Phospholipids
and phytic acid are important phosphorus (P)-containing
compounds in rice grains. Phytic acid is considered as a major antinutrient,
because the negatively charged phytic acid chelates cations, including
essential micronutrients, and decreases their bioavailability to human
beings and monogastric animals. To gain an insight into the interplay
of these two kinds of phosphorus-containing metabolites, we used the
CRISPR/Cas9 system to generate mutants of a phospholipase D gene (OsPLDα1) and analyzed the mutational effect on metabolites,
including phytic acid in rice grains. Metabolic profiling of two ospldα1 mutants revealed depletion in the phosphatidic
acid production and lower accumulation of cytidine diphosphate diacylglycerol
and phosphatidylinositol. The mutants also showed significantly reduced
phytic acid content as compared to their wild-type parent, and the
expression of the key genes involved in the phytic acid biosynthesis
was altered in the mutants. These results demonstrate that OsPLDα1 not only plays an important role in phospholipid
metabolism but also is involved in phytic acid biosynthesis, most
probably through the lipid-dependent pathway, and thus revealed a
potential new route to regulate phytic acid biosynthesis in rice.
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