Abstract
Flowers of ethylene-sensitive ornamental plants transformed with ethylene-insensitive 1-1(etr1-1), a mutant ethylene receptor first isolated from Arabidopsis, are known to have longer shelf lives. We have generated petunia plants in which the etr1-1 gene was over-expressed under the control of a chemically-inducible promoter, which would allow expression of etr1-1 to be initiated at the desired time and stage of development. Here, we showed that transgenic plants grew and developed normally without a chemical inducer. Semi-quantitative RT-PCR demonstrated that the abundance of transcripts of Arabidopsis etr1-1 gene was substantially induced in flowers with 30 μM dexamethasone (DEX). Consequently, t he life of the flowers was almost doubled and the peak of ethylene production was delayed. We compared gene expression changes of petals with DEX to those without DEX at 24 h and 48 h by microarray. Our results indicated that transcripts of many putative genes encoding transcription factors were down-regulated by etr1-1 induced expression at the early stage. In addition, putative genes involved in gibberellin biosynthesis, response to jasmonic acid/gibberellins stimulus, cell wall modification, ethylene biosynthesis, and cell death were down-regulated associating with etr1-1 induced expression. We investigated time-course gene expression profiles and found two profiles which displayed totally opposite expression patterns under these two treatments. In these profiles, ‘the regulation of transcription’ was predominant in GO categories. Taking all results together, we concluded those transcription factors down-regulated at early stage might exert a major role in regulating the senescence process which were consequently characterized by cell wall modification and cell death.
Highlights
Petal senescence is a complex programmed event which includes mineral transport and remobilisation, sugar synthesis and transport, synthesis and degradation of nucleic acids, amino acids, lipids, proteins and cell death compounds
The results suggest that downregulated transcription factors at early stage might play a crucial role in regulating the process of senescence on petunia with etr1-1 induced expression
Agrobacterium-mediated transformation of petunia resulted in eleven transgenic lines, of which six lines of T3 homozygous transgenic plants were obtained
Summary
Petal senescence is a complex programmed event which includes mineral transport and remobilisation, sugar synthesis and transport, synthesis and degradation of nucleic acids, amino acids, lipids, proteins and cell death compounds. The mutant receptor etr, which was originally identified in Arabidopsis, has been demonstrated to be unable to bind ethylene [3,4,5,6] It remains constitutively active in its repression of ethylene response genes and causes a dominant ethyleneinsensitive phenotype. This mutant receptor has been successfully used in many species to confer ethylene insensitivity [7,8,9,10]. The reason why flowers of ethylene receptor mutant plants display extended longevity is not known
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