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Dive into the research topics where Oscar Larroque is active.

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Featured researches published by Oscar Larroque.


Cereal Chemistry | 2001

Biochemical, Genetic, and Molecular Characterization of Wheat Glutenin and Its Component Subunits

M. C. Gianibelli; Oscar Larroque; F. MacRitchie; C. W. Wrigley

Of all the cereal grains, wheat is unique because wheat flour alone has the ability to form a dough that exhibits the rheological properties required for the production of leavened bread and for the wider diversity of foods that have been developed to take advantage of these attributes. The unique properties of the wheat grain reside primarily in the gluten-forming storage proteins of its endosperm. It is these dough-forming properties that are responsible for wheat being the most important source of protein in the human diet. The bread and durum wheats are polyploid species containing three (AABBDD) and two (AABB) related genomes, respectively. The genetic constitution of wheat is important because all quality traits result from the expression of genes and their interaction with the environment. The full spectrum of wheat-endosperm proteins has been exhibited in proteome studies involving the two-dimensional fractionation of the polypeptides (after disulfide-bond rupture), followed by dissection of the individual components for identification. This display (Fig. 1) shows that there are at least 1,300 polypeptides, over 300 of which have been identified by N-terminal amino


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2011

Impact of down-regulation of starch branching enzyme IIb in rice by artificial microRNA- and hairpin RNA-mediated RNA silencing

Vito M. Butardo; Melissa A. Fitzgerald; Anthony R. Bird; Michael J. Gidley; Bernadine M. Flanagan; Oscar Larroque; Adoracion P. Resurreccion; Hunter K. C. Laidlaw; Stephen A. Jobling; Matthew K. Morell; Sadequr Rahman

The inactivation of starch branching IIb (SBEIIb) in rice is traditionally associated with elevated apparent amylose content, increased peak gelatinization temperature, and a decreased proportion of short amylopectin branches. To elucidate further the structural and functional role of this enzyme, the phenotypic effects of down-regulating SBEIIb expression in rice endosperm were characterized by artificial microRNA (amiRNA) and hairpin RNA (hp-RNA) gene silencing. The results showed that RNA silencing of SBEIIb expression in rice grains did not affect the expression of other major isoforms of starch branching enzymes or starch synthases. Structural analyses of debranched starch showed that the doubling of apparent amylose content was not due to an increase in the relative proportion of amylose chains but instead was due to significantly elevated levels of long amylopectin and intermediate chains. Rices altered by the amiRNA technique produced a more extreme starch phenotype than those modified using the hp-RNA technique, with a greater increase in the proportion of long amylopectin and intermediate chains. The more pronounced starch structural modifications produced in the amiRNA lines led to more severe alterations in starch granule morphology and crystallinity as well as digestibility of freshly cooked grains. The potential role of attenuating SBEIIb expression in generating starch with elevated levels of resistant starch and lower glycaemic index is discussed.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2005

Genetic characterisation of dough rheological properties in a wheat doubled haploid population: additive genetic effects and epistatic interactions

Wujun Ma; R. Appels; F. Békés; Oscar Larroque; M. K. Morell; K. R. Gale

Doubled haploid lines (n=160) from a cross between wheat cultivars ‘Cranbrook’ (high dough extensibility) and ‘Halberd’ (low dough extensibility) were grown at three Australian locations. The parents differ at all high- and low-molecular-weight glutenin loci. Dough rheological parameters were measured using small-scale testing procedures, and quantitative trait locus (QTL) mapping procedures were carried out using an existing well-saturated genetic linkage map for this cross. Genetic parameters were estimated using three software packages: QTLCartographer, Epistat and Genstat. Results indicated that environmental factors are a major determinant of dough extensibility across the three trial sites, whereas genotypic factors are the major determinants of dough strength. Composite interval mapping analysis across the 21 linkage groups revealed that as expected, the main additive QTLs for dough rheological properties are located at the high- and low-molecular-weight glutenin loci. A new QTL on chromosome 5A for M-extensibility (a mixograph-estimated measure of extensibility) was detected. Analysis of epistatic interactions revealed that there were significant conditional epistatic interactions related with the additive effects of glutenin loci on dough rheological properties. Therefore, the additive genetic effects of glutenins on dough rheological properties are conditional upon the genetic background of the wheat line. The molecular basis of the interactions with the glutenin loci may be via proteins that modify or alter the gluten protein matrix or variations in the expression level of the glutenin genes. Reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography analysis of the molar number of individual glutenin subunits across the population showed that certain conditional epistases resulted in increased expression of the affected glutenin. The epistatic interactions detected in this study provide a possible explanation of the variable genetic effects of some glutenins on quality attributes in different genetic backgrounds and provide essential information for the accurate prediction of glutenin related variance in marker-assisted wheat breeding.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2007

