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Regulation of Gene Expression in Senscing Flowers Final Report

REGULATION OF GENE EXPRESSION

IN SENESCING FLOWERS

Final Project Report To The American Floral Endowment

Submitted by:

Randy Woodson

1140 AGAD Building Purdue University

West Lafayette, IN 47907-1140

Executive Summary

The postproduction life of many flowers is limited by premature petal

senescence. Following harvest or pollination, flowers of a number of species

exhibit a significant increase in the production of the plant hormone ethylene,

which in turn leads to an induction of the biochemical processes of senescence

(cell death). My laboratory has focused on understanding the regulation of

ethylene biosynthesis and senescence at the cellular and molecular level, with

the goal of developing genetic engineering approaches to improving the

postharvest longevity of flowers such as carnation.

In this project, we identified and characterized genes that encode the enzyme

ACC synthase from both petunia and carnation. This enzyme is central to the

regulation of ethylene biosynthesis, resulting in the production of ACC, which

is the immediate precursor to ethylene. These studies revealed that ACC synthase

is encoded by multiple genes and subject to complex patterns of regulation

within the flowers of both carnation and petunia. Inhibition of ACC synthase

with chemicals such as AVG or AOA blocks ethylene production and slows

senescence. With this in mind, we set out to genetically engineer flowers to

inhibit the expression of ACC synthase, thus blocking ethylene production

without chemicals. We also used another approach to blocking ethylene, which was

to reduce the level of ACC in flowers through the expression of a gene for an

enzyme that converts ACC to a product other than ethylene. Both approaches

appear to have promise for the industry.

This project has been successful in many ways. The data generated has been

communicated in a number of peer reviewed publications. Also, two PhD students

were educated through this project (Michelle Jones and Sven Verlinden), both of

which now enjoy independent careers in floriculture at CSU and the University of

West Virginia. Also, a postdoctoral associate (Dr. Jon Lindstron) worked on this

project and is now an Assistant Professor of Horticulture at the University of

Arkansas.

Experimental Results

Previously, we had reported on the cloning of ACC synthase and ACC

oxidase from carnation (Park et al. 1992; Wang and Woodson 1991). ACC synthase

converts s-adenosyl methionine to ACC, and ACC oxidase converts ACC to ethylene.

As part of this project, we reported the cloning of two additional ACC synthase

genes, ACS2 and ACS3 (Jones and Woodson, 1997; 1999). In addition, we identified

a novel ACC synthase gene in petunia, expressed only in the pollen (Lindstrom et

al. 1999). These steps were critical to the ultimate success of this project, as

the regulation of ACC production is quite complex and under the control of

multiple genes. Genetic engineering flowers to inhibit ethylene requires a good

understanding of this regulation.

Following up on previous research from my laboratory (Larsen et al. 1995), we

showed that pollination induced ethylene production in the flowers through

increases in the expression of both ACC synthase and ACC oxidase (Jones and

Woodson 1997). Using gene-specific probes, we were able to show that ACS3 was

responsible for early ethylene production in pollinated styles and its

expression was not inhibited by norbornadiene or MCP (Jones and Woodson 1999).

The differential regulation of members of the carnation ACC synthase gene family

following pollination and during senescence was useful in determining the role

of ACC and ethylene in interorgan communication within the flower. Our results

clearly point to the pistil playing an important role in producing ethylene that

ultimately travels to, or signals the petals to produce ethylene and senesce.

The story of pollination-induced senescence in carnation is quite

complicated. It is clear that following a compatible pollination, a signal that

coordinates ethylene production is translocated from the style to the ovary and

petals. In another study, we investigated the roles of ethylene and its director

precursor, ACC, in this signaling (Jones and Woodson 1999b). Here we showed that

ethylene and ACC increased sequentially in the styles, ovaries and petals

following pollination. Ethylene and ACC were highest initially in the stigmatic

region of the style but by 24 hours after pollination were highest in the base.

