroponic culture | 1.4 fold (brown seeds) | Zhang et al. | |||
| Knockdown of | |||||
| Paddy field | 1.4 fold (brown seeds) | ||||
| Soil cultivation in greenhouse | 1.3 fold (brown seeds) | Bashir et al. | |||
| 1.8 fold (polished seeds) |
aThe tissue name written in Parentheses is the rice tissue where Fe concentration was increased. bThey introduced these two genes into same transgenic lines. c These two genes were introduced separately into rice and they analyzed these two types of transgenic lines.
Approaches of Fe biofortification of rice: multi transgenic approaches
| Hydroponic culture | 6 fold (polished seeds) | Wirth et al. | |||
| Soil cultivation in greenhouse | 6 fold (polished seeds) | Masuda et al. | |||
| Paddy field | 4.4 fold (polished seeds) | ||||
| Soil cultivation in greenhouse | 3.4 fold (polished seeds) | Aung et al. | |||
| Normal soil in greenhouse | 4 fold (polished seeds) | Masuda et al. | |||
| Calcareous soil in greenhouse | 2.5 fold (polished seeds) |
aThese gene expression cassettes were introduced concomitantly. b.The tissue name written in parentheses is the rice tissue where Fe concentration was increased.
Figure 2Fe concentration in the Fer-NAS-YSL2 lines (Masuda et al.2012). a; The Fe concentrations in T2 polished rice seeds (Oryza sativa cv. Tsukinohikari). Bars represent the Fe concentrations in polished seeds obtained from individual transgenic or non-transgenic plants. The numbers indicate the line numbers of the independent T1 lines. The arrows and numbers above the bars show the lines that contained high levels of Fe, which are shown in b for the subsequent generation. b; Fe concentrations in the T3 polished rice seeds (Oryza sativa cv. Tsukinohikari) harvested from the paddy field. ANOVA with the Tukey–Kramer HSD test was used for each four-block dataset (n = 4). The letters above the bars indicate significant differences (P < 0.05). NT, Non-transgenic rice; AN, OsActin1 promoter–HvNAS1 transgenic rice line No. 8 (Masuda et al. 2009); Fer-NAS-YSL2, transgenic rice lines that carry the OsGlb1 promoter–SoyferH2, OsGluB1 promoter–SoyferH2, OsSUT1 promoter–OsYSL2, OsGlb1 promoter–OsYSL2, and OsActin1 promoter–HvNAS1 (Masuda et al. 2012).