4.6 Article

Genome-Wide Identification and Expression Profiling of Tomato Invertase Genes Indicate Their Response to Stress and Phytohormones

Journal

JOURNAL OF PLANT GROWTH REGULATION
Volume 41, Issue 4, Pages 1481-1498

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00344-021-10384-5

Keywords

Solanum lycopersicum; Genome-wide analysis; Solanaceae; Cell wall invertase; Gene family; Phylogenetic analysis

Categories

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2018YFD1000800]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31991182, 31972426]
  3. Wuhan Frontier Projects for Applied Foundation [2019020701011492]
  4. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [2662018PY073]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Invertases play vital roles in plant metabolism and stress response, with the tomato genome containing multiple types of invertase genes that exhibit varied expression patterns in different tissues and under different environmental conditions.
Invertases (EC 3.2.1.26, INV) are indispensable for plant metabolism, development and stress response. Carbohydrate partitioning and the irreversible hydrolysis of sucrose into glucose and fructose in plants are driven by invertases. We performed a comprehensive analysis on the physico-chemical characteristics, chromosome localisation, exon-intron structures, motif distributions, evolutionary divergence and phylogenetic analysis, and tissue-specific spatio-temporal expression profiles of invertase genes under varied abiotic stressors and phytohormones. We identified twenty-four invertase genes (comprising nine cell wall (CWINV), two cell membrane (CMINV), eleven chloroplast (ChlINV), one cytosol (CyINV) and one vacuolar (VaINV)) in the tomato genome distributed on eight of the twelve chromosomes. The phylogenetic analysis clustered the invertase genes into two major clades. Segmental duplication contributed to the alkaline/neutral sub-domain expansion. The invertase genes were differentially expressed in fruits, roots, stems, leaves, flower buds and responded differentially to light, cold, drought, salinity stress and phytohormones (abscisic acid (ABA), gibberellic acid (GA), and indole-3 acetic acid (IAA)). Majority of the genes that were significantly up-regulated under the phytohormone treatments were consistently down-regulated in the stem, flowerbud and roots. The expression data reveals most of the cell wall and chloroplast-localised invertases were induced by phytohormones; while vacuolar and cytosol-localised invertases were markedly induced by abiotic stresses in the diverse tissues. The network interaction complex evidences that, most of the proteins were implicated in glycolysis, sucrose synthesis and/or pyrophosphate-fructose 6-phosphate 1-phosphotransferase activity. This study provides the groundwork for future functional analysis of invertase genes in tomato and other Solanaceae species.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available