Da. Jones et al., The discovery of compositional variation for the raffinose family of oligosaccharides in pea seeds, SEED SCI R, 9(4), 1999, pp. 305-310
The raffinose family of oligosaccharides (RFO) is present in relatively hig
h levels in grain legume seeds. They are considered to be antinutritional c
ompounds because they are, at least in part, believed to be responsible for
causing flatulence in humans, which is the single most important factor in
deterring people from including more legume seeds in their diet. The RFO a
lso have important functions within the plant. They serve as transport meta
bolites in many legumes and have been proposed to play a positive role in c
old acclimatisation and in conferring desiccation tolerance during seed mat
uration. These responses to environmental stresses are believed to result f
rom the RFO acting as protecting agents for membrane bound-proteins. We hav
e screened 70 pea lines from the test array of the John Innes Pisum germpla
sm collection, and lines were selected which had unusual RFO composition. T
he soluble sugars within these lines were quantified using High Performance
Anion Exchange Chromatography with Pulsed Amperometric Detection (HPAEC-PA
D), and variants were identified which were deficient in verbascose and one
with a reduced level of raffinose. These selected lines are being used in
a crossing programme designed to study the genetics of the RFO pathway and
to produce new material to test the effect of specific RFO on the plant's r
esponses to the environment and on the diets of humans and animals.