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Journal ArticleDOI

High Lysine Mutant Gene (hl that Improves Protein Quality and Biological Value of Grain Sorghum1

Rameshwar Singh, +1 more
- 01 Sep 1973 - 
- Vol. 13, Iss: 5, pp 535-539
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TLDR
In a 28-day isonitrogenous feeding experiment the weight gain of weanling rats was three times higher on an IS 11758 ration and twice as high on anIS 11167 ration as weight gains on rations prepared from normal sorghum lines.
Abstract
Seeds from over 9,000 lines in the world sorghum [Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench] collection were classified for endosperm phenotype to identify floury endosperm lines and evaluate each for potential increases in lysine concentration. Sixty-two floury endosperm lines were selected and analyzed for protein and lysine composition. Two floury lines of Ethiopian origin, IS 11167 and IS 11758, were exceptionally high in lysine at relatively high levels of protein. The average whole grain lysine concentration of high lysine lines IS 11167 and IS 11758 was 3.34 and 3.13 (g/lOOg protein) at 15.7 and 17.2% protein, respectively. Both lines were also high in percent oil. Carbohydrate analyses of whole grain samples of the two high lysine lines were similar to that of normal sorghum grain except for a twofold increase in sucrose concentration. The high lysine gene altered the amino acid pattern in hl hl hl endosperm tissue relative to normal endosperm checks. The major changes were increased lysine, arginine, aspartic acid, glycine, and tryptophan concentrations and decreased amounts of glutamic acid, proline, alanine, and leucine in the hl hl hl endosperm. Inheritance studies suggest that the increased lysine concentration of each line is controlled by a single recessive gene, although it is not known whether the genes from both lines are allelic. The high lysine gene(s) present in IS 11167 and IS 11758 from Ethiopia is (are) herein designated as hl. The endosperm of kernels homozygous for the hl gene is partially dented. The biological value of the high lysine lines was much higher than that of average sorghum lines. In a 28-day isonitrogenous feeding experiment the weight gain of weanling rats was three times higher on an IS 11758 ration and twice as high on an IS 11167 ration as weight gains on rations prepared from normal sorghum lines. When fed rations without any dilution except the usual 2% vitamin and 4% mineral supplementation, rats gained 94 g on high lysine sorghum (IS 11758) and 28.5 g on our current best nutritional quality sorghum line (IS 2319), versus 91.5 g on opaque-2 corn (Zea mays L.) and 30.2 g on normal corn in a 28-day feeding trial. Feed efficiency ratios for this trial were 3.0 for high lysine sorghum, 6.8 for IS 2319, 3.4 for opaque-2 corn, and 7.4 for normal corn.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Improving the protein content and composition of cereal grain

TL;DR: Cereals are important sources of protein for human nutrition but have low quality due to limitations in the amounts of essential amino acids, notably lysine, which are exacerbated when high levels of nitrogen fertiliser are used to increase yield and total protein content.
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Interdependence of threonine, methionine and isoleucine metabolism in plants: accumulation and transcriptional regulation under abiotic stress.

TL;DR: This review describes pathways influencing branched-chain amino acid metabolism and what is known about the biological significance of their accumulation under abiotic stress and a bioinformatics approach to understanding the transcriptional regulation of the genes involved in amino acids metabolism under abiotics stress is presented.
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Improving the content of essential amino acids in crop plants: goals and opportunities.

TL;DR: The inability of humans and many farm animals to synthesize certain amino acids has long triggered tremendous interest in increasing the levels of these so-called essential amino acids in crop plants.
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Induced Mutations in Plant Breeding

TL;DR: This book discusses methods for inducing Mutations, the selection value of Mutant Genes, and the Alteration of Seed Storage Substances under the Influence of Changed Genotypic Background or Environment.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

On the determination of cystine as cysteic acid.

TL;DR: In this article, a reduction agent was used to destroy the excess performic acid before the initial reaction, and the subsequent exposure of cysteic acid residues to bromine would not be likely to be detrimental.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mutant Gene That Changes Protein Composition and Increases Lysine Content of Maize Endosperm

TL;DR: It is shown that the endosperms of maize seeds homozygous for the opaque-2 mutant gene have a higher lysine content than normal kernels and the synthesis of proteins with a greater content of basic amino acids in the acid-soluble fraction of the mutant endosperm.
Book ChapterDOI

Carbohydrate Synthesis in Maize

TL;DR: The interactions of multiple mutations on pathways of starch synthesis offer a promising refinement for analyzing the actual pathways involved and the interest of many researchers offer excellent prospects for significant and relatively large contributions to the detailed knowledge of the genetic control and biochemistry of starch and carbohydrate synthesis and the differentiation of maize endosperm within the very near future.
Journal ArticleDOI

Amino Acid Supplementation of Cereal Grains as Related to the World Food Supply

TL;DR: A detailed analysis of world problenis in protein nutrition has been published and much thinking and effort has been expended in the direction of correcting the situation by use of vegetable products of high protein content, namely, the legumes and oil seed cakes.
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