Department of Botany and Plant Biology, University of Geneva, 1211 Geneva, Switzerland.
Plant Cell. 2012 Feb;24(2):395-414. doi: 10.1105/tpc.111.093120. Epub 2012 Feb 28.
The term vitamin describes a small group of organic compounds that are absolutely required in the human diet. Although for the most part, dependency criteria are met in developed countries through balanced diets, this is not the case for the five billion people in developing countries who depend predominantly on a single staple crop for survival. Thus, providing a more balanced vitamin intake from high-quality food remains one of the grandest challenges for global human nutrition in the coming decade(s). Here, we describe the known importance of vitamins in human health and current knowledge on their metabolism in plants. Deficits in developing countries are a combined consequence of a paucity of specific vitamins in major food staple crops, losses during crop processing, and/or overreliance on a single species as a primary food source. We discuss the role that plant science can play in addressing this problem and review successful engineering of vitamin pathways. We conclude that while considerable advances have been made in understanding vitamin metabolic pathways in plants, more cross-disciplinary approaches must be adopted to provide adequate levels of all vitamins in the major staple crops to eradicate vitamin deficiencies from the global population.
术语“维生素”描述了一小类有机化合物,这些化合物在人类饮食中是绝对必需的。尽管在大多数情况下,通过均衡饮食,发达国家已经满足了依赖标准,但对于依赖单一主食生存的发展中国家的 50 亿人口来说,情况并非如此。因此,提供更均衡的维生素摄入来源,来自高质量的食物仍然是未来十年全球人类营养的最大挑战之一。在这里,我们描述了维生素在人类健康中的已知重要性,以及目前对其在植物中代谢的了解。发展中国家的不足是由于主要粮食作物中缺乏特定维生素、作物加工过程中的损失以及/或过度依赖单一物种作为主要食物来源的综合结果。我们讨论了植物科学在解决这个问题中可以发挥的作用,并回顾了维生素途径的成功工程。我们的结论是,尽管在理解植物中维生素代谢途径方面已经取得了相当大的进展,但必须采取更多的跨学科方法,为主要主食作物提供所有维生素的足够水平,以消除全球人口的维生素缺乏症。