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1.
Plant Physiol Biochem ; 214: 108923, 2024 Jul 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39002308

ABSTRACT

Jasmonates are growth regulators that play a key role in flower development, fruit ripening, root growth, and plant defence. The study explores the coordination of floral organ maturation to ensure proper flower opening for pollination and fertilization. A new mutant (jar1b) was discovered, lacking petal elongation and flower opening but showing normal pistil and stamen development, leading to parthenocarpic fruit development. The mutation also enhanced the elongation of roots while reducing the formation of root hairs. BSA sequencing showed that jar1b is a missense mutation in the gene CpJAR1B, which encodes the enzyme that catalyzes the conjugation between JA and the amino acid isoleucine. The loss of function mutation in CpJAR1B produced a deficiency in biologically active (+) -7-iso-jasmonoyl-L-isoleucine (JA-Ile), which was not complemented by the paralogous gene CpJAR1A or any other redundant gene. Exogenous application of methyl jasmonate (MeJA) demonstrated that jar1b is partially insensitive to JA in both flowers and roots. Further experimentation involving the combination of JA-Ile deficient and ethylene-deficient, and ET insensitive mutations in double mutants revealed that CpJAR1B mediated ET action in female petal maturation and flower opening, but JA and ET have independent additive effects as negative regulators of the set and development of squash fruits. CpJAR1B also regulated the aperture of male flowers in an ethylene-independent manner. The root phenotype of jar1b and effects of external MeJA treatments indicated that CpJAR1B has a dual role in root development, inhibiting the elongation of primary and secondary roots, but promoting the formation of root hairs.

2.
Hortic Res ; 11(6): uhae115, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38919554

ABSTRACT

In monoecious species, female flowering constitutes the developmental process that determines the onset and production of fruit and is therefore closely related to crop yield. This article presents the identification and phenotypic and molecular characterization of myb62, an ethylmethane sulfonate loss-of-function mutation that completely blocks the female floral transition, converting all female flowers into male flowers. BSA-seq analysis coupled with WGS showed that myb62 corresponds to a C>T transition in the coding region of the gene CpMYB62, generating a premature stop codon and a truncated transcription factor without its N-terminal effector domain. The myb62 phenotype was partially rescued by exogenous ethylene application, indicating that the function of CpMYB62 is mediated by ethylene. Different evidence supports this conclusion: first, the reduced ethylene production of the mutant, and second, the male flower productive phenotype of the double mutant between myb62 and the ethylene-insensitive mutant etr2b, which demonstrated that myb62 is epistatic over etr2b. Furthermore, transcriptomic analysis of WT and myb62 apical shoots confirmed that CpMYB62 regulates master sex-determining genes, upregulating those encoding the ethylene biosynthesis enzymes CpACO2B and CpACS27A and those encoding for transcription factors that promote the development of carpels(CpCRC), but downregulating those involved in the arrest of carpels (CpWIP1), In the gene network controlling sex determination in cucurbits, CpMYB62 occupies the most upstream position, activating ethylene and other sex determining genes involved in female flower determination in Cucurbita  pepo.

3.
Hortic Res ; 11(4): uhae050, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38645681

ABSTRACT

A Cucurbita pepo mutant with multiple defects in growth and development has been identified and characterized. The mutant dwfcp displayed a dwarf phenotype with dark green and shrinking leaves, shortened internodes and petioles, shorter but thicker roots and greater root biomass, and reduced fertility. The causal mutation of the phenotype was found to disrupt gene Cp4.1LG17g04540, the squash orthologue of the Arabidopsis brassinosteroid (BR) biosynthesis gene DWF5, encoding for 7-dehydrocholesterol reductase. A single nucleotide transition (G > A) causes a splicing defect in intron 6 that leads to a premature stop codon and a truncated CpDWF5 protein. The mutation co-segregated with the dwarf phenotype in a large BC1S1 segregating population. The reduced expression of CpDWF5 and brassinolide (BL) content in most mutant organs, and partial rescue of the mutant phenotype by exogenous application of BL, showed that the primary cause of the dwarfism in dwfcp is a BR deficiency. The results showed that in C. pepo, CpDWF5 is not only a positive growth regulator of different plant organs but also a negative regulator of salt tolerance. During germination and the early stages of seedling development, the dwarf mutant was less affected by salt stress than the wild type, concomitantly with a greater upregulation of genes associated with salt tolerance, including those involved in abscisic acid (ABA) biosynthesis, ABA and Ca2+ signaling, and those coding for cation exchangers and transporters.

