We determined the phytochemical diversity, including carotenoids, flavonoids, anthocyanins, and phenolic acids, in sweet potatoes ( L.) with distinctive flesh colors (white, orange, and purple) and identified hydrophilic primary metabolites. Carotenoid content was considerably higher in orange-fleshed sweet potatoes, wherein β-carotene was the most plentiful, and anthocyanins were detected only in purple-fleshed sweet potatoes. The levels of phenolic acids and flavonoids were relatively higher in purple-fleshed sweet potatoes than those in the other two varieties. Forty-one primary and 18 secondary metabolite profiles were subjected to multivariate statistical analyses, which fully distinguished among the varieties and separated orange- and purple-fleshed sweet potatoes from white-fleshed sweet potatoes based on the high levels of sugars, sugar alcohols, and secondary metabolites. This is the first study to determine comprehensive metabolic differences among different color-fleshed sweet potatoes and provides useful information for genetic manipulation of sweet potatoes to influence primary and secondary metabolism.
Mammalian spermatogenesis is orchestrated by many specific molecular and cellular events. To understand the detailed mechanism by which spermatogenesis is controlled, the specific genes involved in this process must be identified and studied. From the subtracted cDNA library of rat testis prepared using the representational difference analysis (RDA) method, we isolated the cDNA clone of steroidogenic acute regulatory (StAR) protein-related lipid transfer (START) protein 6 (Stard6). Stard6 cDNA consists of 1146 base pairs of nucleotides and has the longest open reading frame, of 227 amino acids. Northern blot analysis revealed Stard6 mRNA to be testis-specific. The mRNA transcript appeared from the third week of postnatal development, and the expression level increased up to adulthood. Moreover, in situ hybridization showed Stard6 mRNA expression to be germ cell-specific and expressed only during the maturation stages of round and elongated spermatids of adult rat testis. Western blot analysis with Stard6 antibody revealed a 28-kDa Stard6 protein only in testis. Immunohistochemistry further confirmed localization of Stard6 protein expressed in mature germ cells, in concert with the in situ hybridization result. Taken together, these results suggest that Stard6, a member of the START protein family, may play a role during germ cell maturation in adult rat testis.
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