Browse Articles

Article|14 Aug 2024|OPEN
Histone deacetylase SlHDA7 impacts fruit ripening and shelf life in tomato
Yijie Zhou1,2,5 , Zhiwei Li1,3,4,5 and Xinguo Su2 , Huiyu Hou1,3 , Yueming Jiang1,3,4 , Xuewu Duan1,3,4 , Hongxia Qu1,3,4 , , Guoxiang Jiang,1,3,4 ,
1State Key Laboratory of Plant Diversity and Specialty Crops & Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Applied Botany, South China Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou 510650, China
2Guangdong AIB Polytechnic, Guangzhou 510507, China
3South China National Botanical Garden, Guangzhou 510650, China
4University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China
5Yijie Zhou and Zhiwei Li contribute equally to this work
*Corresponding author. E-mail: q-hxia@scbg.ac.cn,gxjiang@scbg.ac.cn

Horticulture Research 11,
Article number: uhae234 (2024)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1093/hr/uhae234
Views: 2075

Received: 22 Mar 2024
Accepted: 08 Aug 2024
Published online: 14 Aug 2024

Abstract

Fruit ripening depends on the accurate control of ripening-related genes expression, with histone deacetylases (HDACs) playing crucial roles in transcriptional regulation. However, the functions of HDACs in fruit maturation remain largely unexplored. Here, we show that SlHDA7 acts as a suppressor of fruit ripening and functions as an H4ac HDAC in tomato. Deletion of SlHDA7 accelerated fruit ripening, while overexpression of SlHDA7 delayed the maturation process. Additionally, ethylene production and carotenoid biosynthesis significantly increased in slhda7 mutant fruits but decreased in SlHDA7-overexpressing fruits. Furthermore, SlHDA7 repress the expression of ethylene production and signaling, carotenoid metabolism, cell wall modification, and transcriptional regulation-related genes. RT-qPCR and ChIP-qPCR analyses indicated that SlHDA7 may deacetylate H4ac, leading to reduced transcript levels of ACO1, GGPPS2Z-ISO, EXP1, and XYL1 mRNA, consequently suppressing fruit ripening. Moreover, SlHDA7 suppresses fruit ripening by targeting specific ripening-associated transcription factors (TFs) like RINFUL1, and ERF.E1, ultimately leading to delayed ripening and prolonged fruit shelf life. In summary, our findings indicate that SlHDA7 negatively modulates tomato fruit maturation by adjusting H4ac levels of these ripening-associated genes and key TFs.