4.
BMC Genomics ; 25(1): 268, 2024 Mar 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38468207

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The core regulation of the abscisic acid (ABA) signalling pathway comprises the multigenic families PYL, PP2C, and SnRK2. In this work, we conducted a genome-wide study of the components of these families in Cucurbita pepo. RESULTS: The bioinformatic analysis of the C. pepo genome resulted in the identification of 19 CpPYL, 102 CpPP2C and 10 CpSnRK2 genes. The investigation of gene structure and protein motifs allowed to define 4 PYL, 13 PP2C and 3 SnRK2 subfamilies. RNA-seq analysis was used to determine the expression of these gene families in different plant organs, as well as to detect their differential gene expression during germination, and in response to ABA and cold stress in leaves. The specific tissue expression of some gene members indicated the relevant role of some ABA signalling genes in plant development. Moreover, their differential expression under ABA treatment or cold stress revealed those ABA signalling genes that responded to ABA, and those that were up- or down-regulated in response to cold stress. A reduced number of genes responded to both treatments. Specific PYL-PP2C-SnRK2 genes that had potential roles in germination were also detected, including those regulated early during the imbibition phase, those regulated later during the embryo extension and radicle emergence phase, and those induced or repressed during the whole germination process. CONCLUSIONS: The outcomes of this research open new research lines for agriculture and for assessing gene function in future studies.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis Proteins , Cucurbita , Abscisic Acid/pharmacology , Abscisic Acid/metabolism , Cucurbita/genetics , Cucurbita/metabolism , Genome-Wide Association Study , Plants/genetics , Cold-Shock Response , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics
5.
J Exp Bot ; 75(7): 1948-1966, 2024 Mar 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38066672

ABSTRACT

The sex determination process in cucurbits involves the control of stamen or carpel development during the specification of male or female flowers from a bisexual floral meristem, a function coordinated by ethylene. A gain-of-function mutation in the miR164-binding site of CpCUC2B, ortholog of the Arabidopsis transcription factor gene CUC2, not only produced ectopic floral meristems and organs, but also suppressed the development of carpels and promoted the development of stamens. The cuc2b mutation induced the transcription of CpCUC2B in the apical shoots of plants after female flowering but repressed other CUC genes regulated by miR164, suggesting a conserved functional redundancy of these genes in the development of squash flowers. The synergistic androecious phenotype of the double mutant between cuc2b and etr2b, an ethylene-insensitive mutation that enhances the production of male flowers, demonstrated that CpCUC2B arrests the development of carpels independently of ethylene and CpWIP1B. The transcriptional regulation of CpCUC1, CpCUC2, and ethylene genes in cuc2b and ethylene mutants also confirms this conclusion. However, the epistasis of cuc2b over aco1a, a mutation that suppresses stamen arrest in female flowers, and the down-regulation of CpACS27A in cuc2b female apical shoots, indicated that CpCUC2B promotes stamen development by suppressing the late ethylene production.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis , Cucurbita , Cucurbita/genetics , Arabidopsis/genetics , Ethylenes , Flowers , Transcription Factors/metabolism , Mutation , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Meristem
6.
Int J Mol Sci ; 24(24)2023 Dec 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38139023

