1. Chlamydomonas starchless mutant defective in ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase hyper-accumulates triacylglycerol.
- Author
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Li Y, Han D, Hu G, Dauvillee D, Sommerfeld M, Ball S, and Hu Q
- Subjects
- Biofuels, Chlamydomonas genetics, Glucose-1-Phosphate Adenylyltransferase metabolism, Lipid Metabolism genetics, Mutation, Starch genetics, Triglycerides analysis, Triglycerides genetics, Chlamydomonas enzymology, Glucose-1-Phosphate Adenylyltransferase genetics, Starch biosynthesis, Triglycerides biosynthesis
- Abstract
Many microalgae and plants have the ability to synthesize large amounts of triacylglycerol (TAG) that can be used to produce biofuels. Presently, TAG-based biofuel production is limited by the feedstock supply. Metabolic engineering of lipid synthesis pathways to overproduce TAGs in oleaginous microalgae and oil crop plants has achieved only modest success. We demonstrate that inactivation of ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase in a Chlamydomonas starchless mutant led to a 10-fold increase in TAG, suggesting that shunting of photosynthetic carbon partitioning from starch to TAG synthesis may represent a more effective strategy than direct manipulation of the lipid synthesis pathway to overproduce TAG., (Copyright 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2010
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