Desnoues Elsa, Gibon Yves, Baldazzi Valentina, Signoret Véronique, Génard Michel, Quilot-Turion Bénédicte
BMC Plant Biol. 2014 Nov 25;14:336. doi: 10.1186/s12870-014-0336-x.
Fruit taste is largely affected by the concentration of soluble sugars and organic acids and non-negligibly by fructose concentration, which is the sweetest-tasting sugar. To date, many studies investigating the sugars in fruit have focused on a specific sugar or enzyme and often on a single variety, but only a few detailed studies addressing sugar metabolism both as a whole and dynamic system are available. In commercial peach fruit, sucrose is the main sugar, followed by fructose and glucose, which have similar levels. Interestingly, low fructose-to-glucose ratios have been observed in wild peach accessions. A cross between wild peach and commercial varieties offers an outstanding possibility to study fruit sugar metabolism.
This work provides a large dataset of sugar composition and the capacities of enzymes that are involved in sugar metabolism during peach fruit development and its genetic diversity. A large fraction of the metabolites and enzymes involved in peach sugar metabolism were assayed within a peach progeny of 106 genotypes, of which one quarter displayed a low fructose-to-glucose ratio. This profiling was performed at six stages of growth using high throughput methods. Our results permit drawing a quasi-exhaustive scheme of sugar metabolism in peach. The use of a large number of genotypes revealed a remarkable robustness of enzymatic capacities across genotypes and years, despite strong variations in sugar composition, in particular the fructose-to-glucose ratio, within the progeny. A poor correlation was also found between the enzymatic capacities and the accumulation rates of metabolites.
These results invalidate the hypothesis of the straightforward enzymatic control of sugar concentration in peach fruit. Alternative hypotheses concerning the regulation of fructose concentration are discussed based on experimental data. This work lays the foundation for a comprehensive study of the mechanisms involved in sugar metabolism in developing fruit.
果实的味道很大程度上受可溶性糖和有机酸浓度的影响,而果糖浓度的影响也不容忽视,果糖是味道最甜的糖。迄今为止,许多关于果实中糖类的研究都聚焦于某一种特定的糖或酶,且通常只针对单一品种,但仅有少数详细研究将糖代谢作为一个整体的动态系统进行探讨。在商业种植的桃果实中,蔗糖是主要糖类,其次是果糖和葡萄糖,它们的含量相近。有趣的是,在野生桃种质中观察到果糖与葡萄糖的比例较低。野生桃与商业品种的杂交为研究果实糖代谢提供了绝佳机会。
本研究提供了一个关于桃果实发育过程中糖组成以及参与糖代谢的酶活性及其遗传多样性的大型数据集。在一个包含106个基因型的桃后代群体中,对参与桃糖代谢的大部分代谢物和酶进行了测定,其中四分之一的基因型果糖与葡萄糖的比例较低。采用高通量方法在六个生长阶段进行了这种分析。我们的结果绘制出了桃糖代谢的近乎详尽的示意图。尽管后代群体中糖组成存在显著差异,特别是果糖与葡萄糖的比例,但大量基因型的使用揭示了不同基因型和年份间酶活性具有显著的稳健性。同时还发现酶活性与代谢物积累速率之间的相关性较差。
这些结果推翻了桃果实中糖浓度直接受酶控制的假设。基于实验数据讨论了关于果糖浓度调控的其他假设。这项工作为全面研究发育中果实糖代谢所涉及的机制奠定了基础。