ABSTRACT

In the monoecious Cucurbita pepo, the transition to female flowering is the time at which the plant starts the production of female flowers after an initial male phase of development. Ethylene plays an essential role in this process since some ethylene deficient and ethylene-insensitive mutants are androecious and only produce male flowers. To gain insight into the molecular mechanisms regulating the specification and early development of female flowers, we have compared the transcriptomic changes occurring in the shoot apices of WT and androecious ethylene-insensitive etr1b mutant plants upon female flowering transition. There were 1160 female flowering-specific DEGs identified in WT plants upon female flowering, and 284 of them were found to be modulated by the ethylene-insensitive etr1b mutation. The function of these DEGs indicated that female flower specification depends on the adoption of a transcriptional program that includes previously identified sex-determining genes in the ethylene pathway, but also genes controlling the biosynthesis and signaling pathways of other phytohormones, and those encoding for many different transcription factors. The transcriptomic changes suggested that gibberellins play a negative role in female flowering, while ethylene, auxins, ABA and cytokinins are positive regulators. Transcription factors from 34 families, including NAC, ERF, bHLH, bZIP, MYB and C2H2/CH3, were found to be regulating female flowering in an ethylene-dependent or -independent manner. Our data open a new perspective of the molecular mechanisms that control the specification and development of female flowers in C. pepo.


Subject(s)
Cucurbita , Humans , Plant Growth Regulators/metabolism , Ethylenes/metabolism , RNA-Seq , Flowers , Transcription Factors/genetics , Transcription Factors/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant
7.
Plant Sci ; 336: 111853, 2023 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37659732

ABSTRACT

The squash gain-of-function mutant etr2b disrupts the ethylene-binding domain of ethylene receptor CpETR2B, conferring partial ethylene insensitivity, changes in flower and fruit development, and enhanced salt tolerance. In this paper, we found that etr2b also confers a growth advantage as well as a physiological and metabolomic response that make the mutant better adapted to drought. Mutant plants had a higher root and leaf biomass than WT under both well-watered and drought conditions, but the reduction in growth parameters in response to drought was similar in WT and etr2b. Water deficit reduced all gas-exchange parameters in both WT and etr2b, but under moderate drought the mutant increased photosynthesis rate in comparison with control conditions, and showed a higher leaf CO2 concentration, transpiration rate, and stomata conductance than WT. The response of etr2b to drought indicates that ethylene is a negative regulator of plant growth under both control and drought. Since etr2b increased ABA content in well-watered plant, but prevented the induction of ABA production in response to drought, it is likely that the etr2b response under drought is not mediated by ABA. A 1H NMR metabolomic analysis revealed that etr2b enhances the accumulation of osmolytes (soluble sugars and trigonelline), unsaturated and polyunsaturated fatty acids, and phenolic compounds under drought, concomitantly with a reduction of malic- and fumaric-acid. The role of CpETR2B and ethylene in the regulation of these drought-protective metabolites is discussed.


Subject(s)
Droughts , Plant Leaves , Plant Leaves/metabolism , Water/metabolism , Ethylenes/metabolism , Stress, Physiological/physiology , Abscisic Acid/metabolism
8.
Antioxidants (Basel) ; 12(1)2023 Jan 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36671073

ABSTRACT

Reports show that phytohormone abscisic acid (ABA) is involved in reducing zucchini postharvest chilling injury. During the storage of harvested fruit at low temperatures, chilling injury symptoms were associated with cell damage through the production of reactive oxygen species. In this work, we have studied the importance of different non-enzymatic antioxidants on tolerance to cold stress in zucchini fruit treated with ABA. The application of ABA increases the antioxidant capacity of zucchini fruit during storage through the accumulation of ascorbate, carotenoids and polyphenolic compounds. The quantification of specific phenols was performed by UPLC/MS-MS, observing that exogenous ABA mainly activated the production of flavonoids. The rise in all these non-enzymatic antioxidants due to ABA correlates with a reduction in oxidative stress in treated fruit during cold stress. The results showed that the ABA mainly induces antioxidant metabolism during the first day of exposure to low temperatures, and this response is key to avoiding the occurrence of chilling injury. This work suggests an important protective role of non-enzymatic antioxidants and polyphenolic metabolism in the prevention of chilling injury in zucchini fruit.

