Discovery of Sucrose Metabolizing and Related Genes to Enhance Sugarcane Productivity
Abstract
Phosynthetic carbon asimilation is a major determinant that limits growth and productivity
in plants. Study on the activities of the carbon assimilating enzymes revealed that among
the enzymes activity of sucrose-phosphate synthase (SPS, EC. 22.4.1.14) is fluctuated
in parallel with sucrose content and growth of sugarcane. Cloning of the genes encoding
for SPS found the presence of two cDNA clones, SoSPS1 and SoSPS2, in sugarcane
and the transcript of SoSPS1 to be predominant in leaves, but that of SoSPS2 to be
distributed conservatively in all tissues. To increase sucrose accumulation, the SoSPS1
gene was overexpressed in transgenic tomato and sugarcane. As the consequences, the
activity of SPS and sucrose content was significantly increased in leaves of the
transgenic plants, but not concomitant followed by significant increase of sucrose
contents in the sink tissues of both transgenic plants. This discrepancy of sucrose
accumulation might because have not accompanied by sucrose loading mechanism
between leave as a source and sink tissue. Thus, the SoSUT1-cDNA encoding for
sucrose transporter protein was cloned from sugarcane and double overexpression of
SoSPS1 and SoSUT1 increased sharply sucrose content in sugarcane stem and fruit
production in tomato. With regard to sucrose content, it is well reported that sucrose acts
as a potent osmoprotectant that might induce drought stress tolerant. Whether the
increased of sucrose content in transgenic sugarcane induce the drought tolerant is still
remain to be elucidated. In addition, identification of a gene responsible for drought
tolerance found a SoDip22-cDNA encoding for a hydrophilic protein with molecular mass
of 15.9 kDa and the function might to adapt to drought stress. However, the drought
stress tolerant sugarcane recently was achieved by genetic engineering of glycine
betaine content.
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- LSP-Conference Proceeding [1874]