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Dive into the research topics where Shahnoor S. Shaik is active.

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Featured researches published by Shahnoor S. Shaik.


BMC Plant Biology | 2012

Concerted suppression of all starch branching enzyme genes in barley produces amylose-only starch granules

Massimiliano Carciofi; Andreas Blennow; Susanne L. Jensen; Shahnoor S. Shaik; Anette Henriksen; Alain Buléon; Preben Bach Holm; Kim H. Hebelstrup

BackgroundStarch is stored in higher plants as granules composed of semi-crystalline amylopectin and amorphous amylose. Starch granules provide energy for the plant during dark periods and for germination of seeds and tubers. Dietary starch is also a highly glycemic carbohydrate being degraded to glucose and rapidly absorbed in the small intestine. But a portion of dietary starch, termed “resistant starch” (RS) escapes digestion and reaches the large intestine, where it is fermented by colonic bacteria producing short chain fatty acids (SCFA) which are linked to several health benefits. The RS is preferentially derived from amylose, which can be increased by suppressing amylopectin synthesis by silencing of starch branching enzymes (SBEs). However all the previous works attempting the production of high RS crops resulted in only partly increased amylose-content and/or significant yield loss.ResultsIn this study we invented a new method for silencing of multiple genes. Using a chimeric RNAi hairpin we simultaneously suppressed all genes coding for starch branching enzymes (SBE I, SBE IIa, SBE IIb) in barley (Hordeum vulgare L.), resulting in production of amylose-only starch granules in the endosperm. This trait was segregating 3:1. Amylose-only starch granules were irregularly shaped and showed peculiar thermal properties and crystallinity. Transgenic lines retained high-yield possibly due to a pleiotropic upregualtion of other starch biosynthetic genes compensating the SBEs loss. For gelatinized starch, a very high content of RS (65 %) was observed, which is 2.2-fold higher than control (29%). The amylose-only grains germinated with same frequency as control grains. However, initial growth was delayed in young plants.ConclusionsThis is the first time that pure amylose has been generated with high yield in a living organism. This was achieved by a new method of simultaneous suppression of the entire complement of genes encoding starch branching enzymes. We demonstrate that amylopectin is not essential for starch granule crystallinity and integrity. However the slower initial growth of shoots from amylose-only grains may be due to an important physiological role played by amylopectin ordered crystallinity for rapid starch remobilization explaining the broad conservation in the plant kingdom of the amylopectin structure.


Cereal Chemistry | 2013

Future Cereal Starch Bioengineering: Cereal Ancestors Encounter Gene Technology and Designer Enzymes

Andreas Blennow; Susanne L. Jensen; Shahnoor S. Shaik; Katsiaryna Skryhan; Massimiliano Carciofi; Preben Bach Holm; Kim H. Hebelstrup; Vanja Tanackovic

ABSTRACT The importance of cereal starch production worldwide cannot be overrated. However, the qualities and resulting values of existing raw and processed starch do not fully meet future demands for environmentally friendly production of renewable, advanced biomaterials, functional foods, and biomedical additives. New approaches for starch bioengineering are needed. In this review, we discuss cereal starch from a combined universal bioresource point of view. The combination of new biotechniques and clean technology methods can be implemented to replace, for example, chemical modification. The recently released cereal genomes and the exploding advancement in whole genome sequencing now pave the road for identifying new genes to be exploited to generate a multitude of completely new starch functionalities directly in the cereal grain, converting cereal crops to production plants. Newly released genome data from cereal ancestors can potentially allow for the reintroduction of cereal traits including, for e...


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2014

Starch bioengineering affects cereal grain germination and seedling establishment

Shahnoor S. Shaik; Massimiliano Carciofi; Helle Juel Martens; Kim H. Hebelstrup; Andreas Blennow

Summary Grain starch phosphorylation and amylose content affect germination and seedling establishment through the combination of direct effects on altered starch granule and molecular structure and indirect effects on amylase activities.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Starch Granule Re-Structuring by Starch Branching Enzyme and Glucan Water Dikinase Modulation Affects Caryopsis Physiology and Metabolism

Shahnoor S. Shaik; Toshihiro Obata; Kim H. Hebelstrup; Kevin Schwahn; Alisdair R. Fernie; Ramona Valentina Mateiu; Andreas Blennow

