1. <scp>CRISPR</scp> /Cas9 genome‐editing applied to <scp> MdPGT1 </scp> in apple results in reduced foliar phloridzin without impacting plant growth
- Author
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Simón Miranda, Stefano Piazza, Floriana Nuzzo, Mingai Li, Jorge Lagrèze, Axel Mithöfer, Alessandro Cestaro, Danuše Tarkowska, Richard Espley, Andrew Dare, Mickael Malnoy, and Stefan Martens
- Subjects
Phytohormones ,Settore AGR/07 - GENETICA AGRARIA ,Apple ,Genetics ,Glycosyltransferases ,Phloridzin ,Cell Biology ,Plant Science ,Transcriptomics ,Genome-editing ,Dihydrochalcones ,Malus x domestica - Abstract
Phloridzin is the most abundant polyphenolic compound in apple (Malus × domestica Borkh.), which results from the action of a key phloretin-specific UDP-2'-O-glucosyltransferase (MdPGT1). Here, we simultaneously assessed the effects of targeting MdPGT1 by conventional transgenesis and clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)/CRISPR-associated protein 9 (Cas9)-mediated genome editing. To this end, we conducted transcriptomic and metabolic analyses of MdPGT1 RNA interference knockdown and genome-edited lines. Knockdown lines exhibited characteristic impairment of plant growth and leaf morphology, whereas genome-edited lines exhibited normal growth despite reduced foliar phloridzin. RNA-sequencing analysis identified a common core of regulated genes, involved in phenylpropanoid and flavonoid pathways. However, we identified genes and processes differentially modulated in stunted and genome-edited lines, including key transcription factors and genes involved in phytohormone signalling. Therefore, we conducted a phytohormone profiling to obtain insight into their role in the phenotypes observed. We found that salicylic and jasmonic acid were increased in dwarf lines, whereas auxin and ABA showed no correlation with the growth phenotype. Furthermore, bioactive brassinosteroids were commonly up-regulated, whereas gibberellin GA
- Published
- 2022