Functional characterization of the tomato HAIRPLUS gene reveals the implication of the epigenome in the control of glandular trichome formation
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Fonseca, Rocío; Gómez Martín, Cristina; Lebrón, Ricardo; Hackenberg, Michael; Oliver Jiménez, José LutgardoEditorial
Oxford University Press
Fecha
2022-01-18Referencia bibliográfica
Rocío Fonseca... [et al.]. Functional characterization of the tomato HAIRPLUS gene reveals the implication of the epigenome in the control of glandular trichome formation, Horticulture Research, Volume 9, 2022, uhab015, [https://doi.org/10.1093/hr/uhab015]
Patrocinador
Spanish Government AGL2017-88702-C2-1-R AGL2017-88702-C2-2-R; European Commission 774244; FPU Programmes of the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion; LASPAU; BRESOV (Breeding for resilient, efficient, and sustainable organic vegetable production) projectResumen
Trichomes are specialised epidermal cells developed in the aerial surface of almost every terrestrial plant. These structures form
physical barriers, which combined with their capability of synthesis of complex molecules, prevent plagues from spreading and
confer trichomes a key role in the defence against herbivores. In this work, the tomato gene HAIRPLUS (HAP) that controls glandular
trichome density in tomato plants was characterised. HAP belongs to a group of proteins involved in histone tail modifications
although some also bind methylated DNA. HAP loss of function promotes epigenomic modifications in the tomato genome reflected
in numerous differentially methylated cytosines and causes transcriptomic changes in hap mutant plants. Taken together, these
findings demonstrate that HAP links epigenome remodelling withmulticellular glandular trichome development and reveal that HAP
is a valuable genomic tool for pest resistance in tomato breeding.





