Mechanisms Involved in Calcium Deficiency Development in Tomato Fruit in Response to Gibberellins

被引:0
|
作者
Sergio Tonetto de Freitas
Cai-Zhong Jiang
Elizabeth Jeanne Mitcham
机构
[1] University of California,Department of Plant Sciences
[2] USDA,Crops Pathology and Genetics Research Unit
[3] ARS,undefined
来源
关键词
L.; Ca; Blossom-end rot; BER; Apoplast; Membrane;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Although gibberellins (GAs) have been shown to induce development of the physiological disorder blossom-end rot (BER) in tomato fruit (Solanum lycopersicum), the mechanisms involved remain largely unexplored. BER is believed to result from calcium (Ca) deficiency, but the relationship between Ca content and BER incidence is not strong. Our objectives were to better understand how GAs and a GA biosynthesis inhibitor affect BER development in tomato fruit. Tomato plants of two BER-susceptible cultivars, ‘Ace 55 (Vf)’ and ‘AB2,’ were grown in a greenhouse environment and subjected to Ca-deficiency conditions. Plants were treated weekly during fruit growth and development with 300 mg L−1 GA4+7, 300 mg L−1 prohexadione-calcium (Apogee®, a GA biosynthesis inhibitor), or water beginning 1 day after flower pollination. GA4+7 treatment induced an increase in BER incidence in both cultivars up to 100%, whereas ‘Ace 55 (Vf)’ and ‘AB2’ plants treated with Apogee did not show BER incidence. The number of functional xylem vessels was higher in the placental and pericarp tissue of tomato fruit treated with Apogee at the early stages of fruit growth. Treatment with Apogee also increased fruit pericarp Ca concentration. GA4+7 treatment enhanced the expression of the putative CAX and Ca-ATPase genes, that code for proteins involved in Ca movement into storage organelles. The lowest water-soluble apoplastic Ca concentration and the highest membrane leakage values were observed in the pericarp of GA4+7-treated fruit. These results suggest that GAs consistently reduced fruit Ca uptake and water-soluble apoplastic Ca concentration, leading to leakier plasma membranes and an increase in BER development in fruit tissue of both tomato cultivars.
引用
收藏
页码:221 / 234
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Sequencing and characterization of tomato genes putatively involved in fruit set and early development
    Giuseppe Testa
    Riccardo Caccia
    Francesca Tilesi
    Gian Soressi
    Andrea Mazzucato
    Sexual Plant Reproduction, 2002, 14 : 269 - 277
  • [22] Comparative analysis of common genes involved in early fruit development in tomato and grape
    Mori, Kentaro
    Lemaire-Chamley, Martine
    Asamizu, Erika
    Mizoguchi, Tsuyoshi
    Ezura, Hiroshi
    Rothan, Christophe
    PLANT BIOTECHNOLOGY, 2013, 30 (03) : 295 - U213
  • [23] Pospiviroid Infection of Tomato Regulates the Expression of Genes Involved in Flower and Fruit Development
    Avina-Padilla, Katia
    Rivera-Bustamante, Rafael
    Kovalskaya, Natalia Y.
    Hammond, Rosemarie W.
    VIRUSES-BASEL, 2018, 10 (10):
  • [24] Sequencing and characterization of tomato genes putatively involved in fruit set and early development
    Testa, G
    Caccia, R
    Tilesi, F
    Soressi, GP
    Mazzucato, A
    SEXUAL PLANT REPRODUCTION, 2002, 14 (05): : 269 - 277
  • [25] Abscisic acid triggers whole-plant and fruit-specific mechanisms to increase fruit calcium uptake and prevent blossom end rot development in tomato fruit
    de Freitas, Sergio Tonetto
    Shackel, Kenneth A.
    Mitcham, Elizabeth J.
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY, 2011, 62 (08) : 2645 - 2656
  • [26] MECHANISMS INVOLVED IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF VITAMIN-B12 DEFICIENCY
    HALSTED, JA
    SWENDSEID, ME
    LEWIS, PM
    GASSTER, M
    GASTROENTEROLOGY, 1956, 30 (01) : 21 - 36
  • [27] Auxin-induced fruit-set in tomato is mediated in part by gibberellins
    Serrani, Juan Carlos
    Ruiz-Rivero, Omar
    Fos, Mariano
    Garcia-Martinez, Jose Luis
    PLANT JOURNAL, 2008, 56 (06): : 922 - 934
  • [28] TOMATO FRUIT-SET - IS MOBILIZATION INVOLVED
    ARCHBOLD, DD
    DENNIS, FG
    HORTSCIENCE, 1979, 14 (03) : 473 - 473
  • [29] MOLECULAR CHARACTERIZATION OF SPY - A GENE INVOLVED IN RESPONSE TO GIBBERELLINS
    JACOBSEN, SE
    BINKOWSKI, K
    GOPALRAJ, M
    OLSZEWSKI, NE
    PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 1995, 108 (02) : 45 - 45
  • [30] Why calcium deficiency is not the cause of blossom-end rot in tomato and pepper fruit - a reappraisal
    Saure, Max C.
    SCIENTIA HORTICULTURAE, 2014, 174 : 151 - 154