Abstract

Wolfberry (Lycium barbarum L.) is a small Solanaceae shrub with medicinal and edible homology, and widely used as ethnobotanical medicine and nutraceutical food. The wolfberry fruits mainly have red, purple, and yellow phenotypes. Wolfberries are rich in flavonoids, which are natural water-soluble pigments that endow a variety of colors in plants There are very few investigations on mechanism of flavonoids biosynthesis and fruit coloring reported about wolfberry. The widely targeted metabolome and transcriptome analysis were performed to obtain metabolite and gene expression profiles of red, yellow, and purple wolfberries and to explain the underlying molecular mechanism of the color differences in wolfberry. As result, metabolomics analysis revealed that the bluish anthocyanins Malvidin and petunidin trended to accumulate in purple wolf-berry, while red and yellow wolfberries trended to accumulate more yellowish flavonoids. And transcriptome analysis showed that flavonoid synthesis-related genes, such as CHS, F3H, ANS and DFR, and several MYB and bHLH genes were differentially expressed among wolfberries in different colors: most of them were more highly expressed in purple wolfberries than in red and yellow ones. In conclusion, the different flavonoids’ accumulation patterns may result in the different fruit colors of wolfberry, and the MYB or bHLH transcription factors could regulate the expression of flavonoids biosynthesis related genes to change the composition of flavonoids or anthocyanins in wolfberry fruits and result in varied fruit colors. These findings provide new insights into the underlying molecular mechanism of the fruit color differences in wolfberry and provide new ideas for molecular breeding of wolfberry.

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