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Plant Physiology Preview Published on April 25, 2008; 10.1104/pp.108.117614
Received February 25, 2008 Tocotrienols, the unsaturated forms of vitamin E, can function as antioxidants and lipid protectors in tobacco leaves
CEA/Grenoble, iRTSV, Laboratoire de Physiologie Cellulaire Vegetale, 17 rue des Martyrs, F-38054 Grenoble cedex 9, France ; CEA, DSV, iBEB, Laboratoire d'Ecophysiologie Moleculaire des Plantes, 13108 Saint-Paul-lez-Durance, France, and CNRS, UMR Biologie Vegetale et Microbiologie Environnementales, 13108 Saint-Paul-lez-Durance, France, and Universite Aix-Marseille, 13108 Saint-Paul-lez-Durance, France * Corresponding author; email: michel.havaux{at}cea.fr.
Vitamin E is a generic term for a group of lipid-soluble antioxidant compounds, the tocopherols and tocotrienols. While tocotrienols are considered as important vitamin E components in humans with functions in health and disease, the protective functions of tocotrienols have never been investigated in plants, contrary to tocopherols. We took advantage of the strong accumulation of tocotrienols in leaves of double transgenic tobacco plants that co-expressed the yeast prephenate dehydrogenase gene (PDH) and the Arabidopsis hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase gene (HPPD) to study in vivo the antioxidant function of those compounds. In young leaves of wild-type and transgenic tobacco plants, the majority of vitamin E was stored in thylakoid membranes, while plastoglobules contained mainly
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