Study of micro-trichome (mict) reveals novel connections between transcriptional regulation of multicellular trichome development and specific metabolism in cucumber
Trichomes that cover the epidermis of aerial plant organs play multiple roles in plant protection. Compared with a unicellular trichome in model plants, the development mechanism of the multicellular trichome is largely unclear. Notably, variations in trichome development are often accompanied by de...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Horticulture research 2021-02, Vol.8 (1), p.21, Article 21 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Trichomes that cover the epidermis of aerial plant organs play multiple roles in plant protection. Compared with a unicellular trichome in model plants, the development mechanism of the multicellular trichome is largely unclear. Notably, variations in trichome development are often accompanied by defects in the biosynthesis of cuticle and secondary metabolites; however, major questions about the interactions between developmental differences in trichomes and defects in metabolic pathways remain unanswered. Here, we characterized the glabrous mutant
mict
/
csgl1/cstbh
via combined metabolomic and transcriptomic analyses to extend our limited knowledge regarding multicellular trichome development and metabolism in cucumber.
Mict
was found to be explicitly expressed within trichome cells. Transcriptomic analysis indicated that genes involved in flavonoid and cuticle metabolism are significantly downregulated in
mict
mutants. Further metabolomic analysis confirmed that flavonoids, lipids, and cuticle compositions are dramatically altered in
mict
mutants. Additional studies revealed that
Mict
regulates flavonoid, lipid, and cuticle biosynthesis by likely directly binding to downstream functional genes, such as
CsTT4
,
CsFLS1
,
CsCER26
, and
CsMYB36
. These findings suggest that specific metabolic pathways (e.g., flavonoids and cuticle components) are co-regulated by
Mict
and provide insights into transcriptional regulation mechanisms of multicellular trichome development and its specific metabolism in cucumber. |
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ISSN: | 2662-6810 2052-7276 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41438-020-00456-0 |