4.7 Article

Regulation of two germin-like protein genes during plum fruit development

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
Volume 61, Issue 6, Pages 1761-1770

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jxb/erq043

Keywords

Auxin; ethylene; expression profile; flowering; germin-like protein; plum fruit development and ripening; subcellular localization

Categories

Funding

  1. Ontario Ministry of Innovation
  2. Canadian Foundation for Innovation
  3. Ontario Innovation Trust
  4. Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs
  5. Niagara Tender Fruit Marketing Board

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Germin-like proteins (GLPs) have several proposed roles in plant development and defence. Two novel genes (Ps-GLP1 and 2) encoding germin-like protein were isolated from plum (Prunus salicina). Their regulation was studied throughout fruit development and during ripening of early and late cultivars. These two genes exhibited similar expression patterns throughout the various stages of fruit development excluding two important stages, pit hardening (S2) and fruit ripening (S4). During fruit development until the ripening phase, the accumulation of both Ps-GLPs is related to the evolution of auxin. However, during the S2 stage only Ps-GLP1 is induced and this could putatively be in a H2O2-dependent manner. On the other hand, the diversity in the Ps-GLPs accumulation profile during the ripening process seems to be putatively due to the variability of endogenous auxin levels among the two plum cultivars, which consequently change the levels of autocatalytic ethylene available for the fruit to co-ordinate ripening. The effect of auxin on stimulating ethylene production and in regulating Ps-GLPs transcripts was also investigated. These data, supported by their localization in the extracellular matrix, suggest that auxin is somehow involved in the regulation of both transcripts throughout fruit development and ripening.

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