9.
Physiol Plant ; 175(1): e13864, 2023 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36718078

ABSTRACT

The enhanced salt tolerance of squash ethylene-insensitive mutants during germination and early stages of seedling development suggested that abscisic acid (ABA) could mediate this tolerance. To gain insight into the crosstalk between ethylene and ABA in seed germination, the germination rate and early seedling growth of wild type (WT) and ethylene-insensitive etr2b mutant were compared in seeds germinated under water and exogenous ABA treatment. The etr2b seeds germinated earlier than WT under both water and ABA, and the effect of ABA on radicle length and seedling growth of etr2b was lower than in WT, indicating that etr2b is also insensitive to ABA. The comparison of ABA and ethylene contents and ABA and ethylene gene expression profiles in WT and etr2b dry and imbibed seeds in either water, NaCl or ABA demonstrated a clear crosstalk between ethylene and ABA in germination. The expression profiles of ethylene genes in WT and etr2b indicated that the role of ethylene in seed germination does not appear to follow the canonical ethylene signaling pathway. Instead, etr2b reduces ABA content during formation of the seeds (dry seeds) and in response to seed imbibition and germination, which means diminished dormancy in the ethylene mutant. The etr2b mutation downregulated the expression of ABA biosynthesis and signaling genes during germination, demonstrating the positive role of ethylene receptor gene CpETR2B on seed germination and early seedling growth in squash is mediated by ABA. The reduced effect of exogenous ABA on ethylene production and ethylene gene expression in etr2b seeds suggests that this regulation is also dependent on ethylene.


Subject(s)
Abscisic Acid , Cucurbita , Abscisic Acid/metabolism , Germination , Plant Growth Regulators/metabolism , Ethylenes/metabolism , Seedlings/metabolism , Mutation , Seeds , Water/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant
10.
J Exp Bot ; 74(4): 1258-1274, 2023 02 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36453889

ABSTRACT

Jasmonate (JA) has been found to be a relevant hormone in floral development in numerous species, but its function in cucurbit floral development and sex determination is unknown. Crosstalk between JA and ethylene (ET) in the differential regulation of male and female floral development was investigated by using the novel JA-deficient mutant lox3a, and the ET-deficient and -insensitive mutants, aco1a and etr2b, respectively, of Cucurbita pepo. The lox3a mutation suppresses male and female flower opening and induces the development of parthenocarpic fruit. A bulked-segregant analysis coupled with whole genome sequencing and fine mapping approach allowed the identification of lox3a mutation in CpLOX3A, a LIPOXYGENASE gene involved in JA biosynthesis. The reduced JA content and expression of JA-signalling genes in male and female flowers of lox3a, and the rescue of lox3a phenotype by external application of methyl jasmonate (MeJA), demonstrated that JA controls petal elongation and flower opening, as well as fruit abortion in the absence of fertilization. JA also rescued the phenotype of ET mutants aco1a and etr2b, which are both specifically defective in female flower opening and fruit abortion. ET, the sex determining hormone of cucurbits, is induced in female flowers towards anthesis, activating JA production and promoting the aperture of the female flower, and the abortion of the unfertilized ovary. Given the close association between flower closure and parthenocarpic fruit development, we propose that flower opening can act as a switch that triggers fruit set and development in fertilized ovaries, but may alternatively induce the abortion of the unfertilized ovary. Both ET and JA from mature and senescent petals can serve as remote signals that determine the alternative development of the ovary and fruit.


Subject(s)
Cucurbita , Fruit/metabolism , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Ethylenes/metabolism , Flowers , Cyclopentanes/metabolism , Oxylipins/metabolism , Hormones/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant
11.
Front Plant Sci ; 12: 778745, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34950169

