| Literature DB >> 29126994 |
Yunkai Jin1, Mingliang Fei2, Sara Rosenquist3, Lu Jin1, Suresh Gohil4, Corine Sandström4, Helena Olsson3, Cecilia Persson5, Anna-Stina Höglund3, Gunnel Fransson6, Ying Ruan7, Per Åman6, Christer Jansson8, Chunlin Liu9, Roger Andersson6, Chuanxin Sun10.
Abstract
Sequential carbohydrate synthesis is important for plant survival because it guarantees energy supplies for growth and development during plant ontogeny and reproduction. Starch and fructan are two important carbohydrates in many flowering plants and in human diets. Understanding this coordinated starch and fructan synthesis and unraveling how plants allocate photosynthates and prioritize different carbohydrate synthesis for survival could lead to improvements to cereals in agriculture for the purposes of greater food security and production quality. Here, we report a system from a single gene in barley employing two alternative promoters, one intronic/exonic, to generate two sequence-overlapping but functionally opposing transcription factors, in sensing sucrose, potentially via sucrose/glucose/fructose/trehalose 6-phosphate signaling. The system employs an autoregulatory mechanism in perceiving a sucrose-controlled trans activity on one promoter and orchestrating the coordinated starch and fructan synthesis by competitive transcription factor binding on the other promoter. As a case in point for the physiological roles of the system, we have demonstrated that this multitasking system can be exploited in breeding barley with tailored amounts of fructan to produce healthy food ingredients. The identification of an intron/exon-spanning promoter in a hosting gene, resulting in proteins with distinct functions, adds to the complexity of plant genomes.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29126994 DOI: 10.1016/j.molp.2017.10.013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Plant ISSN: 1674-2052 Impact factor: 13.164