| Literature DB >> 31475024 |
Chuanying Fang1, Jie Luo1,2, Shouchuang Wang1.
Abstract
The chemical diversity of plants is very high, and plant-based foods provide almost all the nutrients necessary for human health, either directly or indirectly. With advancements in plant metabolomics studies, the concept of nutritional metabolites has been expanded and updated. Because the concentration of many nutrients is usually low in plant-based foods, especially those from crops, metabolome-assisted breeding techniques using molecular markers associated with the synthesis of nutritional metabolites have been developed and used to improve nutritional quality of crops. Here, we review the origins of the diversity of nutrient metabolites from a genomic perspective and the role of gene duplication and divergence. In addition, we systematically review recent advances in the metabolomic and genetic basis of metabolite production in major crops. With the development of genome sequencing and metabolic detection technologies, multi-omic integrative analysis of genomes, transcriptomes, and metabolomes has greatly facilitated the deciphering of the genetic basis of metabolic pathways and the diversity of nutrient metabolites. Finally, we summarize the application of nutrient diversity in crop breeding and discuss the future development of a viable alternative to metabolome-assisted breeding techniques that can be used to improve crop nutrient quality.Entities:
Keywords: breeding; crops; genetic bases; metabolic diversity; nutritional metabolites
Year: 2019 PMID: 31475024 PMCID: PMC6706459 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2019.01028
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Figure 1Biofortification of nutrients in rice endosperm. (A) Grains of the wild-type (WT), the golden rice (GR), canthaxanthin rice (CR), and astaxanthin rice (AR). (B) Simplified carotenoid/canthaxanthin/astaxanthin biosynthesis pathways reconstructed in rice endosperm. The enzymes (in blue) expressed from different combinations of the transgenes, together with those (in black) from the endogenous MEP pathway genes and OsLCYB, catalyze the biosynthesis of β-carotene, canthaxanthin, and astaxanthin as the main products in the GR, CR, and AR lines, respectively. The rate-limiting enzymes of the endogenous genes with no or low levels of expression are shown in gray. The figure is modified with permission from Elsevier.
Figure 2Contributions of metabolomics for metabolome-assisted breeding. This flow chart shows how the metabolome can be used to guide the improved quality of crops. Multi-omics integration analysis is used to analyze the genetic basis of crop nutrients, to explore molecular markers that determine the content of nutrient metabolites, and to establish an interaction network of metabolites, markers, genes, and important agronomic traits to guide the precise breeding of metabolome assisted. The figure is modified with permission from Elsevier (Al-Babili and Beyer, 2005).