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Featured researches published by Kevin L. Stecca.


Plant Physiology | 1996

Developmental and growth temperature regulation of two different microsomal omega-6 desaturase genes in soybeans.

Elmer P. Heppard; Anthony J. Kinney; Kevin L. Stecca; Guo-Hua Miao

The polyunsaturated fatty acid content is one of the major factors influencing the quality of vegetable oils. Edible oils rich in monounsaturated fatty acid provide improved oil stability, flavor, and nutrition for human and animal consumption. In plants, the microsomal [omega]-6 desaturase-catalyzed pathway is the primary route of production of polyunsaturated lipids. We report the isolation of two different cDNA sequences, FAD2-1 and FAD2-2, encoding microsomal [omega]-6 desaturase in soybeans and the characterization of their developmental and temperature regulation. The FAD2-1 gene is strongly expressed in developing seeds, whereas the FAD2-2 gene is constitutively expressed in both vegetative tissues and developing seeds. Thus, the FAD2-2 gene-encoded [omega]-6 desaturase appears to be responsible for production of polyunsaturated fatty acids within membrane lipids in both vegetative tissues and developing seeds. The seed-specifically expressed FAD2-1 gene is likely to play a major role in controlling conversion of oleic acid to linoleic acid within storage lipids during seed development. In both soybean seed and leaf tissues, linoleic acid and linolenic acid levels gradually increase as temperature decreases. However, the levels of transcripts for FAD2-1, FAD2-2, and the plastidial [omega]-6 desaturase gene (FAD 6) do not increase at low temperature. These results suggest that the elevated polyunsaturated fatty acid levels in developing soybean seeds grown at low temperature are not due to the enhanced expression of [omega]-6 desaturase genes.


Plant Physiology | 1993

Cloning of higher plant omega-3 fatty acid desaturases.

N. S. Yadav; A. Wierzbicki; M. Aegerter; C. S. Caster; L. Perez-Grau; Anthony J. Kinney; William D. Hitz; J. R. Booth; B. Schweiger; Kevin L. Stecca; Stephen M. Allen; M. Blackwell; R. S. Reiter; Thomas J. Carlson; S. H. Russell; Kenneth A. Feldmann; J. Pierce; John Browse

Arabidopsis thaliana T-DNA transformants were screened for mutations affecting seed fatty acid composition. A mutant line was found with reduced levels of linolenic acid (18:3) due to a T-DNA insertion. Genomic DNA flanking the T-DNA insertion was used to obtain an Arabidopsis cDNA that encodes a polypeptide identified as a microsomal [omega]-3 fatty acid desaturase by its complementation of the mutation. Analysis of lipid content in transgenic tissues demonstrated that this enzyme is limiting for 18:3 production in Arabidopsis seeds and carrot hairy roots. This cDNA was used to isolate a related Arabidopsis cDNA, whose mRNA is accumulated to a much higher level in leaf tissue relative to root tissue. This related cDNA encodes a protein that is a homolog of the microsomal desaturase but has an N-terminal extension deduced to be a transit peptide, and its gene maps to a position consistent with that of the Arabidopsis fad D locus, which controls plastid [omega]-3 desaturation. These Arabidopsis cDNAs were used as hybridization probes to isolate cDNAs encoding homologous proteins from developing seeds of soybean and rapeseed. The high degree of sequence similarity between these sequences suggests that the [omega]-3 desaturases use a common enzyme mechanism.


Plant Physiology | 1994

Cloning of a higher-plant plastid omega-6 fatty acid desaturase cDNA and its expression in a cyanobacterium.

William D. Hitz; Thomas J. Carlson; J. R. Booth; Anthony J. Kinney; Kevin L. Stecca; N. S. Yadav

Oligomers based on amino acids conserved between known plant [omega]-3 and cyanobacterium [omega]-6 fatty acid desaturases were used to screen an Arabidopsis cDNA library for related sequences. An identified clone encoding a novel desaturase-like polypeptide was used to isolate its homologs from Glycine max and Brassica napus. The plant deduced amino acid sequences showed less than 27% similarity to known plant [omega]-6 and [omega]-3 desaturases but more than 48% similarity to cyanobacterial [omega]-6 desaturase, and they contained putative plastid transit sequences. Thus, we deduce that the plant cDNAs encode the plastid [omega]-6 desaturase. The identity was supported by expression of the B. napus cDNA cyanobacterium. Synechococcus transformed with a chimeric gene that contains a prokaryotic promoter fused to the rapeseed cDNA encoding all but the first 73 amino acids partially converted its oleic acid fatty acid to linoleic acid, and the 16:1(9c) fatty acid was converted primarily to 16:2(9c,12) in vivo. Thus, the plant [omega]-6 desaturase, which utilizes 16:1(7c) in plants, can utilize 16:1(9c) in the cyanobacterium. The plastid and cytosolic homologs of plant [omega]-6 desaturases are much more distantly related than those of [omega]-3 desaturases.


