Silencing of the ACC synthase gene ACACS2 causes delayed flowering in pineapple [Ananas comosus (L.) Merr.]


Autoria(s): Trusov, Y.; Botella, J. R.
Data(s)

01/01/2006

Resumo

Flowering is a crucial developmental stage in the plant life cycle. A number of different factors, from environmental to chemical, can trigger flowering. In pineapple, and other bromeliads, it has been proposed that flowering is triggered by a small burst of ethylene production in the meristem in response to environmental cues. A 1-amino-cyclopropane-1-carboxylate synthase (ACC synthase) gene has been cloned from pineapple (ACACS2), which is induced in the meristem under the same environmental conditions that induce flowering. Two transgenic pineapple lines have been produced containing co-suppression constructs designed to down-regulate the expression of the ACACS2 gene. Northern analysis revealed that the ACACS2 gene was silenced in a number of transgenic plants in both lines. Southern hybridization revealed clear differences in the methylation status of silenced versus non-silenced plants by the inability of a methylation-sensitive enzyme to digest within the ACACS2 DNA extracted from silenced plants, indicating that methylation is the cause of the observed co-suppression of the ACACS2 gene. Flowering characteristics of the transgenic plants were studied under field conditions in South East Queensland, Australia. Flowering dynamics studies revealed significant differences in flowering behaviour, with transgenic plants exhibiting silencing showing a marked delay in flowering when compared with non-silenced transgenic plants and control non-transformed plants. It is argued that the ACACS2 gene is one of the key contributors towards triggering 'natural flowering' in mature pineapples under commercial field conditions.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:81499

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Oxford University Press

Palavras-Chave #Acc Synthase #Co-suppression #Ethylene #Pineapple Flowering #Transgenic Pineapple #Plant Sciences #Smooth Cayenne Pineapple #1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic Acid #Inflorescence Development #Ethylene Biosynthesis #Somaclonal Variation #Multigene Family #Growth #Plant #Dna #Induction #C1 #270403 Plant Pathology #620205 Tropical fruit
Tipo

Journal Article