Laurence J. M. Ducreux
James Hutton Institute
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Featured researches published by Laurence J. M. Ducreux.
Plant Physiology | 2010
Raymond Campbell; Laurence J. M. Ducreux; Wayne L. Morris; Jenny Morris; Jeffrey C. Suttle; Gavin Ramsay; Glenn J. Bryan; Peter E. Hedley; Mark A. Taylor
The factors that regulate storage organ carotenoid content remain to be fully elucidated, despite the nutritional and economic importance of this class of compound. Recent findings suggest that carotenoid pool size is determined, at least in part, by the activity of carotenoid cleavage dioxygenases. The aim of this study was to investigate whether Carotenoid Cleavage Dioxygenase4 (CCD4) activity affects potato (Solanum tuberosum) tuber carotenoid content. Microarray analysis revealed elevated expression of the potato CCD4 gene in mature tubers from white-fleshed cultivars compared with higher carotenoid yellow-fleshed tubers. The expression level of the potato CCD4 gene was down-regulated using an RNA interference (RNAi) approach in stable transgenic lines. Down-regulation in tubers resulted in an increased carotenoid content, 2- to 5-fold higher than in control plants. The increase in carotenoid content was mainly due to elevated violaxanthin content, implying that this carotenoid may act as the in vivo substrate. Although transcript level was also reduced in plant organs other than tubers, such as leaves, stems, and roots , there was no change in carotenoid content in these organs. However, carotenoid levels were elevated in flower petals from RNAi lines. As well as changes in tuber carotenoid content, tubers from RNAi lines exhibited phenotypes such as heat sprouting, formation of chain tubers, and an elongated shape. These results suggest that the product of the CCD4 reaction may be an important factor in tuber heat responses.
Plant Cell and Environment | 2014
Robert D. Hancock; Wayne L. Morris; Laurence J. M. Ducreux; Jenny Morris; Muhammad Usman; Susan R. Verrall; John L. Fuller; Craig G. Simpson; Runxuan Zhang; Peter E. Hedley; Mark A. Taylor
Although significant work has been undertaken regarding the response of model and crop plants to heat shock during the acclimatory phase, few studies have examined the steady-state response to the mild heat stress encountered in temperate agriculture. In the present work, we therefore exposed tuberizing potato plants to mildly elevated temperatures (30/20 °C, day/night) for up to 5 weeks and compared tuber yield, physiological and biochemical responses, and leaf and tuber metabolomes and transcriptomes with plants grown under optimal conditions (22/16 °C). Growth at elevated temperature reduced tuber yield despite an increase in net foliar photosynthesis. This was associated with major shifts in leaf and tuber metabolite profiles, a significant decrease in leaf glutathione redox state and decreased starch synthesis in tubers. Furthermore, growth at elevated temperature had a profound impact on leaf and tuber transcript expression with large numbers of transcripts displaying a rhythmic oscillation at the higher growth temperature. RT-PCR revealed perturbation in the expression of circadian clock transcripts including StSP6A, previously identified as a tuberization signal. Our data indicate that potato plants grown at moderately elevated temperatures do not exhibit classic symptoms of abiotic stress but that tuber development responds via a diversity of biochemical and molecular signals.
Journal of Experimental Botany | 2008
Laurence J. M. Ducreux; Wayne L. Morris; Ian M. Prosser; Jenny Morris; Michael H. Beale; Frank Wright; Tom Shepherd; Glenn J. Bryan; Peter E. Hedley; Mark A. Taylor
Quality traits such as flavour and texture are assuming a greater importance in crop breeding programmes. This study takes advantage of potato germplasm differentiated in tuber flavour and texture traits. A recently developed 44 000-element potato microarray was used to identify tuber gene expression profiles that correspond to differences in tuber flavour and texture as well as carotenoid content and dormancy characteristics. Gene expression was compared in two Solanum tuberosum group Phureja cultivars and two S. tuberosum group Tuberosum cultivars; 309 genes were significantly and consistently up-regulated in Phureja, whereas 555 genes were down-regulated. Approximately 46% of the genes in these lists can be identified from their annotation and amongst these are candidates that may underpin the Phureja/Tuberosum trait differences. For example, a clear difference in the cooked tuber volatile profile is the higher level of the sesquiterpene α-copaene in Phureja compared with Tuberosum. A sesquiterpene synthase gene was identified as being more highly expressed in Phureja tubers and its corresponding full-length cDNA was demonstrated to encode α-copaene synthase. Other potential ‘flavour genes’, identified from their differential expression profiles, include those encoding branched-chain amino acid aminotransferase and a ribonuclease suggesting a mechanism for 5′-ribonucleotide formation in potato tubers on cooking. Major differences in the expression levels of genes involved in cell wall biosynthesis (and potentially texture) were also identified, including genes encoding pectin acetylesterase, xyloglucan endotransglycosylase and pectin methylesterase. Other gene expression differences that may impact tuber carotenoid content and tuber life-cycle phenotypes are discussed.