Effects of starch synthase IIa gene dosage on grain, protein and starch in endosperm of wheat

Christine Konik-Rose; Jenny Thistleton; Hélène Chanvrier; I. Tan; Peter J. Halley; Michael J. Gidley; Behjat Kosar-Hashemi; Hong Wang; Oscar Larroque; Joseph Ikea; Steve McMaugh; Ahmed Regina; Sadequr Rahman; Matthew K. Morell; Zhongyi Li

Starch synthases (SS) are responsible for elongating the α-1,4 glucan chains of starch. A doubled haploid population was generated by crossing a line of wheat, which lacks functional ssIIa genes on each genome (abd), and an Australian wheat cultivar, Sunco, with wild type ssIIa alleles on each genome (ABD). Evidence has been presented previously indicating that the SGP-1 (starch granule protein-1) proteins present in the starch granule in wheat are products of the ssIIa genes. Analysis of 100 progeny lines demonstrated co-segregation of the ssIIa alleles from the three genomes with the SGP-1 proteins, providing further evidence that the SGP-1 proteins are the products of the ssIIa genes. From the progeny lines, 40 doubled haploid lines representing the eight possible genotypes for SSIIa (ABD, aBD, AbD, ABd, abD, aBd, Abd, abd) were characterized for their grain weight, protein content, total starch content and starch properties. For some properties (chain length distribution, pasting properties, swelling power, and gelatinization properties), a progressive change was observed across the four classes of genotypes (wild type, single nulls, double nulls and triple nulls). However, for other grain properties (seed weight and protein content) and starch properties (total starch content, granule morphology and crystallinity, granule size distribution, amylose content, amylose–lipid dissociation properties), a statistically significant change only occurred for the triple nulls, indicating that all three genes had to be missing or inactive for a change to occur. These results illustrate the importance of SSIIa in controlling grain and starch properties and the importance of amylopectin fine structure in controlling starch granule properties in wheat.


BMC Microbiology | 2015

Influence of in situ progressive N-terminal truncation of glycogen branching enzyme in Escherichia coli DH5α on glycogen structure, accumulation, and bacterial viability.

Liang Wang; Ahmed Regina; Vito M. Butardo; Behjat Kosar-Hashemi; Oscar Larroque; Charlene M. Kahler; Michael J. Wise

BackgroundGlycogen average chain length (ACL) has been linked with bacterial durability, but this was on the basis of observations across different species. We therefore wished to investigate the relationship between bacterial durability and glycogen ACL by varying glycogen average chain length in a single species. It has been shown that progressive shortening of the N-terminus of glycogen branching enzyme (GBE) leads to a lengthening of oligosaccharide inter-α-1,6-glycosidic chain lengths, so we sought to harness this to create a set of Escherichia coli DH5α strains with a range of glycogen average chain lengths, and assess these strains for durability related attributes, such as starvation, cold and desiccation stress resistance, and biofilm formation.ResultsA series of Escherichia coli DH5α mutants were created with glgB genes that were in situ progressively N-terminus truncated. N-terminal truncation shifted the distribution of glycogen chain lengths from 5-11 DP toward 13-50 DP, but the relationship between glgB length and glycogen ACL was not linear. Surprisingly, removal of the first 270 nucleotides of glgB (glgBΔ270) resulted in comparatively high glycogen accumulation, with the glycogen having short ACL. Complete knockout of glgB led to the formation of amylose-like glycogen containing long, linear α1,4-glucan chains with significantly reduced branching frequency. Physiologically, the set of mutant strains had reduced bacterial starvation resistance, while minimally increasing bacterial desiccation resistance. Finally, although there were no obvious changes in cold stress resistance or biofilm forming ability, one strain (glgBΔ180) had significantly increased biofilm formation in favourable media.ConclusionsDespite glgB being the first gene of an operon, it is clear that in situ mutation is a viable means to create more biologically relevant mutant strains. Secondly, there was the suggestion in the data that impairments of starvation, cold and desiccation resistance were worse for the strain lacking glgB, though the first of these was not statistically significant. The results provide prima facie evidence linking abiotic stress tolerance with shorter glycogen ACL. However, further work needs to be done, perhaps in a less labile species. Further work is also required to tease out the complex relationship between glycogen abundance and glycogen structure.


