TRANSPARENT TESTA 4-Mediated Flavonoids Negatively Affect Embryonic Fatty Acid Biosynthesis in Arabidopsis
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Flavonoids are involved in many physiological processes in plants. TRANSPARENT TESTA 4 (TT4) acts at the first step of flavonoid biosynthesis, and the loss of TT4 function causes a lack of flavonoid. Flavonoid deficiency is reportedly the main cause of increased fatty acid content in pale-coloured oilseeds, but details regarding the relationship between seed flavonoids and fatty acid biosynthesis are elusive. In this work, we applied a genetic strategy combined with biochemical and cytological assays to determine the effect of seed flavonoids on the biosynthesis of fatty acids in Arabidopsis thaliana. We showed that TT4-mediated flavonoids negatively affect embryonic fatty acid biosynthesis. A crossing experiment indicated that seed flavonoid biosynthesis and the impact of this process on fatty acid biosynthesis were controlled in a maternal line-dependent manner. Loss of TT4 function activated glycolysis in seed embryos, thereby enhancing fatty acid biosynthesis, but did not improve seed mucilage production. Moreover, loss of TT4 function reduced PIN-FORMED 4 expression and subsequently increased auxin accumulation in embryos. Pharmacologically and genetically elevated auxin levels enhanced seed fatty acid biosynthesis. These results indicated that flavonoids affect fatty acid biosynthesis by carbon source reallocation via regulation of WRINKLE1 and auxin transport.
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
Publication Info
Published in Plant, Cell & Environment, Volume 41, Issue 12, 2018, pages 2773-2790.
APA Citation
Xuan, L., Zhang, C., Yan, T., Wu, D., Hussain, N., Li, Z., Chen, M., Pan, J., & Jiang, L. (2018). TRANSPARENT TESTA 4‐mediated flavonoids negatively affect embryonic fatty acid biosynthesis in Arabidopsis. Plant Cell & Environment, 41(12), 2773–2790.https://doi.org/10.1111/pce.13402
Rights
© 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd