Genetic regulation of ethylene perception and signal transduction related to flower senescence
Author: Renate Müller 1* and Bjarne M. Stummann 2
Received 6 October 2002, accepted 5 January 2003.
Abstract
The plant hormone ethylene is involved in
the regulation of a number of physiological and developmental processes
and its role as a regulator of flower senescence is of particular economic
importance in floriculture. The present review focuses on genetic control
of flower senescence, particularly at the level of ethylene perception.
Research in a number of flowering plants has indicated that flower senescence
is the result of a complex regulation of both ethylene biosynthesis and
perception. In the present review, we outline current knowledge of ethylene
signal transduction in the model plant Arabidopsis and in economically
important ornamental flowers. The various members of the ethylene receptor
families in carnation and rose are differentially regulated during flower
senescence and provide evidence that regulation of receptor gene expression
can modulate sensitivity and influence the response of the flowers to
ethylene. Several approaches to decrease ethylene sensitivity and improve
postharvest quality have been reported, such as the use of antisense RNA
for ethylene biosynthesis genes or transformation with a gene coding for
a mutant receptor that does not bind ethylene and which constitutively
suppresses the normal ethylene responses. Further basic research on the
mechanism of ethylene signal transduction will probably reveal further
possibilities for biotechnological modifications that might complement
traditional breeding methods to improve postharvest quality.
| Key words:
CTR, Dianthus caryophyllus, ethylene, EIN, ETR, flower senescence, postharvest, receptors, Rosa hybrida. |
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[FULL
text for subscribers] |
Journal: Food, Agriculture and Environment (JFAE)
Online ISSN: 1459-0263
Year: 2003, Vol. 1, Issue 1, pages 87-94.
Publisher: WFL
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