4.8 Article

Distinct Mechanisms of the ORANGE Protein in Controlling Carotenoid Flux

Journal

PLANT PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 173, Issue 1, Pages 376-389

Publisher

AMER SOC PLANT BIOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.1104/pp.16.01256

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Funding

  1. United States-Israel Binational Agricultural Research and Development Fund [US-4423-11, US-4918-16CR]
  2. Israeli Ministry of Agriculture Chief Scientist [256-1103-15]
  3. Center for the Improvement of Cucurbit Fruit Quality, Agricultural Research Organization, Israel
  4. Harvestplus Research Consortium

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beta-Carotene adds nutritious value and determines the color of many fruits, including melon (Cucumis melo). In melon mesocarp, beta-carotene accumulation is governed by the Orange gene (CmOr) golden single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) through a yet to be discovered mechanism. In Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), OR increases carotenoid levels by posttranscriptionally regulating phytoene synthase (PSY). Here, we identified a CmOr nonsense mutation (Cmor-low beta) that lowered fruit beta-carotene levels with impaired chromoplast biogenesis. Cmor-low beta exerted a minimal effect on PSY transcripts but dramatically decreased PSY protein levels and enzymatic activity, leading to reduced carotenoid metabolic flux and accumulation. However, the golden SNP was discovered to not affect PSY protein levels and carotenoid metabolic flux in melon fruit, as shown by carotenoid and immunoblot analyses of selected melon genotypes and by using chemical pathway inhibitors. The high beta-carotene accumulation in golden SNP melons was found to be due to a reduced further metabolism of beta-carotene. This was revealed by genetic studies with double mutants including carotenoid isomerase (yofi), a carotenoid-isomerase nonsense mutant, which arrests the turnover of prolycopene. The yofi F2 segregants accumulated prolycopene independently of the golden SNP. Moreover, Cmor-low beta was found to inhibit chromoplast formation and chloroplast disintegration in fruits from 30 d after anthesis until ripening, suggesting that CmOr regulates the chloroplast-to-chromoplast transition. Taken together, our results demonstrate that CmOr is required to achieve PSY protein levels to maintain carotenoid biosynthesis metabolic flux but that the mechanism of the CmOr golden SNP involves an inhibited metabolism downstream of beta-carotene to dramatically affect both carotenoid content and plastid fate.

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