Plants (Nov 2024)

Multi-Omics Analysis Uncovers the Mechanism for Enhanced Organic Acid Accumulation in Peach (<i>Prunus persica</i> L.) Fruit from High-Altitude Areas

  • Haiyan Song,
  • Ke Zhao,
  • Xiaoan Wang,
  • Guoliang Jiang,
  • Jing Li,
  • Chengyong He,
  • Lingli Wang,
  • Shuxia Sun,
  • Meiyan Tu,
  • Qiang Wang,
  • Ronggao Gong,
  • Dong Chen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants13223171
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 22
p. 3171

Abstract

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The early-ripening peach industry has undergone rapid development in the Panxi region of the Sichuan Basin in recent years. However, after the introduction of some new peach varieties to the high-altitude peach-producing areas in Panxi, the titratable acid content in peach fruit has significantly increased. This study compared the fruit quality indicators of early-ripening peach varieties cultivated in Xide County (a high-altitude peach-producing area) and Longquanyi District (a low-altitude peach-producing area) in Sichuan Province and analyzed the differences in organic acid metabolism by combining primary metabolomic and transcriptomic approaches. The results showed that the ‘Zhongtaohongyu’ fruit from the high-altitude peach-producing area had a much higher accumulation of malic acid and, accordingly, a significantly higher organic acid content than the other samples. The lower annual average temperature and stronger ultraviolet radiation in high-altitude peach-producing areas may lead to the increased expression of genes (PpNAD-ME1, PpNADP-ME3, and PpPEPC1) in the organic acid synthesis pathway and the decreased expression of genes (PpACO2, PpNAD-MDH2/3/4/5, and PpPEPCK2) in the organic acid degradation pathway in peach fruit, ultimately resulting in the accumulation of more organic acids. Among them, the downregulation of the key genes PpNAD-MDH3/4/5 involved in malic acid metabolism may be the main reason for the higher malic acid accumulation in peach fruit from high-altitude peach-producing areas. Overall, this study elucidates the mechanism by which environmental factors enhance the accumulation of organic acids in peach fruit from high-altitude peach-producing areas from a multi-omics perspective, as well as providing a theoretical basis for screening key genes involved in organic acid metabolism in peach fruit.

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