Anthocyanins are the resultant end-point metabolites of phenylapropanoid/flavonoid (F/P) pathway which is regulated at transcriptional level via a series of structural genes. Identifying the key genes and their potential interactions can provide us with the clue for novel points of intervention for improvement of the trait in strawberry. We profiled the expressions of putative regulatory and biosynthetic genes of cultivated strawberry in three developmental and characteristically colored stages of fruits of contrastingly anthocyanin rich cultivars: Tokun, Maehyang and Soelhyang. Besides a well-characterized positive regulator, , and might also act as potential positive regulators, while , , and as potential negative regulators of anthocyanin biosynthesis in these high-anthocyanin cultivars. Among the early BGs, , , , , and and among the late BGs, , , and showed significantly higher expression in ripe fruits of high anthocyanin cultivars Maehyang and Soelhyang. Multivariate analysis revealed the association of these genes with total anthocyanins. Increasingly higher expressions of the key genes along the pathway indicates the progressive intensification of pathway flux leading to final higher accumulation of anthocyanins. Identification of these key genetic determinants of anthocyanin regulation and biosynthesis in Korean cultivars will be helpful in designing crop improvement programs.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5877517 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms19030656 | DOI Listing |
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