4.7 Article

Targeted Metabolomics Provide Chemotaxonomic Insights of Medicago ruthenica, with Coupled Transcriptomics Elucidating the Mechanism Underlying Floral Coloration

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 18, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants11182408

Keywords

Medicago ruthenica; alfalfa; chemotaxonomy; flavonoids; anthocyanins; gene expression

Categories

Funding

  1. Key Projects in Science and Technology of Inner Mongolia [2021ZD0031]
  2. International cooperation between China [EUP2017YFE0111000]
  3. Natural Science Key Projects of Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region [2020ZD14]
  4. Natural Science Foundation of Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region [2021MS03033]

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Medicago ruthenica, a wild legume forage, exhibits high genetic and phenotypic variation. A purely yellow flower variety (YFM) of M. ruthenica with distinct characteristics from the purple flower variety (PFM) has been discovered. This study investigated M. ruthenica using targeted metabolomics and transcriptomics, revealing differences in flavonoid content and gene expression related to flower coloration. The findings suggest that YFM is a variety of M. ruthenica rather than a different species, and provide insights for further research on species with similar morphologies.
Medicago ruthenica, a wild legume forage widely distributed in the Eurasian steppe, demonstrates high genetic and phenotypic variation. M. ruthenica with a purely yellow flower (YFM), differing from the general phenotype of M. ruthenica with a purple flower (PFM), was recently discovered. The similar characteristics of YFM with Medicago falcata have led to conflicting opinions on its taxonomy using traditional morphological methods. The lack of chemotaxonomy information about M. ruthenica species and the unclear flower coloration mechanisms have hampered their study. Here, we investigated M. ruthenica using targeted metabolomics based on the chemotaxonomy method and elaborated the floral coloration mechanisms using transcriptomics. The identified flavonoids were the same types, but there were different contents in YFM and PFM, especially the contents of cyanidin-3-O-glucoside (C3G), an anthocyanin that causes the purple-reddish color of flowers. The over-accumulation of C3G in PFM was 1,770 times more than YFM. Nineteen anthocyanin-related genes were downregulated in YFM compared with their expression in PFM. Thus, YFM could be defined as a variety of M. ruthenica rather than a different species. The loss of purple flower coloration in YFM was attributed to the downregulation of these genes, resulting in reduced C3G accumulation. The taxonomic characteristics and molecular and physiological characteristics of this species will contribute to further research on other species with similar external morphologies.

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