Plant Physiology | 2012

Oil and Protein Accumulation in Developing Seeds Is Influenced by the Expression of a Cytosolic Pyrophosphatase in Arabidopsis

Knut Meyer; Kevin L. Stecca; Kim Ewell-Hicks; Stephen M. Allen; John D. Everard

This study describes a dominant low-seed-oil mutant (lo15571) of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) generated by enhancer tagging. Compositional analysis of developing siliques and mature seeds indicated reduced conversion of photoassimilates to oil. Immunoblot analysis revealed increased levels of At1g01050 protein in developing siliques of lo15571. At1g01050 encodes a soluble, cytosolic pyrophosphatase and is one of five closely related genes that share predicted cytosolic localization and at least 70% amino acid sequence identity. Expression of At1g01050 using a seed-preferred promoter recreated most features of the lo15571 seed phenotype, including low seed oil content and increased levels of transient starch and soluble sugars in developing siliques. Seed-preferred RNA interference-mediated silencing of At1g01050 and At3g53620, a second cytosolic pyrophosphatase gene that shows expression during seed filling, led to a heritable oil increase of 1% to 4%, mostly at the expense of seed storage protein. These results are consistent with a scenario in which the rate of mobilization of sucrose, for precursor supply of seed storage lipid biosynthesis by cytosolic glycolysis, is strongly influenced by the expression of endogenous pyrophosphatase enzymes. This emphasizes the central role of pyrophosphate-dependent reactions supporting cytosolic glycolysis during seed maturation when ATP supply is low, presumably due to hypoxic conditions. This route is the major route providing precursors for seed oil biosynthesis. ATP-dependent reactions at the entry point of glycolysis in the cytosol or plastid cannot fully compensate for the loss of oil content observed in transgenic events with increased expression of cytosolic pyrophosphatase enzyme in the cytosol. These findings shed new light on the dynamic properties of cytosolic pyrophosphate pools in developing seed and their influence on carbon partitioning during seed filling. Finally, our work uniquely demonstrates that genes encoding cytosolic pyrophosphatase enzymes provide novel targets to improve seed composition for plant biotechnology applications.


Archive | 2001

Recombinant constructs and their use in reducing gene expression

Kimberly Glassman; William J. Gordon-Kamm; Anthony J. Kinney; Keith S. Lowe; Scott E. Nichols; Kevin L. Stecca


Plant Physiology | 2000

Production of fatty acid components of meadowfoam oil in somatic soybean embryos.

Edgar B. Cahoon; Elizabeth-France Marillia; Kevin L. Stecca; Sarah E. Hall; David C. Taylor; Anthony J. Kinney


Archive | 2009

DGAT GENES FROM YARROWIA LIPOLYTICA COMBINED WITH PLASTIDIC PHOSPHOGLUCOMUTASE DOWN REGULATION FOR INCREASED SEED STORAGE LIPID PRODUCTION AND ALTERED FATTY ACID PROFILES IN OILSEED PLANTS

Knut Meyer; Kevin L. Stecca


Archive | 2009

DGAT genes from oleaginous organisms for increased seed storage lipid production and altered fatty acid profiles in oilseed plants

Knut Meyer; Howard Glenn Damude; Kevin G. Ripp; Kevin L. Stecca


Archive | 2010

Use of a seed specific promoter to drive odp1 expression in cruciferous oilseed plants to increase oil content while maintaining normal germination

Knut Meyer; Howard Glenn Damude; John D. Everard; Kevin G. Ripp; Kevin L. Stecca


Archive | 2012

Use of the soybean sucrose synthase promoter to increase plant seed lipid content

Howard Glenn Damude; Bryce Daines; Knut Meyer; Kevin G. Ripp; Kevin L. Stecca

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Kevin G. Ripp

Washington State University

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John D. Everard

Michigan State University

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