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Tung Seed Oil Body Proteomics

Objective

Understanding plant oil biosynthesis will help to create new oilseed crops with value-added properties to replace petroleum-based compounds in products such as nylons, plastics, inks, and dyes. The biosynthesis and accumulation of biopolymers such as oils is accomplished by highly organized enzyme complexes. The coordination of various components in the complexes is essential for the enzymatic efficiency and specificity. The combinations of various isoforms rather than individual enzymes may be the determining factor for the synthesis of specific components of biopolymers. The concept of enzyme complexes in lipid biosynthesis is supported by the isolation of a cytosolic 10S triacylglycerol biosynthetic multienzyme complex from oleaginous yeast. Extensive attempts to purify oil-synthesizing enzymes have only limited success. The purification difficulty itself may imply that individual enzymes are probably associated with other proteins/enzymes in the native environment. Current studies are focused on the identification and characterization of individual enzymes in plant lipid biosynthesis. However, much needs to be learned about the nature of the oil biosynthetic machinery in plants. The objective of this proposal is to determine the exact nature of protein components in oil bodies and their relevance in the synthesis and accumulation of oils in tung seeds.

Investigators
Cao H
Institution
Chinese Academy of Forestry
Start date
2011
End date
2014
Project number
6054-41000-102-10N
Accession number
420768