Glycoside production by in vitro <em>Rhodiola rosea</em> cultures

Abstract Rhodiola rosea is a medicinal plant, mainly used in Asia and Scandinavia. It is characterized as an adaptogen and is reported to have many pharmacological properties, which are ascribed to the glycosides of cinnamyl alcohol and tyrosol. As natural habitats are already overharvested and the...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: György, Z. (Zsuzsanna)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Oulu 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.fi/urn:isbn:9514280806
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:9514280806
id ndltd-oulo.fi-oai-oulu.fi-isbn951-42-8080-6
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-oulo.fi-oai-oulu.fi-isbn951-42-8080-62017-10-14T04:17:10ZGlycoside production by in vitro <em>Rhodiola rosea</em> culturesGyörgy, Z. (Zsuzsanna)info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess© University of Oulu, 2006info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/pissn/0355-3213info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/eissn/1796-2226biotransformationcompact callus aggregategene expressionglycosylationrosavinrosinsalidrosidetyrosine decarboxylaseRhodiola rosea Abstract Rhodiola rosea is a medicinal plant, mainly used in Asia and Scandinavia. It is characterized as an adaptogen and is reported to have many pharmacological properties, which are ascribed to the glycosides of cinnamyl alcohol and tyrosol. As natural habitats are already overharvested and the cultivation of this plant needs 4–6 years, the production of the pharmacologically important compounds in in vitro cultures could be an alternative. In the work presented here, the production of these glycosides in compact callus aggregate cultures of roseroot was addressed. Biotransformation of exogenously added cinnamylalcohol and tyrosol was studied. Glucosylation of the precursors yielded high amounts of rosin and salidroside and low amounts of rosavin. During the course of this work, four new glycosides of cinnamyl alcohol were found and identified. The optimal concentration of the precursors and the time needed for the biotransformation was also determined. For enhancing the biotransformation rate, glucose was added to the culture medium alongside with sucrose, which doubled the production of cinnamyl alcohol glycosides but did not affect the production of salidroside. A pilot experiment using air-lift bioreactor was performed. A cDNA fragment encoding tyrosine decarboxylase was isolated and described. The expression of this gene was analysed in the leaves and roots of two chemotypes. The results demonstrate the important role of tyrosine decarboxylase in the production of salidroside. The results revealed production of the pharmacologically important glycosides of Rhodiola rosea; however the successful pilot bioreactor experiment remains to be scaled-up. New information was obtained on the biosynthesis of salidroside, which substantiate the metabolic engineering of roseroot. University of Oulu2006-05-22info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionapplication/pdfhttp://urn.fi/urn:isbn:9514280806urn:isbn:9514280806eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic biotransformation
compact callus aggregate
gene expression
glycosylation
rosavin
rosin
salidroside
tyrosine decarboxylase
Rhodiola rosea
spellingShingle biotransformation
compact callus aggregate
gene expression
glycosylation
rosavin
rosin
salidroside
tyrosine decarboxylase
Rhodiola rosea
György, Z. (Zsuzsanna)
Glycoside production by in vitro <em>Rhodiola rosea</em> cultures
description Abstract Rhodiola rosea is a medicinal plant, mainly used in Asia and Scandinavia. It is characterized as an adaptogen and is reported to have many pharmacological properties, which are ascribed to the glycosides of cinnamyl alcohol and tyrosol. As natural habitats are already overharvested and the cultivation of this plant needs 4–6 years, the production of the pharmacologically important compounds in in vitro cultures could be an alternative. In the work presented here, the production of these glycosides in compact callus aggregate cultures of roseroot was addressed. Biotransformation of exogenously added cinnamylalcohol and tyrosol was studied. Glucosylation of the precursors yielded high amounts of rosin and salidroside and low amounts of rosavin. During the course of this work, four new glycosides of cinnamyl alcohol were found and identified. The optimal concentration of the precursors and the time needed for the biotransformation was also determined. For enhancing the biotransformation rate, glucose was added to the culture medium alongside with sucrose, which doubled the production of cinnamyl alcohol glycosides but did not affect the production of salidroside. A pilot experiment using air-lift bioreactor was performed. A cDNA fragment encoding tyrosine decarboxylase was isolated and described. The expression of this gene was analysed in the leaves and roots of two chemotypes. The results demonstrate the important role of tyrosine decarboxylase in the production of salidroside. The results revealed production of the pharmacologically important glycosides of Rhodiola rosea; however the successful pilot bioreactor experiment remains to be scaled-up. New information was obtained on the biosynthesis of salidroside, which substantiate the metabolic engineering of roseroot.
author György, Z. (Zsuzsanna)
author_facet György, Z. (Zsuzsanna)
author_sort György, Z. (Zsuzsanna)
title Glycoside production by in vitro <em>Rhodiola rosea</em> cultures
title_short Glycoside production by in vitro <em>Rhodiola rosea</em> cultures
title_full Glycoside production by in vitro <em>Rhodiola rosea</em> cultures
title_fullStr Glycoside production by in vitro <em>Rhodiola rosea</em> cultures
title_full_unstemmed Glycoside production by in vitro <em>Rhodiola rosea</em> cultures
title_sort glycoside production by in vitro <em>rhodiola rosea</em> cultures
publisher University of Oulu
publishDate 2006
url http://urn.fi/urn:isbn:9514280806
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:9514280806
work_keys_str_mv AT gyorgyzzsuzsanna glycosideproductionbyinvitroemrhodiolaroseaemcultures
_version_ 1718554129787256832