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Dissecting the mechanism of Solanum lycopersicum and Solanum chilense flower colour formation
Author(s) -
Gao M.,
Qu H.,
Gao L.,
Chen L.,
Sebastian R. S. J.,
Zhao L.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
plant biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.871
H-Index - 87
eISSN - 1438-8677
pISSN - 1435-8603
DOI - 10.1111/plb.12186
Subject(s) - biology , solanum , carotenoid , petal , lutein , chromoplast , orange (colour) , neoxanthin , botany , lycopene , solanaceae , gene , biochemistry , plastid , horticulture , chloroplast , zeaxanthin
Flowers are the defining feature of angiosperms, and function as indispensable organs for sexual reproduction. Flower colour typically plays an important role in attracting pollinators, and can show considerable variation, even between closely related species. For example, domesticated tomato ( S. lycopersicum ) has orange/yellow flowers, while the wild relative S. chilense (accession LA 2405) has bright yellow flowers. In this study, the mechanism of flower colour formation in these two species was compared by evaluating the accumulation of carotenoids, assessing the expression genes related to carotenoid biosynthetic pathways and observing chromoplast ultrastructure. In S. chilense petals, genes associated with the lutein branch of the carotenoid biosynthetic pathway, phytoene desaturase ( PDS ), ζ‐carotene desaturase ( ZDS ), lycopene β‐cyclase ( LCY ‐B ), β‐ring hydroxylase ( CRTR ‐B ) and ε‐ring hydroxylase ( CRTR ‐E ), were highly expressed, and this was correlated with high levels of lutein accumulation. In contrast, PDS , ZDS and CYC ‐B from the neoxanthin biosynthetic branch were highly expressed in S. lycopersicum anthers, leading to increased β‐carotene accumulation and hence an orange/yellow colour. Changes in the size, amount and electron density of plastoglobules in chromoplasts provided further evidence of carotenoid accumulation and flower colour formation. Taken together, these results reveal the biochemical basis of differences in carotenoid pigment accumulation and colour between petals and anthers in tomato.