Molecular Insights into the Role of Sterols in Microtuber Development of Potato Solanum tuberosum L.
Lisset Herrera Isidron, Eliana Valencia Lozano, Braulio Uribe Lopez, John Paul Délano Frier, Aarón Barraza y José Luis Cabrera Ponce
Te invitamos a leer el artículo "Molecular Insights into the Role of Sterols in Microtuber Development of Potato Solanum tuberosum L." publicado en "Plants", en el que colaboraron Eliana Valencia Lozano, John Paul Délano Frier y José Luis Cabrera Ponce de Cinvestav Irapuato.
Autores:
Lisset Herrera Isidron, Eliana Valencia Lozano, Braulio Uribe Lopez, John Paul Délano Frier, Aarón Barraza y José Luis Cabrera Ponce
Resumen:
Potato tubers are reproductive and storage organs, enabling their survival. Unraveling the molecular mechanisms that regulate tuberization is crucial for understanding how potatorespond to environmental stress situations and for potato breeding. Previously, we did a transcriptomic analysis of potato microtuberization without light. This showed that important cellular processes like ribosomal proteins, cell cycle, carbon metabolism, oxidative stress, fatty acids, and phytosterols (PS) biosynthesis were closely connected in a protein–protein interaction (PPI) network. Research on PS function during potato tuberization has been scarce. PS plays a critical role in regulating membrane permeability and fluidity, and they are biosynthetic precursors of brassinosteroids (BRs) in plants, which are critical in regulating gene expression, cell division, differentiation, and reproductive biology. Within a PPI network, we found a module of 15 genes involved in the PS biosynthetic process. Darkness, as expected, activated the mevalonate (MVA) pathway. There was a tight interaction between three coding gene products for HMGR3, MVD2, and FPS1, and the gene products that synthetize PS, including CAS1, SMO1, BETAHSD, CPI1, CYP51, FACKEL, HYDRA1, SMT2, SMO2, STE1, and SSR1. Quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) confirmed the expression analysis of ten specific genes involved in the biosynthesis of PS. This manuscript discusses the potential role of genes involved in PS biosynthesis during microtuber development.