Back to Search Start Over

The causal mutation leading to sweetness in modern white lupin cultivars.

Authors :
Mancinotti D
Czepiel K
Taylor JL
Golshadi Galehshahi H
Møller LA
Jensen MK
Motawia MS
Hufnagel B
Soriano A
Yeheyis L
Kjaerulff L
Péret B
Staerk D
Wendt T
Nelson MN
Kroc M
Geu-Flores F
Source :
Science advances [Sci Adv] 2023 Aug 04; Vol. 9 (31), pp. eadg8866. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Aug 04.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Lupins are high-protein crops that are rapidly gaining interest as hardy alternatives to soybean; however, they accumulate antinutritional alkaloids of the quinolizidine type (QAs). Lupin domestication was enabled by the discovery of genetic loci conferring low QA levels (sweetness), but the precise identity of the underlying genes remains uncertain. We show that pauper , the most common sweet locus in white lupin, encodes an acetyltransferase (AT) unexpectedly involved in the early QA pathway. In pauper plants, a single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) strongly impairs AT activity, causing pathway blockage. We corroborate our hypothesis by replicating the pauper chemotype in narrow-leafed lupin via mutagenesis. Our work adds a new dimension to QA biosynthesis and establishes the identity of a lupin sweet gene for the first time, thus facilitating lupin breeding and enabling domestication of other QA-containing legumes.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2375-2548
Volume :
9
Issue :
31
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Science advances
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37540741
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.adg8866