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PAGE, MIKE; SULTANA, NIGHAT; PASZKIEWICZ, KONRAD; FLORANCE, HANNAH; SMIRNOFF, NICHOLAS
Plant, cell and environment, February 2012, Volume: 35, Issue: 2Journal Article
ABSTRACT Ascorbate and anthocyanins act as photoprotectants during exposure to high light (HL). They accumulate in Arabidopsis leaves in response to HL on a similar timescale, suggesting a potential relationship between them. Flavonoids and related metabolites were identified and profiled by liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (LC–MS/MS). The ascorbate‐deficient mutants vtc1, vtc2 and vtc3 accumulated less anthocyanin than wild‐type (WT) during HL acclimation. In contrast, kaempferol glycoside accumulation was less affected by light and not decreased by ascorbate deficiency, while sinapoyl malate levels decreased during HL acclimation. Comparison of six Arabidopsis ecotypes showed a positive correlation between ascorbate and anthocyanin accumulation in HL. mRNA‐Seq analysis showed that all flavonoid biosynthesis transcripts were increased by HL acclimation in WT. RT‐PCR analysis showed that vtc1 and vtc2 were impaired in HL induction of transcripts of anthocyanin biosynthesis enzymes, and the transcription factors PAP1, GL3 and EGL3 that activate the pathway. Abscisic acid (ABA) and jasmonic acid (JA), hormones that could affect anthocyanin accumulation, were unaffected in vtc mutants. It is concluded that HL induction of anthocyanin synthesis involves a redox‐sensitive process upstream of the known transcription factors. Because anthocyanins accumulate in preference to kaempferol glycosides and sinapoyl malate in HL, they might have specific properties that make them useful in HL acclimation. Previous research suggests a link between anthocyanin high light‐induced anthocyanin accumulation and ascorbate in Arabidopsis. We show that high light‐induced anthocyanin accumulation is impaired in a range of ascorbate deficient vtc mutants and is also correlated with ascorbate pool size in a range of ecotypes. Decreased anthocyanin production was associated with decreased high light induction of flavonoid biosynthesis genes. The results suggest that redox‐sensitive high light signal transduction upstream of the transcription factors regulating anthocyanin is strongly modulated by ascorbate status.
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