First published online June 30, 2006; 10.1105/tpc.105.039966
The Plant Cell 18:1947-1960 (2006)
© 2006 American Society of Plant Biologists
A Chromoplast-Specific Carotenoid Biosynthesis Pathway Is Revealed by Cloning of the Tomato white-flower Locus[W]
Navot Galpaza,1,
Gil Ronena,1,
Zehava Khalfaa,
Dani Zamirb and
Joseph Hirschberga,2
a Department of Genetics, Alexander Silberman Life Sciences Institute, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, 91904 Israel
b Robert H. Smith Institute of Plant Sciences and Genetics in Agriculture, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, 91904 Israel
2 To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail hirschu{at}vms.huji.ac.il; fax 972-2-5633066.
Carotenoids and their oxygenated derivatives xanthophylls play essential roles in the pigmentation of flowers and fruits. Wild-type tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) flowers are intensely yellow due to accumulation of the xanthophylls neoxanthin and violaxanthin. To study the regulation of xanthophyll biosynthesis, we analyzed the mutant white-flower (wf). It was found that the recessive wf phenotype is caused by mutations in a flower-specific ß-ring carotene hyroxylase gene (CrtR-b2). Two deletions and one exon-skipping mutation in different CrtR-b2 wf alleles abolish carotenoid biosynthesis in flowers but not leaves, where the homologous CrtR-b1 is constitutively expressed. A second ß-carotene hydroxylase enzyme as well as flower- and fruit-specific geranylgeranyl diphosphate synthase, phytoene synthase, and lycopene ß-cyclase together define a carotenoid biosynthesis pathway active in chromoplasts only, underscoring the crucial role of gene duplication in specialized plant metabolic pathways. We hypothesize that this pathway in tomato was initially selected during evolution to enhance flower coloration and only later recruited to enhance fruit pigmentation. The elimination of ß-carotene hydroxylation in wf petals results in an 80% reduction in total carotenoid concentration, possibly caused by the inability of petals to store high concentrations of carotenoids other than xanthophylls and by degradation of ß-carotene, which accumulates as a result of the wf mutation but is not due to altered expression of genes in the biosynthetic pathway.
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