Synergy between the anthocyanin and RDR6/SGS3/DCL4 siRNA pathways expose hidden features of Arabidopsis carbon metabolism

Anthocyanin pigments furnish a powerful visual output of the stress and metabolic status of Arabidopsis thaliana plants. Essential for pigment accumulation is TRANSPARENT TESTA19 (TT19), a glutathione S -transferase proposed to bind and stabilize anthocyanins, participating in their vacuolar sequest...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2020-05, Vol.11 (1), p.2456-2456, Article 2456
Hauptverfasser: Jiang, Nan, Gutierrez-Diaz, Aimer, Mukundi, Eric, Lee, Yun Sun, Meyers, Blake C., Otegui, Marisa S., Grotewold, Erich
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Anthocyanin pigments furnish a powerful visual output of the stress and metabolic status of Arabidopsis thaliana plants. Essential for pigment accumulation is TRANSPARENT TESTA19 (TT19), a glutathione S -transferase proposed to bind and stabilize anthocyanins, participating in their vacuolar sequestration, a function conserved across the flowering plants. Here, we report the identification of genetic suppressors that result in anthocyanin accumulation in the absence of TT19. We show that mutations in RDR6 , SGS3 , or DCL4 suppress the anthocyanin defect of tt19 by pushing carbon towards flavonoid biosynthesis. This effect is not unique to tt19 and extends to at least one other anthocyanin pathway gene mutant. This synergy between mutations in components of the RDR6-SGS3-DCL4 siRNA system and the flavonoid pathway reveals genetic/epigenetic mechanisms regulating metabolic fluxes. TRANSPARENT TESTA19 ( TT19 ) encodes a glutathione S -transferase which functions in anthocyanin stabilization and vacuolar transport. Here, by tt19 suppressor screening, the authors show that RDR6/SGS3/DCL4 siRNA pathway constituents synergistically interact with components of the flavonoid pathway to control carbon metabolism.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-020-16289-3