| Literature DB >> 25422499 |
Lara Lombardi1, Laia Arrom2, Lorenzo Mariotti1, Riccardo Battelli3, Piero Picciarelli3, Peter Kille4, Tony Stead5, Sergi Munné-Bosch6, Hilary J Rogers7.
Abstract
Petal wilting and/or abscission terminates the life of the flower. However, how wilting and abscission are coordinated is not fully understood. There is wide variation in the extent to which petals wilt before abscission, even between cultivars of the same species. For example, tepals of Lilium longiflorum wilt substantially, while those of the closely related Lilium longiflorum×Asiatic hybrid (L.A.) abscise turgid. Furthermore, close comparison of petal death in these two Lilium genotypes shows that there is a dramatic fall in fresh weight/dry weight accompanied by a sharp increase in ion leakage in late senescent L. longiflorum tepals, neither of which occur in Lilium L.A. Despite these differences, a putative abscission zone was identified in both lilies, but while the detachment force was reduced to zero in Lilium L.A., wilting of the fused tepals in L. longiflorum occurred before abscission was complete. Abscission is often negatively regulated by auxin, and the possible role of auxin in regulating tepal abscission relative to wilting was tested in the two lilies. There was a dramatic increase in auxin levels with senescence in L. longiflorum but not in Lilium L.A. Fifty auxin-related genes were expressed in early senescent L. longiflorum tepals including 12 ARF-related genes. In Arabidopsis, several ARF genes are involved in the regulation of abscission. Expression of a homologous transcript to Arabidopsis ARF7/19 was 8-fold higher during senescence in L. longiflorum compared with abscising Lilium L.A., suggesting a conserved role for auxin-regulated abscission in monocotyledonous ethylene-insensitive flowers.Entities:
Keywords: ARF transcription factors; Abscission zone; IAA; Lilium longiflorum; floral senescence; transcriptome.
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25422499 PMCID: PMC4321550 DOI: 10.1093/jxb/eru451
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Bot ISSN: 0022-0957 Impact factor: 6.992
Fig. 3.Detachment of tepals in the two lily genotypes. (A) Outside of the corolla base of L. longiflorum at FB, ES, FS, and beyond. (B, C) Force (g) required to remove the corolla of L. longiflorum (B) at each stage (the force required at CB and FB could not be determined as the corolla tissue tore) plus at 1 and 2 d following the FS stage, and in Lilium L.A. (C) (again detachability could not be determined at CB and the value for FB was determined only from those that detached and may represent a considerable underestimate as n<10; in Lilium L.A., by FS the tepals had abscised naturally. Values are means±SE with n≥10 unless otherwise stated.
Fig. 1.Floral senescence progression in L. longiflorum and Lilium L.A. (A) Equivalent stages based on floral development and signs of visible senescence defined by Battelli and Arrom et al. (2012). CB, closed bud; FB, full bloom; ES, early senescence; FS, full senescence. (B, C) Changes in FW/DW (B) ion leakage (C), and protein content (D) with senescence in the outer tepals of the two genotypes. Results are means±standard error (SE), n=20. Asterisks indicate significant differences between the two genotypes at each stage as determined by Student’s t-test: ***P<0.001.
Fig. 2.The AZ in L. longiflorum and Lilium L.A. (A–C) Transverse section across a young flower of L. longiflorum ‘White Heaven’ (A) showing the central ovary (Ov), anthers (An), and inner (I) and outer (O) tepals. The margins of the outer tepals are fused with the midrib of the inner tepals (arrows), which are shown on the outside in (B) and at higher magnification in (C). (D–F) Longitudinal section through the corolla base of L. longiflorum, at FB (D, E) and at ES (F). (G, H) Longitudinal section through the corolla base of Lilium L.A. at FB (G) and at ES (H).
Fig. 4.Concentrations of endogenous free and conjugated IAA in the outer tepals of control and NPA-treated (50 µM) flowers. (A) L. longiflorum and (B) Lilium L.A. at stages defined in Fig. 1. Results are means±SE, n=10. Asterisks indicate significant differences between the two genotypes at each stage as determined by Student’s t-test: **P<0.05; ***P<0.001.
