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Manipulation of β-carotene levels in tomato fruits results in increased ABA content and extended shelf life

TitleManipulation of β-carotene levels in tomato fruits results in increased ABA content and extended shelf life
Publication TypeArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Year of Publication2020
AuthorsDiretto, Gianfranco, Frusciante Sarah, Fabbri C., Schauer N., Busta L., Wang Z., Matas A. J., Fiore Alessia, Rose J. K. C., Fernie A. R., Jetter R., Mattei B., Giovannoni J., and Giuliano Giovanni
JournalPLANT BIOTECHNOLOGY JOURNAL
Volume18
Pagination1185-1199
ISSN14677644
KeywordsABA, ripening, Tomato, β-carotene
Abstract

Tomato fruit ripening is controlled by the hormone ethylene and by a group of transcription factors, acting upstream of ethylene. During ripening, the linear carotene lycopene accumulates at the expense of cyclic carotenoids. Fruit-specific overexpression of LYCOPENE β-CYCLASE (LCYb) resulted in increased β-carotene (provitamin A) content. Unexpectedly, LCYb-overexpressing fruits also exhibited a diverse array of ripening phenotypes, including delayed softening and extended shelf life. These phenotypes were accompanied, at the biochemical level, by an increase in abscisic acid (ABA) content, decreased ethylene production, increased density of cell wall material containing linear pectins with a low degree of methylation, and a thicker cuticle with a higher content of cutin monomers and triterpenoids. The levels of several primary metabolites and phenylpropanoid compounds were also altered in the transgenic fruits, which could be attributed to delayed fruit ripening and/or to ABA. Network correlation analysis and pharmacological experiments with the ABA biosynthesis inhibitor, abamine, indicated that altered ABA levels were a direct effect of the increased β-carotene content and were in turn responsible for the extended shelf life phenotype. Thus, manipulation of β-carotene levels results in an improvement not only of the nutritional value of tomato fruits, but also of their shelf life. © 2019 The Authors. Plant Biotechnology Journal published by Society for Experimental Biology and The Association of Applied Biologists and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

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URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85077166057&doi=10.1111%2fpbi.13283&partnerID=40&md5=c731923f48a5203b289c5155daafb8b3
DOI10.1111/pbi.13283
Citation Key 20.500.12079_53899