STEREOSPECIFIC ANALYSES OF SEED TRIACYLGLYCEROLS FROM HIGH-ERUCIC ACID BRASSICACEAE - DETECTION OF ERUCIC-ACID AT THE SN-2 POSITION IN BRASSICA-OLERACEA L GENOTYPES

Citation
Dc. Taylor et al., STEREOSPECIFIC ANALYSES OF SEED TRIACYLGLYCEROLS FROM HIGH-ERUCIC ACID BRASSICACEAE - DETECTION OF ERUCIC-ACID AT THE SN-2 POSITION IN BRASSICA-OLERACEA L GENOTYPES, Journal of the American Oil Chemists' Society, 71(2), 1994, pp. 163-167
Citations number
34
Categorie Soggetti
Food Science & Tenology","Chemistry Applied
ISSN journal
0003021X
Volume
71
Issue
2
Year of publication
1994
Pages
163 - 167
Database
ISI
SICI code
0003-021X(1994)71:2<163:SAOSTF>2.0.ZU;2-G
Abstract
Stereospecific analyses of triacylglycerols from selected high erucic acid breeding lines or cultivars of Brassica napus L. and B. oleracea L. have been performed. Initial lipase screening revealed that while a ll B. napus lines contained little or no erucic acid at the sn-2 posit ion, several of the B. oleracea lines had significant proportions of e rucic acid at this position. Detailed stereospecific analyses were per formed on the triacylglycerols from these lines by using a Grignard-ba sed deacylation, conversion of the sn-1, sn-2 and sn-3 monoacylglycero ls to their di-dinitrophenyl methane (DNPU) derivatives, resolution of the di-DNPU-monoacylglycerols (MAGs) by high-performance liquid chrom atography on a chiral column, transmethylation of each sn-di DNPU MAG fraction and analysis of the resulting fatty acid methyl esters by gas chromatography. The findings unequivocally demonstrate for the first time that, within the Brassicaceae, there exists B. oleracea germplasm containing seed oils with substantial erucic acid (30-35 mol%) at the sn-2 position. This has important implications for biotechnology and breeding efforts designed to increase the levels of erucic acid in rap eseed beyond 66 mol% to supply strategic industrial feedstocks. In the first instance, the germplasm will be of direct use in retrieving a g ene encoding a Brassica lyso-phosphatidic acid acyltransferase with an affinity for erucoyl-CoA. In a breeding program, the germplasm offers promise for the introduction of this trait into B. napus by interspec ific hybridization and embryo rescue.