Domestication of crop plants had effects on human lifestyle and agriculture. However, little is known about the underlying molecular mechanisms accompanying the changes in fruit appearance as a consequence of selection by early farmers. We report the fine mapping and cloning of a tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) fruit mass gene encoding the ortholog of KLUH, SlKLUH, a P450 enzyme of the CYP78A subfamily. The increase in fruit mass is predominantly the result of enlarged pericarp and septum tissues caused by increased cell number in the large fruited lines. SlKLUH also modulates plant architecture by regulating number and length of the side shoots, and ripening time, and these effects are particularly strong in plants that transgenically down-regulate SlKLUH expression carrying fruits of a dramatically reduced mass. Association mapping followed by segregation analyses revealed that a single nucleotide polymorphism in the promoter of the gene is highly associated with fruit mass. This single polymorphism may potentially underlie a regulatory mutation resulting in increased SlKLUH expression concomitant with increased fruit mass. Our findings suggest that the allele giving rise to large fruit arose in the early domesticates of tomato and becoming progressively more abundant upon further selections. We also detected association of fruit weight with CaKLUH in chile pepper (Capsicum annuum) suggesting that selection of the orthologous gene may have occurred independently in a separate domestication event. Altogether, our findings shed light on the molecular basis of fruit mass, a key domestication trait in tomato and other fruit and vegetable crops.
Nitrogenase catalyzes the sequential addition of six electrons and six protons to a N 2 that is bound to the active site metal cluster FeMo-cofactor, yielding two ammonia molecules. The nature of the intermediates bound to FeMo-cofactor along this reduction pathway remains unknown, although it has been suggested that there are intermediates at the level of reduction of diazene (HN=NH, also called diimide) and hydrazine (H 2 N-NH 2 ). Through in situ generation of diazene during nitrogenase turnover, we show that diazene is a substrate for the wild-type nitrogenase and is reduced to NH 3 . Diazene reduction, like N 2 reduction, is inhibited by H 2 . This contrasts with the lack of H 2 inhibition when nitrogenase reduces hydrazine. These results support the existence of an intermediate early in the N 2 reduction pathway at the level of reduction of diazene. Freeze-quenching a MoFe protein variant with α-195 His substituted by Gln and α-70 Val substituted by Ala during steady-state turnover with diazene resulted in conversion of the S = 3/2 resting state FeMo-cofactor to a novel S = 1/2 state with g 1 = 2.09, g 2 = 2.01, and g 3 ~ 1.98. 15 N-and 1 H-ENDOR establish that this state consists of a diazene-derived [-NH x ] moiety bound to FeMo-cofactor. This moiety is indistinguishable from the hydrazine-derived [-NH x ] moiety bound to FeMo-cofactor when the same MoFe protein is trapped during turnover with hydrazine. These observations suggest that diazene joins the normal N 2 -reduction pathway, and that the diazene-and hydrazine-trapped turnover states represent the same intermediate in the normal reduction of N 2 by nitrogenase. The implications of these findings for the mechanism of N 2 reduction by nitrogenase are discussed. KeywordsFeMo-cofactor; EPR; ENDOR; Active Site; Substrate Nitrogenase is the enzyme responsible for catalyzing biological reduction of N 2 to two NH 3 , an essential reaction in the global biogeochemical nitrogen cycle (1-3). The minimum stoichiometry for the nitrogenase catalyzed reduction of N 2 involves delivery of 8e − and 8H + (eqn 1). † This work was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health (R01-GM59087 to LCS and DRD; HL13531 to BMH), the National Science Foundation (MCB-0316038 to BMH) and the United States Department of Agriculture Postdoctoral Fellowship program (2004-35318-14905 to BMB).*Address correspondence to these authors: LCS, phone (435) 797-3964, fax (435) email seefeldt@cc.usu.edu; DRD, phone (540) 231-5895, fax (540) email deandr@vt.edu; BMH, phone (847) (Figure 1).Relatively little is known at a molecular level about the nitrogenase N 2 -reduction mechanism beyond the fact that N 2 binds to and is reduced at one or more of the metal atoms of FeMocofactor ( Figure 1) Both the Chatt and Schrock cycles belong to one fundamental class of potential nitrogenase mechanismsin which the first three 'H-atoms' (e − /H + ) are sequentially added to a single N atom, in those instances the distal N of an end-on bound N 2 , followed by cleava...
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.