Journal of Experimental Botany | 2010
Cecil Stushnoff; Laurence J. M. Ducreux; Robert D. Hancock; Peter E. Hedley; David G. Holm; Gordon J. McDougall; James W. McNicol; Jenny Morris; Wayne L. Morris; Julie Sungurtas; Susan R. Verrall; Tatiana Zuber; Mark A. Taylor
Anthocyanin content of potato tubers is a trait that is attracting increasing attention as the potential nutritional benefits of this class of compound become apparent. However, our understanding of potato tuber anthocyanin accumulation is not complete. The aim of this study was to use a potato microarray to investigate gene expression patterns associated with the accumulation of purple tuber anthocyanins. The advanced potato selections, CO97216-3P/PW and CO97227-2P/PW, developed by conventional breeding procedures, produced tubers with incomplete expression of tuber flesh pigmentation. This feature permits sampling pigmented and non-pigmented tissues from the same tubers, in essence, isolating the factors responsible for pigmentation from confounding genetic, environmental, and developmental effects. An examination of the transcriptome, coupled with metabolite data from purple pigmented sectors and from non-pigmented sectors of the same tuber, was undertaken to identify these genes whose expression correlated with elevated or altered polyphenol composition. Combined with a similar study using eight other conventional cultivars and advanced selections with different pigmentation, it was possible to produce a refined list of only 27 genes that were consistently differentially expressed in purple tuber tissues compared with white. Within this list are several new candidate genes that are likely to impact on tuber anthocyanin accumulation, including a gene encoding a novel single domain MYB transcription factor.
New Phytologist | 2013
Stefania Pasare; Laurence J. M. Ducreux; Wayne L. Morris; Raymond Campbell; Sanjeev Kumar Sharma; Efstathios Roumeliotis; Wouter Kohlen; Sander van der Krol; Peter M. Bramley; Alison G. Roberts; Paul D. Fraser; Mark A. Taylor
· Strigolactones (SLs) are a class of phytohormones controlling shoot branching. In potato (Solanum tuberosum), tubers develop from underground stolons, diageotropic stems which originate from basal stem nodes. As the degree of stolon branching influences the number and size distribution of tubers, it was considered timely to investigate the effects of SL production on potato development and tuber life cycle. · Transgenic potato plants were generated in which the CAROTENOID CLEAVAGE DIOXYGENASE8 (CCD8) gene, key in the SL biosynthetic pathway, was silenced by RNA interference (RNAi). · The resulting CCD8-RNAi potato plants showed significantly more lateral and main branches than control plants, reduced stolon formation, together with a dwarfing phenotype and a lack of flowering in the most severely affected lines. New tubers were formed from sessile buds of the mother tubers. The apical buds of newly formed transgenic tubers grew out as shoots when exposed to light. In addition, we found that CCD8 transcript levels were rapidly downregulated in tuber buds by the application of sprout-inducing treatments. · These results suggest that SLs could have an effect, solely or in combination with other phytohormones, in the morphology of potato plants and also in controlling stolon development and maintaining tuber dormancy.
Plant Cell and Environment | 2014
Wayne L. Morris; Robert D. Hancock; Laurence J. M. Ducreux; Jenny Morris; Muhammad Usman; Susan R. Verrall; Sanjeev Kumar Sharma; Glenn J. Bryan; James W. McNicol; Peter E. Hedley; Mark A. Taylor
Recent advances have defined some of the components of photoperiodic signalling that lead to tuberization in potato including orthologues of FLOWERING LOCUS T (StSP6A) and CYCLING DOF FACTOR (StCDF1). The aim of the current study is to investigate the molecular basis of permissive tuber initiation under long days in Solanum tuberosum Neo-Tuberosum by comparative analysis with an obligate short-day S. tuberosum ssp. Andigena accession. We show that the Neo-Tuberosum accession, but not the Andigena, contains alleles that encode StCDF1 proteins modified in the C-terminal region, likely to evade long day inhibition of StSP6A expression. We also identify an allele of StSP6A from the Neo-Tuberosum accession, absent in the Andigena, which is expressed under long days. Other leaf transcripts and metabolites that show different abundances in tuberizing and non-tuberizing samples were identified adding detail to tuberization-associated processes. Overall, the data presented in this study highlight the subtle interplay between components of the clock-CONSTANS-StSP6A axis which collectively may interact to fine-tune the timing of tuberization.
Journal of Cereal Science | 2003
Heather A. Ross; J Sungurtas; Laurence J. M. Ducreux; J.S Swanston; Howard V. Davies; Gordon J. McDougall
Abstract Free and total limit dextrinase (LD) activity was measured in four barley varieties of differing malting quality. LD activity was not detected until 2 days after completion of steeping, at which point, total LD activity was 4–5 fold higher in Static and Chariot than in Optic or Hart. Free LD rose to higher levels in Static and Chariot than in Optic and Hart during malting. In addition, the proportion of free to total LD approached 35% in Static and Chariot whereas it did not reach 15% for Optic and Hart. Lower free LD activity was not reflected in a higher total content of branched dextrins in hot water extracts of the different varieties, but may have contributed to the persistence of branched dextrins of higher degree of polymerisation persisting in the hot water extracts of Hart and Optic. The variation in the proportion of free to total LD activity between varieties was not explained by differences in total LD activity and may be related to the presence of inhibitors of LD. Protein extracts made from the malts following steeping inhibited exogenous partially purified LD activity by >80%. After 3 days germination, Chariot, Optic and Static lost much of their inhibitory activity whereas it was retained in Hart. The increase in free LD activities during malting appeared to mirror the disappearance in inhibitory activity. Inhibitors of LD activity were also present in hot water extracts of Chariot and Hart malts. Chariot lost inhibitory activity after 3 days malting and hot water extracts from Chariot after 4 days malting caused apparent activation of LD. By contrast, hot water extracts from Hart retained inhibitory activity up to 5 days malting. These findings are discussed with reference to the availability and effectiveness of LD during malting.