Carbohydrate Polymers | 2012

Molecular, mesoscopic and microscopic structure evolution during amylase digestion of maize starch granules

Ashok K. Shrestha; Bernadine M. Flanagan; Sushil Dhital; Oscar Larroque; Matthew K. Morell; Elliot P. Gilbert; Michael J. Gidley

Cereal starch granules with high (>50%) amylose content are a promising source of nutritionally desirable resistant starch, i.e. starch that escapes digestion in the small intestine, but the structural features responsible are not fully understood. We report the effects of partial enzyme digestion of maize starch granules on amylopectin branch length profiles, double and single helix contents, gelatinisation properties, crystallinity and lamellar periodicity. Comparing results for three maize starches (27, 57, and 84% amylose) that differ in both structural features and amylase-sensitivity allows conclusions to be drawn concerning the rate-determining features operating under the digestion conditions used. All starches are found to be digested by a side-by-side mechanism in which there is no major preference during enzyme attack for amylopectin branch lengths, helix form, crystallinity or lamellar organisation. We conclude that the major factor controlling enzyme susceptibility is granule architecture, with shorter length scales not playing a major role as inferred from the largely invariant nature of numerous structural measures during the digestion process (XRD, NMR, SAXS, DSC, FACE). Results are consistent with digestion rates being controlled by restricted diffusion of enzymes within densely packed granular structures, with an effective surface area for enzyme attack determined by external dimensions (57 or 84% amylose - relatively slow) or internal channels and pores (27% amylose - relatively fast). Although the process of granule digestion is to a first approximation non-discriminatory with respect to structure at molecular and mesoscopic length scales, secondary effects noted include (i) partial crystallisation of V-type helices during digestion of 27% amylose starch, (ii) preferential hydrolysis of long amylopectin branches during the early stage hydrolysis of 27% and 57% but not 84% amylose starches, linked with disruption of lamellar repeating structure and (iii) partial B-type recrystallisation after prolonged enzyme incubation for 57% and 84% amylose starches but not 27% amylose starch.


Cereal Chemistry | 2000

In Vitro Polymerization of Wheat Glutenin Subunits with Inorganic Oxidizing Agents. I. Comparison of Single-Step and Stepwise Oxidations of High Molecular Weight Glutenin Subunits

Wim S. Veraverbeke; Oscar Larroque; F. Békés; Jan A. Delcour

ABSTRACT High molecular weight glutenin subunits (HMW-GS) were isolated from wheat flour and polymerized in vitro at pH 3.0 with different oxidizing agents (KBrO3, KIO3, H2O2). An oxidation protocol with single addition of oxidant (single-step oxidation) was compared with a set-up in which the oxidant was added in multiple steps (stepwise oxidation). Changes in size distribution were evaluated with size-exclusion HPLC, multilayer SDS-PAGE, and flow-field flow fractionation (flow-FFF). Flow-FFF is particularly suitable for measuring changes in glutenin size in the very high size ranges. In order of increasing sizes of the resulting polymers, the different oxidizing agents could be ranked as KBrO3 < KIO3 < H2O2. However, none of the oxidation conditions allowed for a complete polymerization of HMW-GS. Interestingly, it was found that high concentrations of KIO3 negatively affect the degree of polymerization. A similar observation was not made with KBrO3 or H2O2. SDS-PAGE showed that y-type HMW-GS particular...


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2012

Functional characterization of barley betaglucanless mutants demonstrates a unique role for CslF6 in (1,3;1,4)-β-D-glucan biosynthesis

Shin Taketa; Takahisa Yuo; Takuji Tonooka; Yoichi Tsumuraya; Yoshiaki Inagaki; Naoto Haruyama; Oscar Larroque; Stephen A. Jobling

