Flavonoid induction by UV-B was investigated in five maize landraces from high altitudes and a W23 inbred line lacking the B1 and Pl1 transcription factors required for anthocyanin synthesis. In their natural habitats these landraces receive much higher UV-B fluence than plants at lower altitudes at similar latitudes and would be predicted to have UV-B tolerance by recurrent selection against UV-B stress. We identified two flavones that are induced by UV-B in leaves of high-altitude lines: maysin and its biosynthetic precursor rhamnosylisoorientin. Accumulation is controlled by a p-homologous transcription factor expressed in leaves, and this factor is regulated by UV-B. The levels of either maysin or rhamnosylisoorientin are higher in seedling leaves than in subsequent leaves; the highest flavone concentration was detected in silks. Some landraces have only rhamnosylisoorientin; this likely reflects a mutation in salmon silk1 (sm1) or in a duplicate locus, as genetic crosses with W23 restore the production of maysin in heterozygous F1 plants. In conclusion, it is demonstrated that maize plants from high altitudes respond to UV-B radiation by accumulating UV-absorbing flavones in leaves; in contrast, these compounds are present at only very low levels in inbred lines such as W23 and are not regulated by UV-B. © 2005 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
CITATION STYLE
Casati, P., & Walbot, V. (2005). Differential accumulation of maysin and rhamnosylisoorientin in leaves of high-altitude landraces of maize after UV-B exposure. Plant, Cell and Environment, 28(6), 788–799. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-3040.2005.01329.x
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