| Literature DB >> 33790233 |
Haoliang Wan1, Hongbo Liu2, Jingyu Zhang1, Yi Lyu3, Zhuoran Li1, Yizhong He1, Xiaoliang Zhang1, Xiuxin Deng1, Yariv Brotman4, Alisdair R Fernie5, Yunjiang Cheng6, Weiwei Wen7.
Abstract
Both cuticle and membrane lipids play essential roles in quality maintenance and disease resistance in fresh fruits. Many reports have indicated the modification of alternative branch pathways in epicuticular wax mutants; however, the specific alterations concerning lipids have not been clarified thus far. Here, we conducted a comprehensive, time-resolved lipidomic, and transcriptomic analysis on the "Newhall" navel orange (WT) and its glossy mutant (MT) "Gannan No. 1". The results revealed severely suppressed wax formation accompanied by significantly elevated production of 36-carbon plastid lipids with increasing fruit maturation in MT. Transcriptomics analysis further identified a series of key functional enzymes and transcription factors putatively involved in the biosynthesis pathways of wax and membrane lipids. Moreover, the high accumulation of jasmonic acid (JA) in MT was possibly due to the need to maintain plastid lipid homeostasis, as the expression levels of two significantly upregulated lipases (CsDAD1 and CsDALL2) were positively correlated with plastid lipids and characterized to hydrolyze plastid lipids to increase the JA content. Our results will provide new insights into the molecular mechanisms underlying the natural variation of plant lipids to lay a foundation for the quality improvement of citrus fruit.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33790233 DOI: 10.1038/s41438-020-0262-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hortic Res ISSN: 2052-7276 Impact factor: 6.793