A VIN1 GUS::GFP fusion reveals activated sucrose metabolism occurring in interspersed cells during tomato fruit ripening

Handle

https://riunet.upv.es/handle/10251/79396

Cita bibliográfica

Hueso Estornell, L.; Pons Puig, C.; Martinez, A.; O’connor, JE.; Orzáez Calatayud, DV.; Granell Richart, A. (2013). A VIN1 GUS::GFP fusion reveals activated sucrose metabolism occurring in interspersed cells during tomato fruit ripening. Journal of Plant Physiology. 170(12):1113-1121. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jplph.2013.03.007

Titulación

Resumen

[EN] The tomato is a model for fleshy fruit development and ripening. Here we report on the identification of a novel unique cell autonomous/cellular pattern of expression that was detected in fruits of transgenic tomato lines carrying a GFP GUS driven by the fruit specific vacuolar invertase promoter VIN1. The VIN1 promoter sequence faithfully reproduced the global endogenous VIN expression by conferring a biphasic pattern of expression with a second phase clearly associated to fruit ripening. A closer view revealed a salt and pepper pattern of expression characterized by individual cells exhibiting a range of expression levels (from high to low) surrounded by cells with no expression. This type of pattern was detected across differentfruittissues and celltypes with some preferences for vascular, sub-epidermal layer and the inner part ofthe fruit. Cell ability to show promoter activity wasneither directly associated withoverall ripening – as we find VIN+ and – VIN− cells at all stages of ripening, nor with cell size. Nevertheless the number of cells with active VIN-driven expression increased with ripening and the activity of the VIN promoter seems to be inversely correlated with cell size in VIN+ cells. Gene expression analysis of FACS-sorted VIN+ cells revealed a transcriptionally distinct subpopulation of cells defined by increased expression of genes related to sucrose metabolism, and decreased activity in protein synthesis and chromatin remodeling. This finding suggests that local micro heterogeneity may underlie some aspects (i.e. the futile cycles involving sucrose metabolism) of an otherwise more uniform looking ripening program

Palabras clave

FACS, Invertase, Protoplasts, Ripening, Tomato

ISSN

0176-1617

ISBN

Fuente

Journal of Plant Physiology

DOI

10.1016/j.jplph.2013.03.007