Enhancing microRNA167A expression in seed decreases the ?-linolenic acid content and increases seed size in Camelina sativa

Authors

GunNam Na, Xiaopeng Mu, Paul Grabowski, Jeremy Schmutz, Chaofu Lu

Publication

The Plant Journal

Abstract

Despite well-established roles of microRNAs in plant development, little has been addressed to understand their effects in seeds especially on lipid metabolism. In this study, we showed that overexpressing microRNA167A (miR167OE) in camelina (Camelina sativa) under a seed-specific promoter changed fatty acid composition and increased seed size. Specifically, the miR167OE seeds had a lower ?-linolenic acid with a concomitantly higher linoleic acid content than the wild type. This decreased level of fatty acid desaturation corresponded to a decreased transcriptional expression of the camelina fatty acid dsesaturase3 (CsFAD3) in developing seeds. MiR167 targeted the transcription factor auxin response factor (CsARF8) in camelina, as had been reported previously in Arabidopsis. Chromatin immunoprecipitation experiments combined with transcriptome analysis indicated that CsARF8 bound to promoters of camelina bZIP67 and ABI3 genes. These transcription factors directly or through the ABI3-bZIP12 pathway regulate CsFAD3 expression and affect the ?-linolenic acid accumulation. In addition to decipher the miR167A-CsARF8 mediated transcriptional cascade for CsFAD3 suppression, transcriptome analysis was conducted to implicate mechanisms that regulate seed size in camelina. Expression levels of many genes were altered in miR167OE, including orthologs that have previously been identified to affect seed size in other plants. Most notably, genes for seed coat development such as suberin and lignin biosynthesis were down-regulated.

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