ABSTRACT

Cuticle composition is an important economic trait in agriculture, as it is the first protective barrier of the plant against environmental conditions. The main goal of this work was to study the role of the cuticular wax in maintaining the postharvest quality of zucchini fruit, by comparing two commercial varieties with contrasting behavior against low temperatures; the cold-tolerant variety 'Natura', and the cold-sensitive 'Sinatra', as well as 'Sinatra' fruit with induced-chilling tolerance through a preconditioning treatment (15°C for 48 h). The freshly-harvested 'Natura' fruit had a well-detectable cuticle with a significant lower permeability and a subset of 15 up-regulated cuticle-related genes. SEM showed that zucchini epicuticular waxes mainly consisted of round-shaped crystals and clusters of them, and areas with more dense crystal deposition were found in fruit of 'Natura' and of preconditioned 'Sinatra'. The cuticular wax load per surface was higher in 'Natura' than in 'Sinatra' fruit at harvest and after 14 days at 4°C. In addition, total cuticular wax load only increased in 'Natura' and preconditioned 'Sinatra' fruit with cold storage. With respect to the chemical composition of the waxes, the most abundant components were alkanes, in both 'Natura' and 'Sinatra', with similar values at harvest. The total alkane content only increased in 'Natura' fruit and in the preconditioned 'Sinatra' fruit after cold storage, whereas the amount of total acids decreased, with the lowest values observed in the fruit that showed less chilling injury (CI) and weight loss. Two esters were detected, and their content also decreased with the storage in both varieties, with a greater reduction observed in the cold-tolerant variety in response to low temperature. Gene expression analysis showed significant differences between varieties, especially in CpCER1-like and CpCER3-like genes, involved in alkane production, as well as in the transcription factors CpWIN1-like and CpFUL1-like, associated with cuticle development and epidermal wax accumulation in other species. These results suggest an important role of the alkane biosynthetic pathway and cuticle morphology in maintaining the postharvest quality of zucchini fruit during the storage at low temperatures.

12.
Antioxidants (Basel) ; 10(6)2021 Jun 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34199481

ABSTRACT

Cucurbitaceae is one of the most economically important plant families, and includes some worldwide cultivated species like cucumber, melons, and squashes, and some regionally cultivated and feral species that contribute to the human diet. For centuries, cucurbits have been appreciated because of their nutritional value and, in traditional medicine, because of their ability to alleviate certain ailments. Several studies have demonstrated the remarkable contents of valuable compounds in cucurbits, including antioxidants such as polyphenols, flavonoids, and carotenoids, but also tannins and terpenoids, which are abundant. This antioxidant power is beneficial for human health, but also in facing plant diseases and abiotic stresses. This review brings together data on the antioxidant properties of cucurbit species, addressing the genetic and pre- and postharvest factors that regulate the antioxidant content in different plant organs. Environmental conditions, management, storage, and pre- and postharvest treatments influencing the biosynthesis and activity of antioxidants, together with the biodiversity of this family, are determinant in improving the antioxidant potential of this group of species. Plant breeding, as well as the development of innovative biotechnological approaches, is also leading to new possibilities for exploiting cucurbits as functional products.

13.
Hortic Res ; 8(1): 73, 2021 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33790231

ABSTRACT

Abiotic stresses have a negative effect on crop production, affecting both vegetative and reproductive development. Ethylene plays a relevant role in plant response to environmental stresses, but the specific contribution of ethylene biosynthesis and signalling components in the salt stress response differs between Arabidopsis and rice, the two most studied model plants. In this paper, we study the effect of three gain-of-function mutations affecting the ethylene receptors CpETR1B, CpETR1A, and CpETR2B of Cucurbita pepo on salt stress response during germination, seedling establishment, and subsequent vegetative growth of plants. The mutations all reduced ethylene sensitivity, but enhanced salt tolerance, during both germination and vegetative growth, demonstrating that the three ethylene receptors play a positive role in salt tolerance. Under salt stress, etr1b, etr1a, and etr2b germinate earlier than WT, and the root and shoot growth rates of both seedlings and plants were less affected in mutant than in WT. The enhanced salt tolerance response of the etr2b plants was associated with a reduced accumulation of Na+ in shoots and leaves, as well as with a higher accumulation of compatible solutes, including proline and total carbohydrates, and antioxidant compounds, such as anthocyanin. Many membrane monovalent cation transporters, including Na+/H+ and K+/H+ exchangers (NHXs), K+ efflux antiporters (KEAs), high-affinity K+ transporters (HKTs), and K+ uptake transporters (KUPs) were also highly upregulated by salt in etr2b in comparison with WT. In aggregate, these data indicate that the enhanced salt tolerance of the mutant is led by the induction of genes that exclude Na+ in photosynthetic organs, while maintaining K+/Na+ homoeostasis and osmotic adjustment. If the salt response of etr mutants occurs via the ethylene signalling pathway, our data show that ethylene is a negative regulator of salt tolerance during germination and vegetative growth. Nevertheless, the higher upregulation of genes involved in Ca2+ signalling (CpCRCK2A and CpCRCK2B) and ABA biosynthesis (CpNCED3A and CpNCED3B) in etr2b leaves under salt stress likely indicates that the function of ethylene receptors in salt stress response in C. pepo can be mediated by Ca2+ and ABA signalling pathways.

