An Ancient Duplication of Apple MYB Transcription Factors Is Responsible for Novel Red Fruit-Flesh Phenotypes    

David Chagné(Fondazione Edmund Mach), Kui Lin‐Wang(Fondazione Edmund Mach), Richard V. Espley(Fondazione Edmund Mach), Richard K. Volz(Fondazione Edmund Mach), Natalie How(Fondazione Edmund Mach), Simon A. Rouse(Fondazione Edmund Mach), Cyril Brendolise(Fondazione Edmund Mach), Charmaine Carlisle(Fondazione Edmund Mach), Satish Kumar(Fondazione Edmund Mach), Nihal De Silva(Fondazione Edmund Mach), Diego Micheletti(Fondazione Edmund Mach), Tony K. McGhie(Fondazione Edmund Mach), Ross Crowhurst(Fondazione Edmund Mach), Roy Storey(Fondazione Edmund Mach), Riccardo Velasco(Fondazione Edmund Mach), Roger P. Hellens(Fondazione Edmund Mach), Susan E. Gardiner(Fondazione Edmund Mach), Andrew C. Allan(Fondazione Edmund Mach)
PLANT PHYSIOLOGY
October 24, 2012
Cited by 376Open Access
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Abstract

Anthocyanin accumulation is coordinated in plants by a number of conserved transcription factors. In apple (Malus × domestica), an R2R3 MYB transcription factor has been shown to control fruit flesh and foliage anthocyanin pigmentation (MYB10) and fruit skin color (MYB1). However, the pattern of expression and allelic variation at these loci does not explain all anthocyanin-related apple phenotypes. One such example is an open-pollinated seedling of cv Sangrado that has green foliage and develops red flesh in the fruit cortex late in maturity. We used methods that combine plant breeding, molecular biology, and genomics to identify duplicated MYB transcription factors that could control this phenotype. We then demonstrated that the red-flesh cortex phenotype is associated with enhanced expression of MYB110a, a paralog of MYB10. Functional characterization of MYB110a showed that it was able to up-regulate anthocyanin biosynthesis in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum). The chromosomal location of MYB110a is consistent with a whole-genome duplication event that occurred during the evolution of apple within the Maloideae family. Both MYB10 and MYB110a have conserved function in some cultivars, but they differ in their expression pattern and response to fruit maturity.


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