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Article|07 Mar 2024|OPEN
CsEXL3 regulate mechanical harvest-related droopy leaves under the transcriptional activation of CsBES1.2 in tea plant
Haoran Liu1 ,† , Lingxiao Duan1 ,† , Jianqiang Ma1 ,† , Jiqiang Jin1 , Rong Huang1 , Yujie Liu1 , Si Chen1 , Xiaoying Xu1 , Jiedan Chen1 , , Mingzhe Yao1 , and Liang Chen,1 ,
1Key Laboratory of Biology, Genetics and Breeding of Special Economic Animals and Plants, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, Tea Research Institute of the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Hangzhou 310008, China
*Corresponding author. E-mail: chenjd@tricaas.com,yaomz@tricaas.com,liangchen@tricaas.com
Haoran Liu,Lingxiao Duan and Jianqiang Ma contributed equally to the study.

Horticulture Research 11,
Article number: uhae074 (2024)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1093/hr/uhae074
Views: 1431

Received: 21 Oct 2023
Accepted: 01 Mar 2024
Published online: 07 Mar 2024

Abstract

Due to a labor shortage, the mechanical harvesting of tea plantations has become a focal point. However, mechanical harvest efficiency was hampered by droopy leaves, leading to a high rate of broken tea shoots and leaves. Here, we dissected the genetic structure of leaf droopiness in tea plants using genome-wide association studies (GWAS) on 146 accessions, combined with transcriptome from two accessions with contrasting droopy leaf phenotypes. A set of 16 quantitative trait loci (QTLs) containing 54 SNPs and 34 corresponding candidate genes associated with droopiness were then identified. Among these, CsEXL3 (EXORDIUM-LIKE 3) from Chromosome 1 emerged as a candidate gene. Further investigations revealed that silencing CsEXL3 in tea plants resulted in weaker vascular cell malformation and brassinosteroid-induced leaf droopiness. Additionally, brassinosteroid signal factor CsBES1.2 was proved to participate in CsEXL3-induced droopiness and vascular cell malformation via using the CsBES1.2-silencing tea plant. Notably, CsBES1.2 bound on the E-box of CsEXL3 promoter to transcriptionally activate CsEXL3 expression as CUT&TAG based ChIP-qPCR and ChIP-seq suggested in vivo as well as EMSA and Y1H indicated in vitro. Furthermore, CsEXL3 instead of CsBES1.2 decreased lignin content and the expressing levels of lignin biosynthesis genes. Overall, our findings suggest that CsEXL3 regulates droopy leaves, partially through the transcriptional activation of CsBES1.2, with the potential to improve mechanical harvest efficiency in tea plantations.