Physiological and transcriptome analyses of photosynthesis and chlorophyll metabolism in variegated Citrus (Shiranuhi and Huangguogan) seedlings

14Citations
Citations of this article
15Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

Citrus species are among the most economically important fruit crops. Physiological characteristics and molecular mechanisms associated with de-etiolation have been partially revealed. However, little is known about the mechanisms controlling the expression and function of genes associated with photosynthesis and chlorophyll biosynthesis in variegated citrus seedlings. The lower biomass, chlorophyll contents, and photosynthetic parameter values recorded for the variegated seedlings suggested that chlorophyll biosynthesis was partially inhibited. Additionally, roots of the variegated seedlings were longer than the roots of green seedlings. We obtained 567.07 million clean reads and 85.05 Gb of RNA-sequencing data, with more than 94.19% of the reads having a quality score of Q30 (sequencing error rate = 0.1%). Furthermore, we detected 4,786 and 7,007 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) between variegated and green Shiranuhi and Huangguogan seedlings. Thirty common pathways were differentially regulated, including pathways related to photosynthesis (GO: 0015979) and the chloroplast (GO: 0009507). Photosynthesis (44 and 63 DEGs), photosynthesis-antenna proteins (14 and 29 DEGs), and flavonoid biosynthesis (16 and 29 DEGs) pathways were the most common KEGG pathways detected in two analyzed libraries. Differences in the expression patterns of PsbQ, PetF, PetB, PsaA, PsaN, PsbP, PsaF, Cluster-2274.8338 (ZIP1), Cluster-2274.38688 (PTC52), and Cluster-2274.78784 might be responsible for the variegation in citrus seedlings. We completed a physiological- and transcriptome-level comparison of the Shiranuhi and Huangguogan cultivars that differ in terms of seedling variegation. We performed mRNA-seq analyses of variegated and green Shiranuhi and Huangguogan seedlings to explore the genes and regulatory pathways involved in the inhibition of chlorophyll biosynthesis and decreases in Chl a and Chl b contents. The candidate genes described herein should be investigated in greater detail to further characterize variegated citrus seedlings.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Xiong, B., Qiu, X., Huang, S., Wang, X., Zhang, X., Dong, T., … Wang, Z. (2019). Physiological and transcriptome analyses of photosynthesis and chlorophyll metabolism in variegated Citrus (Shiranuhi and Huangguogan) seedlings. Scientific Reports, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-52276-5

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free