info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo
Silencing of the tomato Sugar Partitioning Affecting protein (SPA) modifies sink strength through a shift in leaf sugar metabolism
Fecha
2014-03Autor
Bermudez Salazar, Luisa
de Godoy, Fabiana
Baldet, Pierre
Demarco, Diego
Osorio, Sonia
Quadrana, Leandro Daniel
Almeida de Souza, Juliana Beatriz
Asis, Ramón
Gibon, Yves
Fernie, Alisdair R.
Rossi, Maria Magdalena
Carrari, Fernando
Resumen
Limitations in our understanding about the mechanisms that underlie source-sink assimilate partitioning
are increasingly becoming a major hurdle for crop yield enhancement via metabolic engineering. By means
of a comprehensive approach, this work reports the functional characterization of a DnaJ chaperone
related-protein (named as SPA; sugar partition-affecting) that is involved in assimilate partitioning in
tomato plants. SPA protein was found to be targeted to the chloroplast thylakoid membranes. SPA-RNAi
tomato plants produced more and heavier fruits compared with controls, thus resulting in a considerable
increment in harvest index. The transgenic plants also displayed increased pigment levels and reduced
sucrose, glucose and fructose contents in leaves. Detailed metabolic and enzymatic activities analyses
showed that sugar phosphate intermediates were increased while the activity of phosphoglucomutase,
sugar kinases and invertases was reduced in the photosynthetic organs of the silenced plants. These
changes would be anticipated to promote carbon export from foliar tissues. The combined results
suggested that the tomato SPA protein plays an important role in plastid metabolism and mediates the
source-sink relationships by affecting the rate of carbon translocation to fruits.