Abstract

With its high seed oil content, the mustard family plant Camelina sativa has gained attention as a potential biofuel source. As a bioenergy crop, camelina has many advantages. It grows on marginal land with low demand for water and fertilizer, has a relatively short life cycle, and is stress tolerant. As most other crop seed oils, camelina seed triacylglycerols (TAGs) consist of mostly long, unsaturated fatty acyl moieties, which is not desirable for biofuel processing. In our efforts to produce shorter, saturated chain fatty acyl moieties in camelina seed oil for conversion to jet fuel, a 12:0-acyl-carrier thioesterase gene, UcFATB1, from California bay (Umbellularia californica Nutt.) was expressed in camelina seeds. Up to 40% of short chain laurate (C12:0) and myristate (C14:0) were present in TAGs of the seed oil of the transgenics. The total oil content and germination rate of the transgenic seeds were not affected. Analysis of positions of these two fatty acyl moieties in TAGs indicated that they were present at the sn-1 and sn-3 positions, but not sn-2, on the TAGs. Suppression of the camelina KASII genes by RNAi constructs led to higher accumulation of palmitate (C16:0), from 7.5% up to 28.5%, and further reduction of longer, unsaturated fatty acids in seed TAGs. Co-transformation of camelina with both constructs resulted in enhanced accumulation of all three medium-chain, saturated fatty acids in camelina seed oils. Our results show that a California bay gene can be successfully used to modify the oil composition in camelina seed and present a new biological alternative for jet fuel production.

Highlights

  • Camelina sativa (L.) Crtz., is a member of the Brassicaceae family

  • We report expression of the UcFATB1gene alone or together with camelina CsKASII RNAi constructs in transgenic camelina, and demonstrate the accumulation of medium-chain, saturated fatty acyl moieties in camelina seed oil for biodiesel and jet fuel use

  • The results showed that UcFATB1 expression greatly enhanced the accumulation of laurate (C12:0) in seed oil, ranging from 16.6% in Line 80 to 34.4% in Line 12, compared to no detection in wild type (WT) (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Camelina sativa (L.) Crtz., is a member of the Brassicaceae family. It is known as false flax or gold of pleasure, an ancient crop native to Europe and Central Asia [1]. Camelina has gained attention as a potential biofuel crop with many industrial applications in North America and other temperate climate zones of the world [2, 3, 4]. Camelina is tolerant to cold and drought, requires little fertilizer or pest control, and grows well on marginal land where other oil crops such as corn and soybean usually do not grow efficiently [5]. PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0172296 February 17, 2017

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