Fukushima Atsushi, Hikosaka Shoko, Kobayashi Makoto, Nishizawa Tomoko, Saito Kazuki, Goto Eiji, Kusano Miyako
RIKEN Center for Sustainable Resource Science, Yokohama, Japan.
Graduate School of Horticulture, Chiba University, Chiba, Japan.
Front Plant Sci. 2018 Oct 9;9:1439. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2018.01439. eCollection 2018.
Tomato () is a model crop for studying development regulation and ripening in flesh fruits and vegetables. Supplementary light to maintain the optimal light environment can lead to the stable growth of tomatoes in greenhouses and areas without sufficient daily light integral. Technological advances in genome-wide molecular phenotyping have dramatically enhanced our understanding of metabolic shifts in the plant metabolism across tomato fruit development. However, comprehensive metabolic and transcriptional behaviors along the developmental process under supplementary light provided by light-emitting diodes (LEDs) remain to be fully elucidated. We present integrative omic approaches to identify the impact on the metabolism of a single tomato plant leaf exposed to monochromatic red LEDs of different intensities during the fruit development stage. Our special light delivery system, the "simplified source-sink model," involves the exposure of a single leaf below the second truss to red LED light of different intensities. We evaluated fruit-size- and fruit-shape variations elicited by different light intensities. Our findings suggest that more than high-light treatment (500 μmol m s) with the red LED light is required to accelerate fruit growth for 2 weeks after anthesis. To investigate transcriptomic and metabolomic changes in leaf- and fruit samples we used microarray-, RNA sequencing-, and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry techniques. We found that metabolic shifts in the carbohydrate metabolism and in several key pathways contributed to fruit development, including ripening and cell-wall modification. Our findings suggest that the proposed workflow aids in the identification of key metabolites in the central metabolism that respond to monochromatic red-LED treatment and contribute to increase the fruit size of tomato plants. This study expands our understanding of systems-level responses mediated by low-, appropriate-, and high levels of red light irradiation in the fruit growth of tomato plants.
番茄()是研究肉质果实和蔬菜发育调控与成熟的模式作物。补充光照以维持最佳光照环境可使番茄在温室和每日光照积分不足的地区稳定生长。全基因组分子表型分析技术的进步极大地增进了我们对番茄果实发育过程中植物代谢中代谢变化的理解。然而,在发光二极管(LED)提供的补充光照下,整个发育过程中的综合代谢和转录行为仍有待充分阐明。我们提出了综合组学方法,以确定在果实发育阶段暴露于不同强度单色红色LED下的单个番茄植株叶片对代谢的影响。我们特殊的光输送系统,即“简化的源库模型”,包括将第二穗以下的一片叶子暴露于不同强度的红色LED光下。我们评估了不同光强度引起的果实大小和形状变化。我们的研究结果表明,在开花后2周,要加速果实生长,仅用红色LED光进行高光处理(500 μmol m² s⁻¹)是不够的。为了研究叶片和果实样本中的转录组和代谢组变化,我们使用了微阵列、RNA测序和气相色谱 - 质谱技术。我们发现碳水化合物代谢和几个关键途径中的代谢变化有助于果实发育,包括成熟和细胞壁修饰。我们的研究结果表明,所提出的工作流程有助于识别中心代谢中对单色红色LED处理有反应并有助于增加番茄植株果实大小的关键代谢物。这项研究扩展了我们对番茄植株果实生长过程中低、适宜和高水平红光照射介导的系统水平反应的理解。