Genetic variation and structural diversity in major seed proteins among and within Camelina species

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DOI

https://doi.org/10.1007/s00425-022-03998-w

Language of the publication
English
Date
2022-10-06
Type
Article
Author(s)
  • Hegedus, Dwayne
  • Coutu, Cathy
  • Gjetvaj, Branimir
  • Hannoufa, Abdelali
  • Harrington, Myrtle
  • Martin, Sara
  • Parkin, Isobel A. P.
  • Perera, Suneru
  • Wanasundara, Janitha
Publisher
Springer Nature

Abstract

Seed protein diversity was examined in six Camelina species (C. hispida, C. laxa, C. microcarpa, C. neglecta, C. rumelica and C. sativa). Differences were observed in seed protein electrophoretic profiles, total seed protein content and amino acid composition between the species. Genes encoding major seed proteins (cruciferins, napins, oleosins and vicilins) were catalogued for C. sativa and RNA-Seq analysis established the expression patterns of these and other genes in developing seed from anthesis through to maturation. Examination of 187 C. sativa accessions revealed limited variation in seed protein electrophoretic profiles, though sufficient to group the majority into classes based on high MW protein profiles corresponding to the cruciferin region. C. sativa possessed four distinct types of cruciferins, named CsCRA, CsCRB, CsCRC and CsCRD, which corresponded to orthologues in Arabidopsis thaliana with members of each type encoded by homeologous genes on the three C. sativa sub-genomes. Total protein content and amino acid composition varied only slightly; however, RNA-Seq analysis revealed that CsCRA and CsCRB genes contributed > 95% of the cruciferin transcripts in most lines, whereas CsCRC genes were the most highly expressed cruciferin genes in others, including the type cultivar DH55. This was confirmed by proteomics analyses. Cruciferin is the most abundant seed protein and contributes the most to functionality. Modelling of the C. sativa cruciferins indicated that each type possesses different physiochemical attributes that were predicted to impart unique functional properties. As such, opportunities exist to create C. sativa cultivars with seed protein profiles tailored to specific technical applications.

Subject

  • Nature and environment,
  • Science and technology

Keywords

  • false flax,
  • gene expression,
  • protein functionality,
  • protein modelling

Rights

Pagination

23 pages

Peer review

Yes

Identifiers

ISSN
1432-2048

Article

Journal title
Planta
Journal volume
256
Article number
93
Accepted date
2022-09-12
Submitted date
2022-04-08

Citation(s)

Hegedus, D., Coutu, C., Gjetvaj, B., Hannoufa, A., Harrington, M., Martin, S., Parkin, I. A. P., Perera, S., & Wanasundara, J. (2022). Genetic variation and structural diversity in major seed proteins among and within Camelina species. Planta 256, 93. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00425-022-03998-w

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Plants and weeds

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