TY - JOUR
T1 - Molecular mechanisms driving the unusual pigmentation shift during eggplant fruit development
AU - Panda, Sayantan
AU - Chappell-Maor, Louise
AU - Alejandro de Haro, Luis
AU - Jozwiak, Adam
AU - Gharat, Sachin A.
AU - Kazachkova, Yana
AU - Cai, Jianghua
AU - Vainer, Andrii
AU - Toppino, Laura
AU - Sehrawat, Urmila
AU - Wizler, Guy
AU - Pliner, Margarita
AU - Meir, Sagit
AU - Rotino, Giuseppe Leonardo
AU - Yasuor, Hagai
AU - Rogachev, Ilana
AU - Aharoni, Asaph
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2025 The Authors
PY - 2025/5/12
Y1 - 2025/5/12
N2 - Fruit pigmentation is a major signal that attracts frugivores to enable seed dispersal. In most fleshy fruit, green chlorophyll typically accumulates early in development and is replaced by a range of pigments during ripening. In species such as grape and strawberry, chlorophyll is replaced by red anthocyanins produced by the flavonoid biosynthetic pathway. Eggplant (Solanum melongena) is unique, as its fruit accumulates anthocyanins beginning from fruit set, and these are later replaced by the yellow flavonoid-pathway intermediate naringenin chalcone. To decipher the genetic regulation of this extraordinary pigmentation shift, we integrated mRNA and microRNA (miRNA) profiling data obtained from developing eggplant fruit. We discovered that SQUAMOSA PROMOTER BINDING-LIKE (i.e., SPL6a, SPL10, and SPL15), MYB1, and MYB2 transcription factors (TFs) regulate anthocyanin biosynthesis in early fruit development, whereas the MYB12 TF controls later accumulation of naringenin chalcone. We further show that miRNA157 and miRNA858 negatively regulate the expression of SPLs and MYB12, respectively. Taken together, our findings suggest that opposing and complementary expression of miRNAs and TFs controls the pigmentation switch in eggplant fruit skin. Intriguingly, despite the distinctive pigmentation pattern in eggplant, fruit development in other species makes use of homologous regulatory factors to control the temporal and spatial production of different pigment classes.
AB - Fruit pigmentation is a major signal that attracts frugivores to enable seed dispersal. In most fleshy fruit, green chlorophyll typically accumulates early in development and is replaced by a range of pigments during ripening. In species such as grape and strawberry, chlorophyll is replaced by red anthocyanins produced by the flavonoid biosynthetic pathway. Eggplant (Solanum melongena) is unique, as its fruit accumulates anthocyanins beginning from fruit set, and these are later replaced by the yellow flavonoid-pathway intermediate naringenin chalcone. To decipher the genetic regulation of this extraordinary pigmentation shift, we integrated mRNA and microRNA (miRNA) profiling data obtained from developing eggplant fruit. We discovered that SQUAMOSA PROMOTER BINDING-LIKE (i.e., SPL6a, SPL10, and SPL15), MYB1, and MYB2 transcription factors (TFs) regulate anthocyanin biosynthesis in early fruit development, whereas the MYB12 TF controls later accumulation of naringenin chalcone. We further show that miRNA157 and miRNA858 negatively regulate the expression of SPLs and MYB12, respectively. Taken together, our findings suggest that opposing and complementary expression of miRNAs and TFs controls the pigmentation switch in eggplant fruit skin. Intriguingly, despite the distinctive pigmentation pattern in eggplant, fruit development in other species makes use of homologous regulatory factors to control the temporal and spatial production of different pigment classes.
KW - MYB
KW - SQUAMOSA promoter binding-like
KW - Solanum
KW - anthocyanin
KW - fruit development
KW - fruit pigments
KW - melongena
KW - microRNA
KW - naringenin chalcone
KW - transcription factor
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105003825954&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.xplc.2025.101321
DO - 10.1016/j.xplc.2025.101321
M3 - مقالة
C2 - 40143551
SN - 2590-3462
VL - 6
JO - Plant Communications
JF - Plant Communications
IS - 5
M1 - 101321
ER -