Cloning of tangerine from tomato reveals a Carotenoid isomerase essential for the production of β-carotene and xanthophylls in plants

Tal Isaacson, Gil Ronen, Dani Zamir, Joseph Hirschberg*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

514 Scopus citations

Abstract

Carotenoid biosynthesis in plants has been described at the molecular level for most of the biochemical steps in the pathway. However, the cis-trans isomerization of carotenoids, which is known to occur in vivo, has remained a mystery since its discovery five decades ago. To elucidate the molecular mechanism of carotenoid isomerization, we have taken a genetic map-based approach to clone the tangerine locus from tomato. Fruit of tangerine are orange and accumulate prolycopene (7Z,9Z,7′Z,9′Z-tetra-cis-lycopene) instead of the all-trans-lycopene, which normally is synthesized in the wild type. Our data indicate that the tangerine gene, designated CRTISO, encodes an authentic carotenoid isomerase that is required during carotenoid desaturation. CRTISO is a redox-type enzyme structurally related to the bacterial-type phytoene desaturase CRTI. Two alleles of tangerine have been investigated. In tangerinemic, loss of function is attributable to a deletion mutation in CRTISO, and in tangerine3183, expression of this gene is impaired. CRTISO from tomato is expressed in all green tissues but is upregulated during fruit ripening and in flowers. The function of carotene isomerase in plants presumably is to enable carotenoid biosynthesis to occur in the dark and in nonphotosynthetic tissues.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)333-342
Number of pages10
JournalPlant Cell
Volume14
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 2002

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