14.
Curr Opin Plant Biol ; 59: 101981, 2021 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33517096

ABSTRACT

Within the Cucurbitaceae family, most of its species develop unisexual female and male flowers, either on the same plant (monoecy) or on different plants (dioecy). As in other plant families, these two sex morphotypes have evolved from hermaphrodite species; however, many evolutionary events have occurred in cucurbits allowing easy conversion from dioecy to monoecy and vice versa. The variability in sex morphotypes is higher in the domesticated species of the family, which together with recent advances in genomics, make cucurbits an ideal model to study the genetic and molecular mechanisms that control sex determination in plants. Conventional studies demonstrated that ethylene was the master regulator of sex determination in cucurbits, although some cultivated species may respond differently to ethylene action. In this article, we survey the new advances in hormonal and genetic control of sex determination in cucurbit species, control which establishes the ethylene biosynthesis and signaling genes as being those that determine the floral meristem towards a male, female or hermaphrodite flower. The interactions between these genes are integrated into a model that explains the occurrence and distribution of unisexal and hermaphrodite flowers within the different sex morphotypes. We underline the significance of this scientific progress with regard to breeding programs for agronomically-important sex-associated traits.


Subject(s)
Flowers , Plant Breeding , Biological Evolution , Ethylenes , Female , Flowers/genetics , Male , Phenotype
15.
Front Plant Sci ; 12: 817922, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35140733

ABSTRACT

A methanesulfonate-generated mutant has been identified in Cucurbita pepo that alters sex determination. The mutation converts female into hermaphrodite flowers and disrupts the growth rate and maturation of petals and carpels, delaying female flower opening, and promoting the growth rate of ovaries and the parthenocarpic development of the fruit. Whole-genome resequencing allowed identification of the causal mutation of the phenotypes as a missense mutation in the coding region of CpACO1A, which encodes for a type I ACO enzyme that shares a high identity with Cucumis sativus CsACO3 and Cucumis melo CmACO1. The so-called aco1a reduced ACO1 activity and ethylene production in the different organs where the gene is expressed, and reduced ethylene sensitivity in flowers. Other sex-determining genes, such as CpACO2B, CpACS11A, and CpACS27A, were differentially expressed in the mutant, indicating that ethylene provided by CpACO1A but also the transcriptional regulation of CpACO1A, CpACO2B, CpACS11A, and CpACS27A are responsible for determining the fate of the floral meristem toward a female flower, promoting the development of carpels and arresting the development of stamens. The positive regulation of ethylene on petal maturation and flower opening can be mediated by inducing the biosynthesis of JA, while its negative control on ovary growth and fruit set could be mediated by its repressive effect on IAA biosynthesis.

16.
Front Plant Sci ; 11: 1243, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32973825

ABSTRACT

The sexual expression of watermelon plants is the result of the distribution and occurrence of male, female, bisexual and hermaphrodite flowers on the main and secondary stems. Plants can be monoecious (producing male and female flowers), andromonoecious (producing male and hermaphrodite flowers), or partially andromonoecious (producing male, female, bisexual, and hermaphrodite flowers) within the same plant. Sex determination of individual floral buds and the distribution of the different flower types on the plant, are both controlled by ethylene. A single missense mutation in the ethylene biosynthesis gene CitACS4, is able to promote the conversion of female into hermaphrodite flowers, and therefore of monoecy (genotype MM) into partial andromonoecy (genotype Mm) or andromonoecy (genotype mm). We phenotyped and genotyped, for the M/m locus, a panel of 207 C. lanatus accessions, including five inbreds and hybrids, and found several accessions that were repeatedly phenotyped as PA (partially andromonoecious) in several locations and different years, despite being MM. A cosegregation analysis between a SNV in CitACS4 and the PA phenotype, demonstrated that the occurrence of bisexual and hermaphrodite flowers in a PA line is not dependent on CitACS4, but conferred by an unlinked recessive gene which we called pa. Two different approaches were performed to map the pa gene in the genome of C. lanatus: bulk segregant analysis sequencing (BSA-seq) and genome wide association analysis studies (GWAS). The BSA-seq study was performed using two contrasting bulks, the monoecious M-bulk and the partially andromonoecious PA-bulk, each one generated by pooling DNA from 20 F2 plants. For GWAS, 122 accessions from USDA gene bank, already re-sequenced by genotyping by sequencing (GBS), were used. The combination of the two approaches indicates that pa maps onto a genomic region expanding across 32.24-36.44 Mb in chromosome 1 of watermelon. Fine mapping narrowed down the pa locus to a 867 Kb genomic region containing 101 genes. A number of candidate genes were selected, not only for their function in ethylene biosynthesis and signalling as well as their role in flower development and sex determination, but also by the impact of the SNPs and indels differentially detected in the two sequenced bulks.

