Biosynthesis of carotenoids in carrot: An underground story comes to light
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Rodríguez Concepción, Manuel
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Biosynthesis of carotenoids in carrot: An underground story comes to light
Abstract
Carrot (Daucus carota) is a biannual plant that accumulates massive amounts of carotenoid pigments in
the storage root. Although the root of carrot plants was white before domestication, intensive breeding
generated the currently known carotenoid-rich varieties, including the widely popular orange carrots
that accumulate very high levels of the pro-vitamin A carotenoids b-carotene and, to a lower extent,
a-carotene. Recent studies have shown that the developmental program responsible for the accumulation
of these health-promoting carotenes in underground roots can be completely altered when roots
are exposed to light. Illuminated root sections do not enlarge as much as dark-grown roots, and they contain
chloroplasts with high levels of lutein instead of the b-carotene-rich chromoplasts found in underground
roots. Analysis of carotenoid gene expression in roots either exposed or not to light has
contributed to better understand the contribution of developmental and environmental cues to the root
carotenoid profile. In this review, we summarize the main conclusions of this work in the context of our
current knowledge of how carotenoid biosynthesis and accumulation is regulated at transcriptional and
post-transcriptional levels in carrot roots and other model systems for the study of plant carotenogenesis
such as Arabidopsis de-etiolation and tomato fruit ripening.
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/119645
DOI: doi: 10.1016/j.abb.2013.07.009
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Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics 539 (2013) 110–116
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