4.7 Article

Three metabolic pathways are responsible for the accumulation and maintenance of high AsA content in kiwifruit (Actinidia eriantha)

Journal

BMC GENOMICS
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12864-020-07311-5

Keywords

Ascorbic acid; Enzyme activity; Gene expression; Transcriptomics

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31760559, 31760567]
  2. Key research and development plan of Jiangxi Science and Technology Department [20192ACB60002]

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This study revealed the metabolic characteristics and key enzymes of Ascorbic Acid (AsA) in kiwifruit, as well as identified candidate genes related to AsA biosynthesis, cycling, and degradation through transcriptome analysis. The research results indicate that the accumulation of AsA in fruit mainly depends on the L-galactose pathway.
Background: Actinidia eriantha is a precious material to study the metabolism and regulation of ascorbic acid (AsA) because of its high AsA content. Although the pathway of AsA biosynthesis in kiwifruit has been identified, the mechanism of AsA metabolism and regulation is still unclear. The purpose of this experiment is to reveal the AsA metabolic characteristics of A. eriantha 'Ganmi 6' from the molecular level, and lay a theoretical foundation for the research on the genetic improvement of kiwifruit quality. Results: We found that AsA reached the accumulation peak at S7 (110 DAF) during the process of fruit growth and development. The activity of GalDH, GalLDH, MDHAR and DHAR in fruit was similar to AsA accumulation trend, and both of them were significantly positively correlated with AsA content. It was speculated that GalDH and GalLDH were key enzymes in AsA biosynthesis, while MDHAR and DHAR were key enzymes in AsA regeneration cycle, which together regulated AsA accumulation in fruit. Also, we identified 98,656 unigenes with an average length of 932 bp from the transcriptome libraries using RNA-seq technology after data assembly. There were 50,184 (50.87%) unigenes annotations in four databases. Two thousand nine hundred forty-nine unigenes were enriched into the biosynthesis pathway of secondary metabolites, among which 133 unigenes involved in the AsA and aldehyde metabolism pathways, and 23 candidate genes related to AsA biosynthesis, cycling and degradation were screened out. Conclusions: Considering gene expression levels and changes of physiological traits and related enzyme activity, we concluded that the accumulation of AsA depends mainly on the L-galactose pathway, and the D-galacturonic acid pathway and AsA recycling pathway as the secondary pathways, which co-maintain the high AsA content in fruit of A. eriantha.

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