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Silencing of histone deacetylase SlHDT3 delays fruit ripening and suppresses carotenoid accumulation in tomato.

The acetylation levels of histones on lysine residues are regulated by histone acetyltransferases and histone deacetylases, which play an important but understudied role in the control of gene expression in plants. There is an increasing research focus on histone deacetylation in crops, but to date, there is little information regarding tomato. With the aim of characterizing the tomato HD2 family of histone deacetylases, an RNA interference (RNAi) expression vector of SlHDT3 was constructed and transformed into tomato plants. The time of fruit ripening was delayed and the shelf life of the fruit was prolonged in SlHDT3 RNAi lines. The accumulation of carotenoid was decreased by altering of the carotenoid pathway flux. Ethylene content was also reduced and expression of ethylene biosynthetic genes (ACS2, ACS4 and ACO1, ACO3) and ripening-associated genes (RIN, E4, E8, PG, Pti4 and LOXB) was significantly down-regulated in SlHDT3 RNAi lines. The expression of genes involved in fruit cell wall metabolism (HEX, MAN, TBG4, XTH5 and XYL) was inhibited compared with wild type. These results indicate that SlHDT3 functions as a positive regulator of fruit ripening by affecting ethylene synthesis and carotenoid accumulation and that SlHDT3 lies upstream of SlMADS-RIN in the fruit ripening regulatory network.

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