Flavonoid gene expression and UV photoprotection in transgenic and mutant Petunia leaves
- PMID: 11754940
- DOI: 10.1016/s0031-9422(01)00404-6
Flavonoid gene expression and UV photoprotection in transgenic and mutant Petunia leaves
Abstract
The effects of UVB radiation on plant growth rate, gene expression and flavonoid content in wild-type, and in transgenic and mutant F3'H deficient Petunia lines have been studied for the first time. In wild-type Petunia, UVB induced an increase in total levels of flavonols and this was due to an up-regulation of several genes in the phenylpropanoid pathway. Furthermore, UVB induced a higher rate of production of dihydroxylated flavonols than mono-hydroxylated equivalents. Thus, the ratio of quercetin (ortho-dihydroxylated) to kaempferol (monohydroxylated) increased. In the F3H deficient mutant line, increasing UVB resulted in up-regulation of all of the basic flavonoid biosynthetic genes. Total flavonoids increased to levels significantly higher than in control plants, and the predominant flavonoid was kaempferol. The leaves of these plants grew at a significantly slower rate than comparably treated wild-type plants under ambient or enhanced UVB radiation. This suggests that the predominance of quercetin in the wild-type confers a protective advantage that is not matched in the mutant, even with higher overall flavonoid levels. In contrast, the antisense F3H construct produced an unexpected down-regulation of C4H, CHS and CHI transcription. This resulted in lower total flavonoid production in these plants. The growth rate of these plants was not impaired in UVB to a statistically significant extent, and the Q:K ratio did not change with increasing UVB radiation. This investigation has established a likely correlation between the effect of UVB on plant growth rate, the level of activity of the F3'H gene, and the proposed photoprotection afforded by an increased Q:K ratio.
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