Activity of ACC synthase was correlated with ethylene production in styles and

petals, but interestingly activity was not detected in the ovary, which

accumulated significant levels of ACC. Lack of ACC synthase activity in

pollinated ovearies, coupled with high ACC content, suggested that ACC was

translocated within the gynoecium to the petals, where it was converted to

ethylene. Experiments that removed styles and petals at various times after

pollination indicated that there was a transmissible pollination signal in

carnations that reached the ovary by 12 hours and the petals by 14 to 16 hours

after pollination. This publication received the Alex Laurie Award as the best

paper published in floriculture in 1999.

Pollination of petunia flowers results in a rapid burst of ethylene from the

stigma, which leads to senescence of the petals. Petunia is an excellent model

for studying the regulation of ethylene and petal senescence as it is easy to

genetically engineer. In petunia, pollen contains considerable ACC, which has

been suggested to play a critical role in inducing ethylene. We investigated the

synthesis of ACC in petunia pollen (Lindstrom et al. 1999). We reported that a

specific ACC synthase gene was expressed in pollen, which accounted for the

accumulation of ACC. This gene was characterized and shown to have a

pollen-specific promoter that directed the expression of a reporter gene in

transgenic plants. This was the first report of ACC synthase expression in

pollen, and the first report of an ACC synthase gene promoter.

In another set of experiments, we sought to determine the role for this

pollen-borne ACC in pollination-induced ethylene. We constructed a gene

consisting of the coding region from a bacterial ACC deaminase gene and a

pollen-specific promoter from tobacco (LAT52). First, we showed that the LAT52

promoter activated the expression of a reporter gene (GUS) in transgenic

petunias. We went on to show that petunias expressing the ACC deaminase gene had

one hundred-fold less ACC in pollen. ACC deaminase converts ACC to µ -ketobutyrate, thus diverting it away from ethylene production. This large

reduction in ACC did not affect pollination-induced ethylene production from the

stigma. In addition, fertility as determined by seed set and inheritance of the

transgene were unaffected by this reduction in pollen ACC content. Our results

indicate that pollen-borne ACC does not play a role in pollination-induced

ethylene.

Future Research

This work has pointed the way for a number of approaches to genetic

engineering of flowers for postharvest longevity. First, we have identified

critical steps in the biosynthesis of ethylene in both carnation and petunia.

Also, we have shown that this regulation is complex and a single silver bullet

is not likely to control the production of ethylene. We were successful in

creating transgenic plants with the ACC deaminase gene, which converts ACC to a

-ketobutyrate, which is not used in ethylene production, thus limiting the

amount of ethylene produced. We were the first to report on a pollen-specific

ACC synthase, showing how this is regulated in petunias at the genetic level.

Given the number of genes involved in ethylene biosynthesis, future experiments

should focus on using gene-specific approaches to knock out ethylene production

in flowers. Also, it is clear that inhibiting ethylene action will be a good

strategy to prolonging the life of cut flowers.

References

Larsen PB, Ashworth EN, Jones ML and WR Woodson. 1995. Pollination-induced

ethylene in carnation: role of pollen tube growth and sexual compatibility.

Plant Physiology 108:1405-1412.

Park KY, A Dory and WR Woodson. 1992. Molecular cloning of an ACC synthase

gene from senescing carnation flower petals. Plant Molecular Biology 18:377-386.

Wang H and WR Woodson. 1991. A flower senescence-related mRNA from carnation

shares sequence similarity with fruit ripening-related mRNAs involved in

ethylene biosynthesis. Plant Physiology. 96:1000-1001.

Publications Resulting from Project

Jones, ML and WR Woodson. 1997. Pollination-induced ethylene in carnation:

role of stylar ethylene in corolla senescence. Plant Physiology 115:205-212.

Verlinden S and WR Woodson. 1998. The physiological and molecular responses

of carnation flowers to high temperatures. Postharvest Biology and Technology

14:185-192.

Linstrom JT, CH Lei, ML Jones and WR Woodson. 1999. Accumulation of ACC in

petunia pollen is associated with expression of a pollen-specific ACC synthase

late in development. Journal of the American Society for Horticultural Science

124:145-151.

Jones ML and WR Woodson. 1999. Interorgan signaling following pollination in

carnations. Journal of the American Society for Horticultural Science

124:598-604. (Alex Laurie Award)

Jones ML and WR Woodson. 1999. Differential expression of three members of

the ACC synthase gene family in carnation. Plant Physiology 119:755-764.