Genetic Modification of the Soybean to Enhance the β-Carotene Content through Seed-Specific Expression

  • Mi Jin Kim
  • , Jae Kwang Kim
  • , Hye Jeong Kim
  • , Jung Hun Pak
  • , Jai Heon Lee
  • , Doh Hoon Kim
  • , Hong Kyu Choi
  • , Ho Won Jung
  • , Jeong Dong Lee
  • , Young Soo Chung
  • , Sun Hwa Ha

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

95 Scopus citations

Abstract

The carotenoid biosynthetic pathway was genetically manipulated using the recombinant PAC (Phytoene synthase-2A-Carotene desaturase) gene in Korean soybean (Glycine max L. cv. Kwangan). The PAC gene was linked to either the β-conglycinin (β) or CaMV-35S (35S) promoter to generate β-PAC and 35S-PAC constructs, respectively. A total of 37 transgenic lines (19 for β-PAC and 18 for 35S-PAC) were obtained through Agrobacterium-mediated transformation using the modified half-seed method. The multi-copy insertion of the transgene was determined by genomic Southern blot analysis. Four lines for β-PAC were selected by visual inspection to confirm an orange endosperm, which was not found in the seeds of the 35S-PAC lines. The strong expression of PAC gene was detected in the seeds of the β-PAC lines and in the leaves of the 35S-PAC lines by RT-PCR and qRT-PCR analyses, suggesting that these two different promoters function distinctively. HPLC analysis of the seeds and leaves of the T2 generation plants revealed that the best line among the β-PAC transgenic seeds accumulated 146 μg/g of total carotenoids (approximately 62-fold higher than non-transgenic seeds), of which 112 μg/g (77%) was β-carotene. In contrast, the level and composition of the leaf carotenoids showed little difference between transgenic and non-transgenic soybean plants. We have therefore demonstrated the production of a high β-carotene soybean through the seed-specific overexpression of two carotenoid biosynthetic genes, Capsicum phytoene synthase and Pantoea carotene desaturase. This nutritional enhancement of soybean seeds through the elevation of the provitamin A content to produce biofortified food may have practical health benefits in the future in both humans and livestock.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere48287
JournalPLoS ONE
Volume7
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - 31 Oct 2012

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