L. longiflorum petal unigenes showing homology to genes with auxin-related functions
| Lily contig | Accession code | Match on nr database | E-value |
|---|---|---|---|
| 651 | A2YG67 | Auxin response factor 17 | 0 |
| 1348 | Q653U3 | Auxin response factor 17 | 6E–11 |
| 1628 | Q9XED8 | Auxin response factor 9 | 3E–32 |
| 2468 | Q9XED8 | Auxin response factor 9 | 3E–83 |
| 5803 | Q6YZW0 | Auxin response factor 21 | 2E–10 |
| 6507 | Q9ZTX9 | Auxin response factor 4 | 2E–28 |
| 7111 | Q0D9R7 | Auxin response factor 19 | 5E–60 |
| 8123 | Q0DGS1 | Auxin response factor 14 | 6E–16 |
| 9023 | Q9ZPY6 | Auxin response factor 11 | 3E–13 |
| 10581 | Q653U3 | Auxin response factor 17 | 3E–12 |
| 11452 | Q5JK20 | Auxin response factor 4 | 4E–25 |
| 11651 | Q653H7 | Auxin response factor | 3E–32 |
| 2713 | B9G2A8 | Auxin transport protein BIG | 0 |
| 3454 | Q96247 | Auxin transporter protein 1 | 1E–115 |
| 7797 | Q9FEL6 | Auxin transporter-like protein 3 | 3E–83 |
| 6782 | Q5SMQ9 | Auxin efflux carrier component | 9E–12 |
| 4681 | Q94BT2 | Auxin-induced in root cultures | 2E–28 |
| 5083 | Q6J163 | Auxin-induced protein 5NG4 | 2E–23 |
| 10928 | Q6J163 | Auxin-induced protein 5NG4 | 5E–10 |
| 32 | Q6J163 | Auxin-induced protein 5NG4 | 3E–21 |
| 9356 | Q6J163 | Auxin-induced protein 5NG4 | 2E–31 |
| 4137 | Q6J163 | Auxin-induced protein 5NG4 | 9E–34 |
| 3596 | Q6J163 | Auxin-induced protein 5NG4 | 3E–35 |
| 3456 | Q6J163 | Auxin-induced protein 5NG4 | 6E–46 |
| 1865 | Q6J163 | Auxin-induced protein 5NG4 | 3E–52 |
| 1341 | Q6J163 | Auxin-induced protein 5NG4 | 1E–57 |
| 5697 | Q6J163 | Auxin-induced protein 5NG4 | 1E–77 |
| 7896 | P33083 | Auxin-induced protein 6B | 3E–09 |
| 5806 | P40691 | Auxin-induced protein PCNT115 | 3E–20 |
| 1364 | P40691 | Auxin-induced protein PCNT115 | 6E–65 |
| 949 | Q05349 | Auxin-repressed 12.5kDa protein | 2E–16 |
| 7600 | Q5VRD1 | Auxin-responsive protein IAA1 | 8E–21 |
| 2243 | Q5VRD1 | Auxin-responsive protein IAA1 | 5E–43 |
| 4986 | Q6AT10 | Auxin-responsive protein IAA15 | 2E–17 |
| 2817 | Q5Z749 | Auxin-responsive protein IAA21 | 2E–33 |
| 3836 | Q9ZSY8 | Auxin-responsive protein IAA27 | 9E–33 |
| 8767 | P0C132 | Auxin-responsive protein IAA30 | 5E–10 |
| 3951 | P0C132 | Auxin-responsive protein IAA30 | 1E–42 |
| 1293 | Q6H543 | Auxin-responsive protein IAA7 | 4E–21 |
| 3646 | P32295 | IAA-induced protein ARG7 | 0.000002 |
| 5808 | P32295 | IAA -induced protein ARG7 | 7E–07 |
| 2930 | P32295 | IAA -induced protein ARG7 | 3E–09 |
| 2438 | Q67UL3 | Probable auxin efflux carrier component 1c | 5E–82 |
| 3338 | Q9LW29 | AUXIN SIGNALING F-BOX 2 | 0.000006 |
| 9124 | Q9LW29 | AUXIN SIGNALING F-BOX 2 | 0.000009 |
| 12877 | Q9LW29 | AUXIN SIGNALING F-BOX 2 | 2E–11 |
| 11286 | Q9LW29 | AUXIN SIGNALING F-BOX 2 | 9E–12 |
| 1440 | Q9LW29 | AUXIN SIGNALING F-BOX 2 | 1E–171 |
| 12808 | Q9LPW7 | AUXIN SIGNALING F-BOX 3 | 5E–26 |
| 7557 | Q0DKP3 | Transport inhibitor response 1-like protein | 1E–55 |
Fig. 5.Relative expression of ARF-like genes by real time RT-PCR. Transcript levels of the ARF6/8-like gene (A, B) and the ARF7/19-like gene (C, D) in L. longiflorum (A, C) and Lilium L.A. (B, D) at the stages defined in Fig 1. Results are means±SE, n=10. Different letters indicate significant differences among stages as determined by one-way analysis of variance.
Free IAA content across petals of the two genotypes at FSLetters indicate a significant differences between control and treatment (P<0.05).
| IAA (ng g–1 DW) |
|
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Control | NPA | Control | NPA | |
| Tip | 341±9 a | 262±7 b | 55±0.2 a | 40±0.8 b |
| Middle | 612±8.8 a | 314±4.3 b | 122±3.5 a | 48±0.01 b |
| Base | 504±3.6 a | 572±11 b | 125±1.3 a | 140±0.9 b |
Fig. 6.Relative expression of APP1-like and AUX1-like genes by real-time RT-PCR. Transcript levels in L. longiflorum (A, C) and in Lilium L.A. (B, D) at the stages defined in Fig 1. Results are means±SE, n=10. Different letters indicate significant differences among stages as determined by one-way analysis of variance.