17.
Plant J ; 103(4): 1548-1560, 2020 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32436252

ABSTRACT

Ethylene is the key regulator of sex determination in monoecious species of the family Cucurbitaceae. This hormone determines which individual floral meristems develop as female or male flowers and the female flowering transition. The sex determination genes discovered so far code for ethylene biosynthesis enzymes, but little is known about the importance of ethylene signaling components. In this paper we characterize two novel ethylene-insensitive mutations (etr1a-1 and etr1b) which block the female flowering transition of Cucurbita pepo; this makes plants produce male flowers indefinitely (androecy). Two missense mutations in the ethylene-binding domain of the ethylene receptors CpETR1A or CpETR1B were identified as the causal mutations of these phenotypes by using whole-genome resequencing. The distinctive phenotypes of single and double mutants for four etr mutations have demonstrated that the final level of ethylene insensitivity depends upon the strength and dosage of mutant alleles for at least three cooperating ETR genes, and that the level of ethylene insensitivity determines the final sex phenotype of the plant. The sex phenotype ranges from monoecy in ethylene-sensitive wild-type plants to androecy in the strongest ethylene-insensitive ones, via andromonoecy in partially ethylene-insensitive plants. The induction of female flowering transition was found to be associated with upregulation of CpACS11, CpACO2 and CpACS27, three ethylene biosynthesis genes required for female flower development. A model is proposed herein, integrating both ethylene biosynthesis and receptor genes into the genetic network which regulates sex determination in C. pepo.


Subject(s)
Cucurbita/growth & development , Flowers/growth & development , Plant Proteins/genetics , Receptors, Cell Surface/genetics , Cucurbita/genetics , Ethylenes/metabolism , Flowers/genetics , Fruit/growth & development , Genes, Plant/genetics , Genes, Plant/physiology , Mutation/genetics , Plant Growth Regulators/metabolism , Plant Proteins/physiology , Receptors, Cell Surface/physiology
18.
J Exp Bot ; 71(1): 154-167, 2020 01 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31562498

ABSTRACT

High-throughput screening of an ethyl methanesulfonate-generated mutant collection of Cucurbita pepo using the ethylene triple-response test resulted in the identification of two semi-dominant ethylene-insensitive mutants: etr1a and etr2b. Both mutations altered sex determination mechanisms, promoting conversion of female into bisexual or hermaphrodite flowers, and monoecy into andromonoecy, thereby delaying the transition to female flowering and reducing the number of pistillate flowers per plant. The mutations also altered the growth rate and maturity of petals and carpels in pistillate flowers, lengthening the time required for flowers to reach anthesis, as well as stimulating the growth rate of ovaries and the parthenocarpic development of fruits. Whole-genome sequencing allowed identification of the causal mutation of the phenotypes as two missense mutations in the coding region of CpETR1A and CpETR2B, each one corresponding to one of the duplicates of ethylene receptor genes highly homologous to Arabidopsis ETR1 and ETR2. The phenotypes of homozygous and heterozygous single- and double-mutant plants indicated that the two ethylene receptors cooperate in the control of the ethylene response. The level of ethylene insensitivity, which was determined by the strength of each mutant allele and the dose of wild-type and mutant etr1a and etr2b alleles, correlated with the degree of phenotypic changes in the mutants.


