Cargando…

Involvement of CitCHX and CitDIC in Developmental-Related and Postharvest-Hot-Air Driven Citrate Degradation in Citrus Fruits

Citrate is the predominant organic acid associated with taste in citrus fruit. Although citrate metabolism has been widely studied in recent years, the potential contributions of transport proteins to citrate content remain unclear. In the present study, high-acid citrus fruit Gaocheng (‘GC’, Citrus...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lin, Qiong, Li, Shaojia, Dong, Wencheng, Feng, Chao, Yin, Xueren, Xu, Changjie, Sun, Chongde, Chen, Kunsong
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4349887/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25738939
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0119410
_version_ 1782360102728105984
author Lin, Qiong
Li, Shaojia
Dong, Wencheng
Feng, Chao
Yin, Xueren
Xu, Changjie
Sun, Chongde
Chen, Kunsong
author_facet Lin, Qiong
Li, Shaojia
Dong, Wencheng
Feng, Chao
Yin, Xueren
Xu, Changjie
Sun, Chongde
Chen, Kunsong
author_sort Lin, Qiong
collection PubMed
description Citrate is the predominant organic acid associated with taste in citrus fruit. Although citrate metabolism has been widely studied in recent years, the potential contributions of transport proteins to citrate content remain unclear. In the present study, high-acid citrus fruit Gaocheng (‘GC’, Citrus sp.) and low-acid citrus fruit Satsuma mandarin (‘SM’, Citrus unshiu Marc.) were selected for study, and the degradation of citrate was deduced to be the main cause of the difference in acidity in fully mature fruits. RNA-seq analysis was carried out on ‘GC’ and ‘SM’ fruit samples over the same time course, and the results indicated that citrate degradation occurred mainly through the glutamine pathway, catalyzed by CitAco3-CitGS2-CitGDU1, and also two transport-related genes, CitCHX and CitDIC, were shown to be associated with citrate degradation. These results were confirmed by real-time PCR. In postharvest ‘GC’ fruit, the expressions of these two transport-related genes were induced by 2-fold under hot air treatment, accompanied by a reduction of 7%-9% in total acid degradation. Transient expression of CitCHX and CitDIC in tobacco leaves was performed, and the citrate content was reduced by 62%, 75% and 78% following CitCHX, CitDIC and CitCHX plus CitDIC treatments, respectively, as compared with expression of an empty vector. Overall, these data indicated that two transport proteins, CitCHX and CitDIC, are not only involved in citrate degradation during fruit development, but also involved in postharvest hot air triggered citrate reduction.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4349887
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2015
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-43498872015-03-17 Involvement of CitCHX and CitDIC in Developmental-Related and Postharvest-Hot-Air Driven Citrate Degradation in Citrus Fruits Lin, Qiong Li, Shaojia Dong, Wencheng Feng, Chao Yin, Xueren Xu, Changjie Sun, Chongde Chen, Kunsong PLoS One Research Article Citrate is the predominant organic acid associated with taste in citrus fruit. Although citrate metabolism has been widely studied in recent years, the potential contributions of transport proteins to citrate content remain unclear. In the present study, high-acid citrus fruit Gaocheng (‘GC’, Citrus sp.) and low-acid citrus fruit Satsuma mandarin (‘SM’, Citrus unshiu Marc.) were selected for study, and the degradation of citrate was deduced to be the main cause of the difference in acidity in fully mature fruits. RNA-seq analysis was carried out on ‘GC’ and ‘SM’ fruit samples over the same time course, and the results indicated that citrate degradation occurred mainly through the glutamine pathway, catalyzed by CitAco3-CitGS2-CitGDU1, and also two transport-related genes, CitCHX and CitDIC, were shown to be associated with citrate degradation. These results were confirmed by real-time PCR. In postharvest ‘GC’ fruit, the expressions of these two transport-related genes were induced by 2-fold under hot air treatment, accompanied by a reduction of 7%-9% in total acid degradation. Transient expression of CitCHX and CitDIC in tobacco leaves was performed, and the citrate content was reduced by 62%, 75% and 78% following CitCHX, CitDIC and CitCHX plus CitDIC treatments, respectively, as compared with expression of an empty vector. Overall, these data indicated that two transport proteins, CitCHX and CitDIC, are not only involved in citrate degradation during fruit development, but also involved in postharvest hot air triggered citrate reduction. Public Library of Science 2015-03-04 /pmc/articles/PMC4349887/ /pubmed/25738939 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0119410 Text en © 2015 Lin et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lin, Qiong
Li, Shaojia
Dong, Wencheng
Feng, Chao
Yin, Xueren
Xu, Changjie
Sun, Chongde
Chen, Kunsong
Involvement of CitCHX and CitDIC in Developmental-Related and Postharvest-Hot-Air Driven Citrate Degradation in Citrus Fruits
title Involvement of CitCHX and CitDIC in Developmental-Related and Postharvest-Hot-Air Driven Citrate Degradation in Citrus Fruits
title_full Involvement of CitCHX and CitDIC in Developmental-Related and Postharvest-Hot-Air Driven Citrate Degradation in Citrus Fruits
title_fullStr Involvement of CitCHX and CitDIC in Developmental-Related and Postharvest-Hot-Air Driven Citrate Degradation in Citrus Fruits
title_full_unstemmed Involvement of CitCHX and CitDIC in Developmental-Related and Postharvest-Hot-Air Driven Citrate Degradation in Citrus Fruits
title_short Involvement of CitCHX and CitDIC in Developmental-Related and Postharvest-Hot-Air Driven Citrate Degradation in Citrus Fruits
title_sort involvement of citchx and citdic in developmental-related and postharvest-hot-air driven citrate degradation in citrus fruits
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4349887/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25738939
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0119410
work_keys_str_mv AT linqiong involvementofcitchxandcitdicindevelopmentalrelatedandpostharvesthotairdrivencitratedegradationincitrusfruits
AT lishaojia involvementofcitchxandcitdicindevelopmentalrelatedandpostharvesthotairdrivencitratedegradationincitrusfruits
AT dongwencheng involvementofcitchxandcitdicindevelopmentalrelatedandpostharvesthotairdrivencitratedegradationincitrusfruits
AT fengchao involvementofcitchxandcitdicindevelopmentalrelatedandpostharvesthotairdrivencitratedegradationincitrusfruits
AT yinxueren involvementofcitchxandcitdicindevelopmentalrelatedandpostharvesthotairdrivencitratedegradationincitrusfruits
AT xuchangjie involvementofcitchxandcitdicindevelopmentalrelatedandpostharvesthotairdrivencitratedegradationincitrusfruits
AT sunchongde involvementofcitchxandcitdicindevelopmentalrelatedandpostharvesthotairdrivencitratedegradationincitrusfruits
AT chenkunsong involvementofcitchxandcitdicindevelopmentalrelatedandpostharvesthotairdrivencitratedegradationincitrusfruits