See more from this Session: General Biomedical, Health-Beneficial & Nutritionally Enhanced Plants: II/Div. C09 Business Meeting
Wednesday, November 3, 2010: 10:45 AM
Long Beach Convention Center, Room 308, Seaside Level
Raffinose, stachyose and phytin are undesirable compounds for soybean food and animal feed products. In seeds, raffinose and stachyose are believed to contribute to desiccation and cold stress tolerance. Thus, removal of these compounds from soybean by genetic mutation has resulted in a more commercially desirable composition, but potentially less physiologically viable seed. In an effort to develop a method to improve viability and seed storability in soybean, stem-leaf-pod explants of three low raffinose, low stachyose lines, two of which were also low in phytin and a check line were fed solutions containing D-chiro-inositol, myo-inositol, or D-pinitol, free cyclitols which unload through the seed coat to the developing embryo where they accumulate as fagopyritols, galactinol, and galactopinitols, respectively, during seed maturation. Increased galactopinitol and fagopyritol accumulation may substitute for the roles of raffinose and stachyose in low raffinose, stachyose, and phytin seed. Explants of all lines unloaded fed D-chiro-inositol, myo-inositol and D-pinitol. All fed cyclitols accumulated in leaf tissues indicating uptake into explants. Fed D-chiro-inositol and myo-inositol accumulated in pod wall and seed coat tissues. The results indicate D-chiro-inositol, myo-inositol, and D-pinitol were unloaded from the seed coat to the embryo in increased amounts after feeding. The potential use of increased maternal D-chiro-inositol for synthesis of fagopyritols in embryos to improve seed performance in low stachyose and low phytin soybean seeds is supported. The seed coat cup unloading of fed free cyclitols may provide a model system to test effective unloading of upregulated maternally synthesized cyclitols.
See more from this Division: C09 Biomedical, Health-Beneficial & Nutritionally Enhanced PlantsSee more from this Session: General Biomedical, Health-Beneficial & Nutritionally Enhanced Plants: II/Div. C09 Business Meeting