Significance of CmCCD4a orthologs in apetalous wild chrysanthemum species,responsible for white coloration of ray petals |
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Authors: | Satoshi Yoshioka Katsuhiko Sumitomo Yuichi Fujita Atsuko Yamagata Takashi Onozaki Michio Shibata Akemi Ohmiya |
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Affiliation: | (1) National Institute of Floricultural Science, 2-1 Fujimoto, Tsukuba Ibaraki, 305-8519, Japan;(2) Present address: Kumamoto Prefectural Government, Kumamoto 862-8570, Japan;(3) Present address: Akita Agricultural Experiment Station, Akita 010-1231, Japan;(4) Present address: Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Research Council, Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries of Japan, Chiyoda-ku Tokyo, 100-8950, Japan; |
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Abstract: | Most chrysanthemum (Chrysanthemum morifolium Ramat.) flowers have a central capitulum, composed of many disc florets that is surrounded by ray petals. CmCCD4a, a gene that encodes a carotenoid cleavage dioxygenase (CCD), is expressed specifically in the ray petals of chrysanthemum cultivars, and its expression leads to white ray petals as a result of carotenoid degradation. Here, we show that wild chrysanthemums with white ray petals have CmCCD4a orthologs, whereas those with yellow ray petals lack these orthologs, as is the case in chrysanthemum cultivars. CmCCD4a orthologs also exist in some lines of Chrysanthemum pacificum and Chrysanthemum shiwogiku, even though these species lack ray petals. Interspecific hybridization between C. shiwogiku and a yellow-flowered chrysanthemum cultivar showed that the CmCCD4a orthologs from C. shiwogiku lead to the development of white ray petals. This indicates that the translation products of the CmCCD4a orthologs maintain enzymatic activity that can degrade carotenoids in chrysanthemums, irrespective of whether or not the ray petals that CmCCD4a expression actually occurred. |
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