Starch is of fundamental importance for plant development and reproduction and its optimized molecular assembly is potentially necessary for correct starch metabolism. Re-structuring of starch granules in-planta can therefore potentially affect plant metabolism. Modulation of granule micro-structure was achieved by decreasing starch branching and increasing starch-bound phosphate content in the barley caryopsis starch by RNAi suppression of all three Starch Branching Enzyme (SBE) isoforms or overexpression of potato Glucan Water Dikinase (GWD). The resulting lines displayed Amylose-Only (AO) and Hyper-Phosphorylated (HP) starch chemotypes, respectively. We studied the influence of these alterations on primary metabolism, grain composition, starch structural features and starch granule morphology over caryopsis development at 10, 20 and 30 days after pollination (DAP) and at grain maturity. While HP showed relatively little effect, AO showed significant reduction in starch accumulation with re-direction to protein and β-glucan (BG) accumulation. Metabolite profiling indicated significantly higher sugar accumulation in AO, with re-partitioning of carbon to accumulate amino acids, and interestingly it also had high levels of some important stress-related metabolites and potentially protective metabolites, possibly to elude deleterious effects. Investigations on starch molecular structure revealed significant increase in starch phosphate and amylose content in HP and AO respectively with obvious differences in starch granule morphology at maturity. The results demonstrate that decreasing the storage starch branching resulted in metabolic adjustments and re-directions, tuning to evade deleterious effects on caryopsis physiology and plant performance while only little effect was evident by increasing starch-bound phosphate as a result of overexpressing GWD.


Scientific Reports | 2016

High throughput screening of starch structures using carbohydrate microarrays.

Vanja Tanackovic; Maja G. Rydahl; Henriette L. Pedersen; Mohammed Saddik Motawia; Shahnoor S. Shaik; Maria Dalgaard Mikkelsen; Susanne Langgaard Krunic; Jonatan U. Fangel; William G. T. Willats; Andreas Blennow

In this study we introduce the starch-recognising carbohydrate binding module family 20 (CBM20) from Aspergillus niger for screening biological variations in starch molecular structure using high throughput carbohydrate microarray technology. Defined linear, branched and phosphorylated maltooligosaccharides, pure starch samples including a variety of different structures with variations in the amylopectin branching pattern, amylose content and phosphate content, enzymatically modified starches and glycogen were included. Using this technique, different important structures, including amylose content and branching degrees could be differentiated in a high throughput fashion. The screening method was validated using transgenic barley grain analysed during development and subjected to germination. Typically, extreme branching or linearity were detected less than normal starch structures. The method offers the potential for rapidly analysing resistant and slowly digested dietary starches.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2017

Waxy and non-waxy barley cultivars exhibit differences in the targeting and catalytic activity of GBSS1a

Kim H. Hebelstrup; Morten M. Nielsen; Massimiliano Carciofi; Olga Andrzejczak; Shahnoor S. Shaik; Andreas Blennow; Monica M. Palcic

&NA; Amylose synthesis is strictly associated with activity of granule‐bound starch synthase (GBSS) enzymes. Among several crops there are cultivars containing starch types with either little or no amylose known as near‐waxy or waxy. This (near) amylose‐free phenotype is associated with a single locus (waxy) which has been mapped to GBSS‐type genes in different crops. Most waxy varieties are a result of either low or no expression of a GBSS gene. However, there are some waxy cultivars where the GBSS enzymes are expressed normally. For these types, single nucleotide polymorphisms have been hypothesized to represent amino‐acid substitutions leading to loss of catalytic activity. We here confirm that the HvGBSSIa enzyme from one such waxy barley variety, CDC_Alamo, has a 90% reduction in catalytic activity. We also engineered plants with expression of transgenic C‐terminal green fluorescent protein‐tagged HvGBSSIa of both the non‐waxy type and of the CDC_Alamo type to monitor their subcellular localization patterns in grain endosperm. HvGBSSIa from non‐waxy cultivars was found to localize in discrete concentric spheres strictly within starch granules. In contrast, HvGBSSIa from waxy CDC_Alamo showed deficient starch targeting mostly into unknown subcellular bodies of 0.5‐3 &mgr;m in size, indicating that the waxy phenotype of CDC_Alamo is associated with deficient targeting of HvGBSSIa into starch granules.


Journal of Cereal Science | 2011

Hyperphosphorylation of cereal starch

Massimiliano Carciofi; Shahnoor S. Shaik; Susanne L. Jensen; Andreas Blennow; Jan T. Svensson; Eva Vincze; Kim H. Hebelstrup


Starch-starke | 2018

Non-GMO potato lines with altered starch biosynthesis pathway confers increased-amylose and resistant starch properties†

Susanne Langgaard Krunic; Katsiaryna Skryhan; Lisbeth Mikkelsen; Christian Ruzanski; Shahnoor S. Shaik; Hanne‐Grethe Kirk; Monica M. Palcic; Andreas Blennow


CFW Plexus | 2013

The structure of the starch granule affects cereal grain germination.

Andreas Blennow; Shahnoor S. Shaik; Massimiliano Carciofi; Kim H. Hebelstrup; Helle Juel Martens


CFW Plexus | 2012

Barley starch bioengineering for high phosphate and amylose

Andreas Blennow; Massimiliano Carciofi; Shahnoor S. Shaik; Susanne L. Jensen; Jan T. Svensson; Preben Bach Holm; Kim H. Hebelstrup

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