1. Phytoene synthase 2 can compensate for the absence of PSY1 in the control of color in Capsicum fruit
- Author
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Hyo-Bong Jeong, Byoung-Cheorl Kang, Suna Kim, Jin-Kyung Kwon, Sun-Hwa Ha, Ayoung Jung, So-Jeong Jang, and Min-Young Kang
- Subjects
mature fruit color ,Physiology ,Mutant ,virus-induced gene silencing ,Plant Science ,Biology ,Capsanthin-capsorubin synthase ,pepper ,VIGS ,Protein-fragment complementation assay ,Pepper ,Carotenoid ,Gene ,Plant Proteins ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Phytoene synthase ,ATP synthase ,AcademicSubjects/SCI01210 ,phytoene synthase ,fungi ,food and beverages ,Carotenoids ,Research Papers ,carotenoid ,White (mutation) ,Horticulture ,Crop Molecular Genetics ,chemistry ,Fruit ,color complementation ,biology.protein ,Capsicum - Abstract
PSY2 can compensate for the absence of PSY1 in yellow pepper fruit, allowing a basal level of carotenoid accumulation to occur, and hence it should be considered alongside PSY1 and CCS as an essential gene in the control of fruit coloration., Phytoene synthase 1 (PSY1) and capsanthin-capsorubin synthase (CCS) are two major genes responsible for fruit color variation in pepper (Capsicum spp.). However, the role of PSY2 remains unknown. We used a systemic approach to examine the genetic factors responsible for the yellow fruit color of C. annuum ‘MicroPep Yellow’ (MY) and to determine the role of PSY2 in fruit color. We detected complete deletion of PSY1 and a retrotransposon insertion in CCS. Despite the loss of PSY1 and CCS function, both MY and mutant F2 plants from a cross between MY and the ‘MicroPep Red’ (MR) accumulated basal levels of carotenoids, indicating that other PSY genes may complement the loss of PSY1. qRT-PCR analysis indicated that PSY2 was constitutively expressed in both MR and MY fruits, and a color complementation assay using Escherichia coli revealed that PSY2 was capable of biosynthesizing a carotenoid. Virus-induced gene silencing of PSY2 in MY resulted in white fruits. These findings indicate that PSY2 can compensate for the absence of PSY1 in pepper fruit, resulting in the yellow color of MY fruits.
- Published
- 2020