CSIRO Publishing Home Books & CDs Journals About Us Shopping Cart
Functional Plant Biology
  Functional analysis of plants
You are here: Journals > Functional Plant Biology   
Search
 
 
  Advanced Search
   
Journal Home
General Information
Scope
Editorial Board
Editorial Contacts
Awards and Prizes
Affiliated Societies
Sites of Interest
Print Publication Dates
Online Content
For Authors
For Referees
How to Order

 Most Read
Visit our Most Read page regularly to view the most downloaded papers.

 Early Alert
Subscribe to our email Early Alert or RSS feeds for the latest journal papers.

 

Regulation of lutein biosynthesis and prolamellar body formation in Arabidopsis

Abby J. Cuttriss A, Alexandra C. Chubb A, Ali Alawady A B, Bernhard Grimm B and Barry J. Pogson A C

A ARC Centre of Excellence in Plant Energy Biology, School of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia.
B Institute of Biology/Plant Physiology, Humboldt University, Philippstrasse 13 Building 12, 10115 Berlin, Germany.
C Corresponding author. Email: barry.pogson@anu.edu.au


Abstract

Carotenoids are critical for photosynthetic function in chloroplasts, and are essential for the formation of the prolamellar body in the etioplasts of dark-grown (etiolated) seedlings. They are also precursors for plant hormones in both types of plastids. Lutein is one of the most abundant carotenoids found in both plastids. In this study we examine the regulation of lutein biosynthesis and investigate the effect of perturbing carotenoid biosynthesis on the formation of the lattice-like membranous structure of etioplasts, the prolamellar body (PLB). Analysis of mRNA abundance in wildtype and lutein-deficient mutants, lut2 and ccr2, in response to light transitions and herbicide treatments demonstrated that the mRNA abundance of the carotenoid isomerase (CRTISO) and epsilon-cyclase (εLCY) can be rate limiting steps in lutein biosynthesis. We show that accumulation of tetra-cis-lycopene and all-trans-lycopene correlates with the abundance of mRNA of several carotenoid biosynthetic genes. Herbicide treatments that inhibit carotenoid biosynthetic enzymes in wildtype and ccr2 etiolated seedlings were used to demonstrate that the loss of the PLB in ccr2 mutants is a result of perturbations in carotenoid accumulation, not indirect secondary effects, as PLB formation could be restored in ccr2 mutants treated with norflurazon.

Functional Plant Biology 34(8) 663–672    doi:10.1071/FP07034
Submitted: 14 February 2007    Accepted: 9 May 2007    Published: 23 July 2007





   
Subscriber Login
Username:
Password:  

 View
Issue Contents
Full Text
PDF (571 KB)
Export Citation
Cited by
 Tools
Print
Email this page
    


 
Top  Email this page
 


Legal & Privacy | Sitemap | Contact Us | Help

CSIRO

© CSIRO 1996-2010