(1,3;1,4)-β-D-glucans (mixed-linkage glucans) are found in tissues of members of the Poaceae (grasses), and are particularly high in barley (Hordeum vulgare) grains. The present study describes the isolation of three independent (1,3;1,4)-β-D-glucanless (betaglucanless; bgl) mutants of barley which completely lack (1,3;1,4)-β-D-glucan in all the tissues tested. The bgl phenotype cosegregates with the cellulose synthase like HvCslF6 gene on chromosome arm 7HL. Each of the bgl mutants has a single nucleotide substitution in the coding region of the HvCslF6 gene resulting in a change of a highly conserved amino acid residue of the HvCslF6 protein. Microsomal membranes isolated from developing endosperm of the bgl mutants lack detectable (1,3;1,4)-β-D-glucan synthase activity indicating that the HvCslF6 protein is inactive. This was confirmed by transient expression of the HvCslF6 cDNAs in Nicotiana benthamiana leaves. The wild-type HvCslF6 gene directed the synthesis of high levels of (1,3;1,4)-β-D-glucans, whereas the mutant HvCslF6 proteins completely lack the ability to synthesize (1,3;1,4)-β-D-glucans. The fine structure of the (1,3;1,4)-β-D-glucan produced in the tobacco leaf was also very different from that found in cereals having an extremely low DP3/DP4 ratio. These results demonstrate that, among the seven CslF and one CslH genes present in the barley genome, HvCslF6 has a unique role and is the key determinant controlling the biosynthesis of (1,3;1,4)-β-D-glucans. Natural allelic variation in the HvCslF6 gene was found predominantly within introns among 29 barley accessions studied. Genetic manipulation of the HvCslF6 gene could enable control of (1,3;1,4)-β-D-glucans in accordance with the purposes of use.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2003

Bánkúti 1201--an old Hungarian wheat variety with special storage protein composition.

A. Juhász; Oscar Larroque; László Tamás; S. L. K. Hsam; F. J. Zeller; F. Békés; Zoltán Bedo

Abstract Bánkúti 1201, an old Hungarian wheat variety with special quality traits, was analysed to determine the relationships between its storage protein composition and superior quality-attributes for breadmaking. Based on the storage protein composition, the variety appears to have the nature of a population, containing several genotypes with different gluten protein alleles. Using molecular markers, a new mutant x-type HMW glutenin allele was identified, containing an extra cysteine residue and showing a moderate, positive-effect on gluten properties. In lines possessing subunits Bx7+By8 the overexpression of the Bx-type subunit could be detected, resulting in a higher unextractable polymeric protein (UPP) content and increased dough strength. It was found that the presence or absence of subunit Bx7 has an equilibrating effect on the dough extensibility, which is generally characteristic of the Bánkúti 1201 population. The complex good bread-making quality of the variety, which has strong but highly extensible dough, is probably due to the balance between lines which express subunit Bx7 and those which do not.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2011

The barley amo1 locus is tightly linked to the starch synthase IIIa gene and negatively regulates expression of granule-bound starch synthetic genes

Zhongyi Li; Dehong Li; Xihua Du; Hong Wang; Oscar Larroque; Colin L. D. Jenkins; Stephen A. Jobling; Matthew K. Morell

In this study of barley starch synthesis, the interaction between mutations at the sex6 locus and the amo1 locus has been characterized. Four barley genotypes, the wild type, sex6, amo1, and the amo1sex6 double mutant, were generated by backcrossing the sex6 mutation present in Himalaya292 into the amo1 ‘high amylose Glacier’. The wild type, amo1, and sex6 genotypes gave starch phenotypes consistent with previous studies. However, the amo1sex6 double mutant yielded an unexpected phenotype, a significant increase in starch content relative to the sex6 phenotype. Amylose content (as a percentage of starch) was not increased above the level observed for the sex6 mutation alone; however, on a per seed basis, grain from lines containing the amo1 mutation (amo1 mutants and amo1sex6 double mutants) synthesize significantly more amylose than the wild-type lines and sex6 mutants. The level of granule-bound starch synthase I (GBSSI) protein in starch granules is increased in lines containing the amo1 mutation (amo1 and amo1sex6). In the amo1 genotype, starch synthase I (SSI), SSIIa, starch branching enzyme IIa (SBEIIa), and SBEIIb also markedly increased in the starch granules. Genetic mapping studies indicate that the ssIIIa gene is tightly linked to the amo1 locus, and the SSIIIa protein from the amo1 mutant has a leucine to arginine residue substitution in a conserved domain. Zymogram analysis indicates that the amo1 phenotype is not a consequence of total loss of enzymatic activity although it remains possible that the amo1 phenotype is underpinned by a more subtle change. It is therefore proposed that amo1 may be a negative regulator of other genes of starch synthesis.

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Matthew K. Morell

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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F. Békés

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Zhongyi Li

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Ahmed Regina

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Behjat Kosar-Hashemi

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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M. C. Gianibelli

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Sadequr Rahman

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Stephen A. Jobling

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Jean-Philippe Ral

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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