A carotenoid oxygenase is responsible for muscle coloration in scallop

Xue Li(Ocean University of China), Shuyue Wang(Ocean University of China), Xiaogang Xun(Ocean University of China), Mengran Zhang(Ocean University of China), Shi Wang(Ocean University of China), Hengde Li(Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences), Liang Zhao(Qingdao National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology), Qiang Fu(Ocean University of China), Huizhen Wang(Ocean University of China), Tingting Li(Ocean University of China), Shanshan Lian(Ocean University of China), Qiang Xing(Ocean University of China), Xu Li(Ocean University of China), Wei Wu(Ocean University of China), Lingling Zhang(Qingdao National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology), Xiaoli Hu(Ocean University of China), Zhenmin Bao(Qingdao National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology)
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Molecular and Cell Biology of Lipids
March 8, 2019
Cited by 56Open Access
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Abstract

As lipid microconstituents mainly of plant origin, carotenoids are essential nutrients for humans and animals, and carotenoid coloration represents an important meat quality parameter for many farmed animals. Currently, the mechanism of carotenoid bioavailability in animals is largely unknown mainly due to the limited approaches applied, the shortage of suitable model systems and the restricted taxonomic focus. The mollusk Yesso scallop (Patinopecten yessoensis) possessing orange adductor muscle with carotenoid deposition, provides a unique opportunity to research the mechanism underlying carotenoid utilization in animals. Herein, through family construction and analysis, we found that carotenoid coloration in scallop muscle is inherited as a recessive Mendelian trait. Using a combination of genomic approaches, we mapped this trait onto chromosome 8, where PyBCO-like 1 encoding carotenoid oxygenase was the only differentially expressed gene between the white and orange muscles (FDR = 2.75E-21), with 11.28-fold downregulation in the orange muscle. Further functional assays showed that PyBCO-like 1 is capable of degrading β-carotene, and inhibiting PyBCO-like 1 expression in the white muscle resulted in muscle coloration and carotenoid deposition. In the hepatopancreas, which is the organ for digestion and absorption, neither the scallop carotenoid concentration nor PyBCO-like 1 expression were significantly different between the two scallops. These results indicate that carotenoids could be taken up in both white- and orange-muscle scallops and then degraded by PyBCO-like 1 in the white muscle. Our data suggest that PyBCO-like 1 is the essential gene for carotenoid metabolism in scallop muscle, and its downregulation leads to carotenoid deposition and muscle coloration.


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