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Chloroplast C-to-U editing, regulated by a PPR protein BoYgl-2, is important for chlorophyll biosynthesis in cabbage.


ABSTRACT: Leaf color is an important agronomic trait in cabbage (Brassica oleracea L. var. capitata), but the detailed mechanism underlying leaf color formation remains unclear. In this study, we characterized a Brassica oleracea yellow-green leaf 2 (BoYgl-2) mutant 4036Y, which has significantly reduced chlorophyll content and abnormal chloroplasts during early leaf development. Genetic analysis revealed that the yellow-green leaf trait is controlled by a single recessive gene. Map-based cloning revealed that BoYgl-2 encodes a novel nuclear-targeted P-type PPR protein, which is absent in the 4036Y mutant. Functional complementation showed that BoYgl-2 from the normal-green leaf 4036G can rescue the yellow-green leaf phenotype of 4036Y. The C-to-U editing efficiency and expression levels of atpF, rps14, petL and ndhD were significantly reduced in 4036Y than that in 4036G, and significantly increased in BoYgl-2 overexpression lines than that in 4036Y. The expression levels of many plastid- and nuclear-encoded genes associated with chloroplast development in BoYgl-2 mutant were also significantly altered. These results suggest that BoYgl-2 participates in chloroplast C-to-U editing and development, which provides rare insight into the molecular mechanism underlying leaf color formation in cabbage.

SUBMITTER: Zhang B 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10980974 | biostudies-literature | 2024 Mar

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Chloroplast C-to-U editing, regulated by a PPR protein BoYgl-2, is important for chlorophyll biosynthesis in cabbage.

Zhang Bin B   Wu Yuankang Y   Li Shoufan S   Ren Wenjing W   Yang Limei L   Zhuang Mu M   Lv Honghao H   Wang Yong Y   Ji Jialei J   Hou Xilin X   Zhang Yangyong Y  

Horticulture research 20240110 3


Leaf color is an important agronomic trait in cabbage (<i>Brassica oleracea</i> L. var. <i>capitata</i>), but the detailed mechanism underlying leaf color formation remains unclear. In this study, we characterized a <i>Brassica oleracea yellow-green leaf 2</i> (<i>BoYgl-2</i>) mutant 4036Y, which has significantly reduced chlorophyll content and abnormal chloroplasts during early leaf development. Genetic analysis revealed that the yellow-green leaf trait is controlled by a single recessive gene  ...[more]

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