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Flavonoid engineering of flax potentiate its biotechnological application

BACKGROUND: Flavonoids are a group of secondary plant metabolites important for plant growth and development. They show also a protective effect against colon and breast cancer, diabetes, hypercholesterolemic atherosclerosis, lupus nephritis, and immune and inflammatory reactions. Thus, overproducti...

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Autores principales: Żuk, Magdalena, Kulma, Anna, Dymińska, Lucyna, Szołtysek, Katarzyna, Prescha, Anna, Hanuza, Jerzy, Szopa, Jan
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3040132/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21276227
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6750-11-10
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author Żuk, Magdalena
Kulma, Anna
Dymińska, Lucyna
Szołtysek, Katarzyna
Prescha, Anna
Hanuza, Jerzy
Szopa, Jan
author_facet Żuk, Magdalena
Kulma, Anna
Dymińska, Lucyna
Szołtysek, Katarzyna
Prescha, Anna
Hanuza, Jerzy
Szopa, Jan
author_sort Żuk, Magdalena
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Flavonoids are a group of secondary plant metabolites important for plant growth and development. They show also a protective effect against colon and breast cancer, diabetes, hypercholesterolemic atherosclerosis, lupus nephritis, and immune and inflammatory reactions. Thus, overproduction of these compounds in flax by genetic engineering method might potentiate biotechnological application of these plant products. RESULTS: Flax plants of third generation overexpressing key genes of flavonoid pathway cultivated in field were used as plant material throughout this study. The biochemical properties of seed, oil and seedcake extracts and fibre from natural and transgenic flax plants were compared. The data obtained suggests that the introduced genes were stably inherited and expressed through plant generations. Overproduction of flavonoid compounds resulted in increase of fatty acids accumulation in oil from transgenic seeds due to protection from oxidation offered during synthesis and seed maturation. The biochemical analysis of seedcake extracts from seeds of transgenic flax revealed significant increase in flavonoids (kaempferol), phenolic acids (coumaric, ferulic, synapic acids) and lignan content. Fibres, another product of flax plant showed increase in the level of catechine and acetylvanillone and decrease in phenolic acids upon flax modification. Biochemical analysis results were confirmed using IR spectroscopy. The integral intensities of IR bands have been used for identification of the component of phenylpropanoid pathway in oil, seedcake extract and fibre from control and transgenic flax. It was shown that levels of flavonoids, phenolic acids and lignans in oil and seedcake extract was higher in transgenic flax products compared to control. An FT-IR study of fibres confirmed the biochemical data and revealed that the arrangement of the cellulose polymer in the transgenic fibres differs from the control; in particular a significant decrease in the number of hydrogen bonds was detected. CONCLUSIONS: All analysed products from generated transgenic plants were enriched with antioxidant compounds derived from phenylopropanoid pathway Thus the products provide valuable source of flavonoids, phenolic acids and lignan for biomedical application. The compounds composition and quantity from transgenic plants was confirmed by IR spectroscopy. Thus the infrared spectroscopy appeared to be suitable method for characterization of flax products.
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spelling pubmed-30401322011-02-17 Flavonoid engineering of flax potentiate its biotechnological application Żuk, Magdalena Kulma, Anna Dymińska, Lucyna Szołtysek, Katarzyna Prescha, Anna Hanuza, Jerzy Szopa, Jan BMC Biotechnol Research Article BACKGROUND: Flavonoids are a group of secondary plant metabolites important for plant growth and development. They show also a protective effect against colon and breast cancer, diabetes, hypercholesterolemic atherosclerosis, lupus nephritis, and immune and inflammatory reactions. Thus, overproduction of these compounds in flax by genetic engineering method might potentiate biotechnological application of these plant products. RESULTS: Flax plants of third generation overexpressing key genes of flavonoid pathway cultivated in field were used as plant material throughout this study. The biochemical properties of seed, oil and seedcake extracts and fibre from natural and transgenic flax plants were compared. The data obtained suggests that the introduced genes were stably inherited and expressed through plant generations. Overproduction of flavonoid compounds resulted in increase of fatty acids accumulation in oil from transgenic seeds due to protection from oxidation offered during synthesis and seed maturation. The biochemical analysis of seedcake extracts from seeds of transgenic flax revealed significant increase in flavonoids (kaempferol), phenolic acids (coumaric, ferulic, synapic acids) and lignan content. Fibres, another product of flax plant showed increase in the level of catechine and acetylvanillone and decrease in phenolic acids upon flax modification. Biochemical analysis results were confirmed using IR spectroscopy. The integral intensities of IR bands have been used for identification of the component of phenylpropanoid pathway in oil, seedcake extract and fibre from control and transgenic flax. It was shown that levels of flavonoids, phenolic acids and lignans in oil and seedcake extract was higher in transgenic flax products compared to control. An FT-IR study of fibres confirmed the biochemical data and revealed that the arrangement of the cellulose polymer in the transgenic fibres differs from the control; in particular a significant decrease in the number of hydrogen bonds was detected. CONCLUSIONS: All analysed products from generated transgenic plants were enriched with antioxidant compounds derived from phenylopropanoid pathway Thus the products provide valuable source of flavonoids, phenolic acids and lignan for biomedical application. The compounds composition and quantity from transgenic plants was confirmed by IR spectroscopy. Thus the infrared spectroscopy appeared to be suitable method for characterization of flax products. BioMed Central 2011-01-28 /pmc/articles/PMC3040132/ /pubmed/21276227 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6750-11-10 Text en Copyright ©2011 Żuk et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Żuk, Magdalena
Kulma, Anna
Dymińska, Lucyna
Szołtysek, Katarzyna
Prescha, Anna
Hanuza, Jerzy
Szopa, Jan
Flavonoid engineering of flax potentiate its biotechnological application
title Flavonoid engineering of flax potentiate its biotechnological application
title_full Flavonoid engineering of flax potentiate its biotechnological application
title_fullStr Flavonoid engineering of flax potentiate its biotechnological application
title_full_unstemmed Flavonoid engineering of flax potentiate its biotechnological application
title_short Flavonoid engineering of flax potentiate its biotechnological application
title_sort flavonoid engineering of flax potentiate its biotechnological application
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3040132/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21276227
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6750-11-10
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