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Manipulating cereal crops for high lysine accumulation in seeds

The nutrition value of a protein is directly related to its amino acid composition. Some of these amino acids, termed essential amino acids, cannot be synthesized by humans and therefore must be supplied in the diet for adults and in particular for infants and children. Lysine is an essential amino acid synthesized via the aspartic acid metabolic pathway, in which threonine, methionine and isoleucine are also endproducts. Moreover, lysine is the first limiting amino acid in all cereal grains. For over 30 years, the aspartic acid metabolic pathway has been studied in higher plants with the aim of identifying and characterizing the key regulatory points controlling the biosynthetic pathway. Two clear distinct time periods, one begining with the development of tissue culture techniques (1970-80's) and the second with the development of plant transformation techniques (90's), has encouraged the production of biochemical mutants and transgenic plants with specific alterations in key enzymes of the pathway, leading to the overproduction and accumulation of threonine in all plant tissues. However, the accumulation of lysine in seeds has been particularly difficult to achieve. Such an observation, associated with the recent biochemical studies on lysine degradation in cereal and legume plant species, has indicated that the manipulation of lysine degradation is as important as the manipulation of lysine synthesis, if the goal of accumulating this amino acid in cereal seeds is to be achieved. In maize, the study and use of other mutants such as the opaque-2 and QPM (Quality Protein Maize) varieties, has contributed significantly to our understanding of the regulatory aspects of the aspartate pathway. The strategies of obtaining cereals rich in lysine and their relevance to the manipulation of other amino acids have been discussed.

lysine; nutrition; essential amino acids; cereal crops


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