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Articles

Molecular Mechanisms Determining the Differential Accumulation of Carotenoids in Plant Species and Varieties

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Abstract

Carotenoids are one of the most abundant natural pigments on earth. They accumulate in plastids and play many important roles in biological processes in plants. The structure and quantity of carotenoids vary extensively in different plant species and varieties and over the past three decades the molecular mechanisms underlying these differences have been elucidated. Multiple mechanisms have been discovered, including evolution of novel carotenogenic enzymes and novel catalytic functions, alteration in carotenogenic enzyme activity caused by gene body sequence mutations, changes in gene expression resulting from promoter mutations, difference in expression of noncarotenogenic genes involved in regulation of carotenoid sequestration, plastid sink capacity or transcriptional and epigenetic regulation, as well as effects of related metabolic events. These mechanisms are summarized here, with the aim of providing guidance for future studies on this topic and for genetic manipulation of carotenoid accumulation in plants.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported financially by the National Key Research and Development Program of China under Grant 2018YFD0401303; the 111 project under Grant B17039.

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