4.7 Article

Molecular Responses of Red Ripe Tomato Fruit to Copper Deficiency Stress

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants12102062

Keywords

COPT; heavy metal; micronutritional stress; phosphate starvation; ripening; Solanum lycopersicum; transcriptomics

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Insufficient copper availability can affect the nutritional value, growth, and yield of fruits, especially tomatoes. This study investigates the transcriptomic changes in red ripe tomatoes grown under suboptimal copper conditions, revealing the molecular mechanisms underlying this stress. The research found that copper deficiency activates signals for metal ion transport, cellular redox homeostasis, pyridoxal phosphate binding, and amino acid metabolism, while repressing the response to phosphate starvation in harvested fruit.
Fruit nutritional value, plant growth, and yield can be compromised by deficient copper (Cu) bioavailability, which often appears in arable lands. This condition causes low Cu content and modifications in the ripening-associated processes in tomato fruit. This research studies the transcriptomic changes that occur in red ripe tomato fruit grown under suboptimal Cu conditions to shed light on the molecular mechanisms underlying this stress. Comparative RNA-sequencing and functional analyses revealed that Cu deficiency during cultivation activates signals for metal ion transport, cellular redox homeostasis, pyridoxal phosphate binding, and amino acid metabolism while repressing the response to phosphate starvation in harvested fruit. Transcriptomic analyses highlighted a number of novel Cu stress-responsive genes of unknown function and indicated that Cu homeostasis regulation in tomato fruit may involve additional components than those described in model plants. It also studied the regulation of high-affinity Cu transporters and a number of well-known Cu stress-responsive genes during tomato fruit ripening depending on Cu availability, which allowed potential candidates to be targeted for biotechnological improvements in reproductive tissues. We provide the first study characterizing the molecular responses of fruit to Cu deficiency stress for any fruit crop.

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