Abscisic acid regulates anthocyanin biosynthesis and gene expression associated with cell wall modification in ripening bilberry (vaccinium myrtillus l.) fruits
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/14138Dato
2018-08-29Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Ripening of non-climacteric bilberry (Vaccinium myrtillus L.) fruit is characterized by a
high accumulation of health-beneficial anthocyanins. Plant hormone abscisic acid (ABA)
and sucrose have been shown to be among the central signaling molecules coordinating
non-climacteric fruit ripening and anthocyanin accumulation in some fruits such as
strawberry. Our earlier studies have demonstrated an elevation in endogenous ABA
level in bilberry fruit at the onset of ripening indicating a role for ABA in the regulation of
bilberry fruit ripening. In the present study, we show that the treatment of unripe green
bilberry fruits with exogenous ABA significantly promotes anthocyanin biosynthesis
and accumulation both in fruits attached and detached to the plant. In addition,
ABA biosynthesis inhibitor, fluridone, delayed anthocyanin accumulation in bilberries.
Exogenous ABA also induced the expression of several genes involved in cell wall
modification in ripening bilberry fruits. Furthermore, silencing of VmNCED1, the key gene
in ABA biosynthesis, was accompanied by the down-regulation in the expression of key
anthocyanin biosynthetic genes. In contrast, the treatment of unripe green bilberry fruits
with exogenous sucrose or glucose did not lead to an enhancement in the anthocyanin
accumulation neither in fruits attached to plant nor in post-harvest fruits. Moreover,
sugars failed to induce the expression of genes associated in anthocyanin biosynthesis
or ABA biosynthesis while could elevate expression of some genes associated with
cell wall modification in post-harvest bilberry fruits. Our results demonstrate that ABA
plays a major role in the regulation of ripening-related processes such as anthocyanin
biosynthesis and cell wall modification in bilberry fruit, whereas sugars seem to have
minor regulatory roles in the processes. The results indicate that the regulation of bilberry
fruit ripening differs from strawberry that is currently considered as a model of nonclimacteric
fruit ripening. In this study, we also identified transcription factors, which
expression was enhanced by ABA, as potential regulators of ABA-mediated bilberry
fruit ripening processes.
Beskrivelse
Source at: http://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2018.01259