Subject(s)
Cucurbita/genetics , Flowers/growth & development , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant/physiology , Plant Proteins/genetics , Receptors, Cell Surface/genetics , Cucurbita/growth & development , Flowers/genetics , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Receptors, Cell Surface/metabolism
19.
Plant Physiol Biochem ; 136: 188-195, 2019 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30685698

ABSTRACT

This work examines the effect of a treatment with 1 mM of γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) on zucchini fruit during postharvest cold storage. Specifically, the effect of GABA on postharvest quality was measured, as well as its implication in the GABA shunt and other related metabolic pathways. The treatments were performed in Sinatra, a variety of zucchini highly sensitive to low-temperature storage. The application of GABA improved the quality of zucchini fruit stored at 4 °C, with a reduction of chilling-injury index, weight loss, and cell death, as well as a lower rate of electrolyte leakage. GABA content was significantly higher in the treated fruit than in the control fruit at all times analyzed. At the end of the storage period, GABA-treated fruit had higher contents of both proline and putrescine. The catabolism of this polyamine was not affected by exogenous GABA. Also, over the long term, the treatment induced the GABA shunt by increasing the activities of the enzymes GABA transaminase (GABA-T) and glutamate decarboxylase (GAD). GABA-treated fruit contained higher levels of fumarate and malate than did non-treated fruit, as well as higher ATP and NADH contents. These results imply that the GABA shunt is involved in providing metabolites to produce energy, reduce power, and help the fruit to cope with cold stress over the long term.


Subject(s)
Cucurbita/drug effects , Food Storage , Fruit/drug effects , 4-Aminobutyrate Transaminase/metabolism , Adenosine Triphosphate/metabolism , Alanine/metabolism , Amine Oxidase (Copper-Containing)/metabolism , Cell Death/drug effects , Cold Temperature , Cucurbita/metabolism , Food Storage/methods , Fruit/metabolism , Fumarates/metabolism , Glutamate Decarboxylase/metabolism , Glutamic Acid/metabolism , Malates/metabolism , NAD/metabolism , Proline/metabolism , Putrescine/metabolism , gamma-Aminobutyric Acid/pharmacology
20.
Front Plant Sci ; 9: 1049, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30123227

ABSTRACT

The Cucurbita pepo genome comprises 263 Mb and 34,240 gene models organized in 20 different chromosomes. To improve our understanding of gene function we have generated an EMS mutant platform, consisting of 3,751 independent M2 families. The quality of the collection has been evaluated based on phenotyping and whole-genome re-sequencing (WGS) results. The phenotypic evaluation of the whole platform at seedling stage has demonstrated that the rate of variation for easily observable traits is more than 10%. The percentage of families with albino or chlorotic seedlings exceeded 3%, similar or higher to that found in other EMS collections of cucurbit crops. A rapid screening of the library for triple ethylene response in etiolated seedlings allowed the identification of four ethylene-insensitive mutants, that were found to be semidominant (ein1, ein2, and ein3) or dominant (EIN4). By evaluating 4 adult plants from 300 independent families more than 28% of apparent mutations were found for vegetative and reproductive traits, including plant vigor, leaf size and shape, sex expression and sex determination, and fruit set and development. Two pools of genomic DNA derived from 20 plants of two mutant families were subjected to WGS by using NGS methodology, estimating the density, spectrum, distribution and impact of EMS induced mutation. The number of EMS mutations in the genomes of families L1 and L2 was 1,704 and 859, respectively, which represents a density of 11.8 and 6 mutations per Mb, respectively. As expected, the predominant EMS induced mutations were C > T and G > A transitions (80.3% in L1, and 61% L2), that were found to be randomly distributed along the 20 chromosomes of C. pepo. The mutations were mostly affecting intergenic regions, but 7.9 and 6% of the identified EMS mutations in L1 and L2, respectively, were located in the exome, and 0.4 and 0.2% had a moderate and high putative impact on gene functions. These results provide information regarding the potential use of the obtained mutant platform in the discovery of novel alleles for both functional genomics and Cucurbita breeding by using direct- or reverse-genetic approaches.

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