4.7 Article

Effects of the sliaa9 Mutation on Shoot Elongation Growth of Tomato Cultivars

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2021.627832

Keywords

parthenocarpy; photomorphogenesis; elongation growth; shoot growth; auxin; SlIAA9; CRISPR-Cas9; tomato

Categories

Funding

  1. Program on Open Innovation Platform with Enterprises, Research Institute and Academia (OPERA)
  2. JSPS KAKENHI [JP19H02932]

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By utilizing CRISPR-Cas9 technology, knockout mutants of the SlIAA9 gene with parthenocarpic fruits were successfully generated in several commercial tomato cultivars. The study revealed that the growth phenotypes under low light conditions varied among the cultivars, indicating differences in the control mechanisms involved in the interaction of AUX/IAA9 and light conditions for elongation growth.
Tomato INDOLE-3-ACETIC ACID9 (SlIAA9) is a transcriptional repressor in auxin signal transduction, and SlIAA9 knockout tomato plants develop parthenocarpic fruits without fertilization. We generated sliaa9 mutants with parthenocarpy in several commercial tomato cultivars (Moneymaker, Rio Grande, and Ailsa Craig) using CRISPR-Cas9, and null-segregant lines in the T1 generation were isolated by self-pollination, which was confirmed by PCR and Southern blot analysis. We then estimated shoot growth phenotypes of the mutant plants under different light (low and normal) conditions. The shoot length of sliaa9 plants in Moneymaker and Rio Grande was smaller than those of wild-type cultivars in low light conditions, whereas there was not clear difference between the mutant of Ailsa Craig and the wild-type under both light conditions. Furthermore, young seedlings in Rio Grande exhibited shade avoidance response in hypocotyl growth, in which the hypocotyl lengths were increased in low light conditions, and sliaa9 mutant seedlings of Ailsa Craig exhibited enhanced responses in this phenotype. Fruit production and growth rates were similar among the sliaa9 mutant tomato cultivars. These results suggest that control mechanisms involved in the interaction of AUX/IAA9 and lights condition in elongation growth differ among commercial tomato cultivars.

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