AI Article Synopsis

  • This study analyzed the different flower colors of Cymbidium orchids, identifying key anthocyanin biosynthetic genes and their role in color variations among pink, white, yellow, and green flower cultivars.
  • Major identified pigments included cyanidin 3-O-rutinoside and peonidin 3-O-rutinoside, along with flavonols like quercetin in petals, while β-carotene was prominent in yellow flowers and pheophytins in green ones.
  • Expression of flavonoid biosynthetic genes varied across flower bud development, confirming that specific genes were only active in tissues with anthocyanin accumulation, indicating that color diversity is due to minor variations in pigment profiles rather

Article Abstract

This study confirmed pigment profiles in different colour groups, isolated key anthocyanin biosynthetic genes and established a basis to examine the regulation of colour patterning in flowers of Cymbidium orchid. Cymbidium orchid (Cymbidium hybrida) has a range of flower colours, often classified into four colour groups; pink, white, yellow and green. In this study, the biochemical and molecular basis for the different colour types was investigated, and genes involved in flavonoid/anthocyanin synthesis were identified and characterised. Pigment analysis across selected cultivars confirmed cyanidin 3-O-rutinoside and peonidin 3-O-rutinoside as the major anthocyanins detected; the flavonols quercetin and kaempferol rutinoside and robinoside were also present in petal tissue. β-carotene was the major carotenoid in the yellow cultivars, whilst pheophytins were the major chlorophyll pigments in the green cultivars. Anthocyanin pigments were important across all eight cultivars because anthocyanin accumulated in the flower labellum, even if not in the other petals/sepals. Genes encoding the flavonoid biosynthetic pathway enzymes chalcone synthase, flavonol synthase, flavonoid 3' hydroxylase (F3'H), dihydroflavonol 4-reductase (DFR) and anthocyanidin synthase (ANS) were isolated from petal tissue of a Cymbidium cultivar. Expression of these flavonoid genes was monitored across flower bud development in each cultivar, confirming that DFR and ANS were only expressed in tissues where anthocyanin accumulated. Phylogenetic analysis suggested a cytochrome P450 sequence as that of the Cymbidium F3'H, consistent with the accumulation of di-hydroxylated anthocyanins and flavonols in flower tissue. A separate polyketide synthase, identified as a bibenzyl synthase, was isolated from petal tissue but was not associated with pigment accumulation. Our analyses show the diversity in flower colour of Cymbidium orchid derives not from different individual pigments but from subtle variations in concentration and pattern of pigment accumulation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00425-014-2152-9DOI Listing

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