Affiliation:
1. State Key Laboratory of Crop Stress Biology for Arid Areas/Shaanxi Key Laboratory of Apple, College of Horticulture Northwest A&F University Yangling Shaanxi 712100 China
2. The New Zealand Institute for Plant and Food Research Ltd Auckland 1142 New Zealand
Abstract
SUMMARYDihydrochalcones (DHCs) including phlorizin (phloretin 2′‐O‐glucoside) and its positional isomer trilobatin (phloretin 4′‐O‐glucoside) are the most abundant phenylpropanoids in apple (Malus spp.). Transcriptional regulation of DHC production is poorly understood despite their importance in insect‐ and pathogen‐plant interactions in human physiology research and in pharmaceuticals. In this study, segregation in hybrid populations and bulked segregant analysis showed that the synthesis of phlorizin and trilobatin in Malus leaves are both single‐gene‐controlled traits. Promoter sequences of PGT1 and PGT2, two glycosyltransferase genes involved in DHC glycoside synthesis, were shown to discriminate Malus with different DHC glycoside patterns. Differential PGT1 and PGT2 promoter activities determined DHC glycoside accumulation patterns between genotypes. Two transcription factors containing MYB‐like DNA‐binding domains were then shown to control DHC glycoside patterns in different tissues, with PRR2L mainly expressed in leaf, fruit, flower, stem, and seed while MYB8L mainly expressed in stem and root. Further hybridizations between specific genotypes demonstrated an absolute requirement for DHC glycoside production in Malus during seed development which explains why no Malus spp. with a null DHC chemotype have been reported.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Subject
Cell Biology,Plant Science,Genetics
Cited by
4 articles.
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