Plant Science | 2015
Raymond Campbell; Wayne L. Morris; Cara L. Mortimer; Norihiko Misawa; Laurence J. M. Ducreux; Jenny Morris; Peter E. Hedley; Paul D. Fraser; Mark A. Taylor
Astaxanthin is a high value carotenoid produced by some bacteria, a few green algae, several fungi but only a limited number of plants from the genus Adonis. Astaxanthin has been industrially exploited as a feed supplement in poultry farming and aquaculture. Consumption of ketocarotenoids, most notably astaxanthin, is also increasingly associated with a wide range of health benefits, as demonstrated in numerous clinical studies. Currently astaxanthin is produced commercially by chemical synthesis or from algal production systems. Several studies have used a metabolic engineering approach to produce astaxanthin in transgenic plants. Previous attempts to produce transgenic potato tubers biofortified with astaxanthin have met with limited success. In this study we have investigated approaches to optimising tuber astaxanthin content. It is demonstrated that the selection of appropriate parental genotype for transgenic approaches and stacking carotenoid biosynthetic pathway genes with the cauliflower Or gene result in enhanced astaxanthin content, to give six-fold higher tuber astaxanthin content than has been achieved previously. Additionally we demonstrate the effects of growth environment on tuber carotenoid content in both wild type and astaxanthin-producing transgenic lines and describe the associated transcriptome and metabolome restructuring.
Plant Biotechnology Journal | 2011
Heather A. Ross; Wayne L. Morris; Laurence J. M. Ducreux; Robert D. Hancock; Susan R. Verrall; Jenny Morris; Gregory A. Tucker; Derek Stewart; Peter E. Hedley; Gordon J. McDougall; Mark A. Taylor
Although processed potato tuber texture is an important trait that influences consumer preference, a detailed understanding of tuber textural properties at the molecular level is lacking. Previous work has identified tuber pectin methyl esterase (PME) activity as a potential factor impacting on textural properties, and the expression of a gene encoding an isoform of PME (PEST1) was associated with cooked tuber textural properties. In this study, a transgenic approach was undertaken to investigate further the impact of the PEST1 gene. Antisense and over-expressing potato lines were generated. In over-expressing lines, tuber PME activity was enhanced by up to 2.3-fold; whereas in antisense lines, PME activity was decreased by up to 62%. PME isoform analysis indicated that the PEST1 gene encoded one isoform of PME. Analysis of cell walls from tubers from the over-expressing lines indicated that the changes in PME activity resulted in a decrease in pectin methylation. Analysis of processed tuber texture demonstrated that the reduced level of pectin methylation in the over-expressing transgenic lines was associated with a firmer processed texture. Thus, there is a clear link between PME activity, pectin methylation and processed tuber textural properties.
Protoplasma | 2013
Stefania Pasare; Kathryn M. Wright; Raymond Campbell; Wayne L. Morris; Laurence J. M. Ducreux; Sean Chapman; Peter M. Bramley; Paul D. Fraser; Alison G. Roberts; Mark A. Taylor
Carotenoids are isoprenoids with important biological roles both for plants and animals. The yellow flesh colour of potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) tubers is a quality trait dependent on the types and levels of carotenoids that accumulate. The carotenoid biosynthetic pathway is well characterised, facilitating the successful engineering of carotenoid content in numerous crops including potato. However, a clear understanding concerning the factors regulating carotenoid accumulation and localisation in plant storage organs, such as tubers, is lacking. In the present study, the localisation of key carotenoid biosynthetic enzymes was investigated, as one of the unexplored factors that could influence the accumulation of carotenoids in potato tubers. Stable transgenic potato plants were generated by over-expressing β-CAROTENE HYDROXYLASE 2 (CrtRb2) and PHYTOENE SYNTHASE 2 (PSY2) genes, fused to red fluorescent protein (RFP). Gene expression and carotenoid levels were both significantly increased, confirming functionality of the fluorescently tagged proteins. Confocal microscopy studies revealed different sub-organellar localisations of CrtRb2-RFP and PSY2-RFP within amyloplasts. CrtRb2 was detected in small vesicular structures, inside amyloplasts, whereas PSY2 was localised in the stroma of amyloplasts. We conclude that it is important to consider the location of biosynthetic enzymes when engineering the carotenoid metabolic pathway in storage organs such as tubers.