| Literature DB >> 24795731 |
Paolo Pesaresi1, Chiara Mizzotti1, Monica Colombo2, Simona Masiero1.
Abstract
Fruits are an important evolutionary acquisition of angiosperms, which afford protection for seeds and ensure their optimal dispersal in the environment. Fruits can be divided into dry or fleshy. Dry fruits are the more ancient and provide for mechanical seed dispersal. In contrast, fleshy fruits develop soft tissues in which flavor compounds and pigments accumulate during the ripening process. These serve to attract animals that eat them and disseminate the indigestible seeds. Fruit maturation is accompanied by several striking cytological modifications. In particular, plastids undergo significant structural alterations, including the dedifferentiation of chloroplasts into chromoplasts. Chloroplast biogenesis, their remodeling in response to environmental constraints and their conversion into alternative plastid types are known to require communication between plastids and the nucleus in order to coordinate the expression of their respective genomes. In this review, we discuss the role of plastid modifications in the context of fruit maturation and ripening, and consider the possible involvement of organelle-nucleus crosstalk via retrograde (plastid to nucleus) and anterograde (nucleus to plastid) signaling in the process.Entities:
Keywords: fruit development; plastid; retrograde and anterograde signaling; ripening; tomato
Year: 2014 PMID: 24795731 PMCID: PMC4006027 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2014.00124
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Mutations associated with defects in fruit maturation and ripening.
| Tomato fruit mutants | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Mutant | Phenotype/tissues affected | Reference | Gene product |
| Flower meristem and inner whorl fate determination | MADS-box transcription factor | ||
| Chlorophyll and carotenoid accumulation | MADS-box transcription factor | ||
| Plastids present in the collenchyma of the exocarp | |||
| Ripening delay | MADS-box transcription factor | ||
| Sepal development | MADS-box transcription factor | ||
| Abscission zone formation | MADS-box transcription factor | ||
| Ripening delay | Ethylene receptor | ||
| Ripening delay | SBP transcription factor | ||
| Regulation of carotenoid and chlorophyll metabolism | AP2 transcription factor | ||
| Parthenocarpy | Auxin-responsive factor 7 | ||
| Ripening delay | RTE-like proteins | ||
Relative expression levels of the putative homologs of Arabidopsis anterograde and retrograde factors in developing tomato fruit.