Literature DB >> 26058159

Low caffeine content in novel grafted tea with Camellia sinensis as scions and Camellia oleifera as stocks.

Wei-Wei Deng, Min Li, Chen-Chen Gu, Da-Xiang Li, Lin-Long Ma, Yang Jin, Xiao-Chun Wan.   

Abstract

Caffeine, a purine alkaloid, is a major secondary metabolite in tea leaves. The demand for low caffeine tea is increasing in recent years, especially for health reasons. We report a novel grafted tea material with low caffeine content. The grafted tea plant had Camellia sinensis as scions and C. oleifera as stocks. The content of purine alkaloids was determined in the leaves of one-year-old grafted tea plants by HPLC. We also characterized caffeine synthase (CS), a key enzyme involved in caffeine biosynthesis in tea plants, at the expression level. The expression patterns of CS were examined in grafted and control leaves by Western blot, using a self-prepared polyclonal antibody with high specificity and sensitivity. The expression of related genes (TCS1, tea caffeine synthase gene, GenBank accession No. AB031280; sAMS, SAM synthetase gene, AJ277206; TIDH, IMP dehydrogenase gene, EU106658) in the caffeine biosynthetic pathway was investigated by qRT-PCR. HPLC showed that the caffeine content was only 38% as compared with the non-grafted tea leaves. Immunoblotting analysis showed that CS protein decreased by half in the leaves of grafted tea plants. qRT-PCR revealed no significant changes in the expression of two genes in the upstream pathway (sAMS and TIDH), while the expression of TCS1 was greatly decreased (50%). Taken together, these data revealed that the low caffeine content in the grafted tea leaves is due to low TCS1 expression and CS protein accumulation.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26058159

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nat Prod Commun        ISSN: 1555-9475            Impact factor:   0.986


  2 in total

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Authors:  Ding Dong; Ya-Na Shi; Zong-Min Mou; Sui-Yun Chen; Da-Ke Zhao
Journal:  Hortic Res       Date:  2022-02-28       Impact factor: 7.291

2.  Guanine deaminase provides evidence of the increased caffeine content during the piling process of pu'erh tea.

Authors:  Si-An Pan; Ying Sun; Mengmeng Li; Wei-Wei Deng; Zheng-Zhu Zhang
Journal:  RSC Adv       Date:  2019-11-07       Impact factor: 3.361

  2 in total

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