| Literature DB >> 33247457 |
Jiafa Wang1, Guobin Li1, Changxing Li1, Chunli Zhang1, Long Cui1, Guo Ai1, Xin Wang1, Fangyan Zheng1, Dedi Zhang1, Robert M Larkin1, Zhibiao Ye1, Junhong Zhang1.
Abstract
NF-Y transcription factors are reported to play diverse roles in a wide range of biological processes in plants. However, only a few active NF-Y complexes are known in plants and the precise functions of NF-Y complexes in flavonoid biosynthesis have not been determined. Using various molecular, genetic and biochemical approaches, we found that NF-YB8a, NF-YB8b and NF-YB8c - a NF-YB subgroup - can interact with a specific subgroup of NF-YC and then recruit either of two distinct NF-YAs to form NF-Y complexes that bind the CCAAT element in the CHS1 promoter. Furthermore, suppressing the expression of particular NF-YB genes increased the levels of H3K27me3 at the CHS1 locus and significantly suppressed the expression of CHS1 during tomato fruit ripening, which led to the development of pink-coloured fruit with colourless peels. Altogether, by demonstrating that NF-Y transcription factors play essential roles in flavonoid biosynthesis and by providing significant molecular insight into the regulatory mechanisms that drive the development of pink-coloured tomato fruit, we provide a major advance to our fundamental knowledge and information that has considerable practical value for horticulture.Entities:
Keywords: NF-Y transcription factor; chalcone synthase; flavonoid; fruit peel; histone modification; tomato (Solanum lycopersicum)
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33247457 DOI: 10.1111/nph.17112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: New Phytol ISSN: 0028-646X Impact factor: 10.151