Horticulture Research (Aug 2018)

Aberrant seed development in Litchi chinensis is associated with the impaired expression of cell wall invertase genes

  • Jieqiong Zhang,
  • Zichen Wu,
  • Fuchu Hu,
  • Lian Liu,
  • Xuming Huang,
  • Jietang Zhao,
  • Huicong Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41438-018-0042-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Plant development: The complex control of seed size A family of genes, known as cell wall invertases (CWINs), control different stages of seed development in litchi, and could be used to breed more desirable fruits. Seed set and seed size are important characteristics of horticultural plants, with the seeds of some crops being significant food sources, while seedlessness or small seededness is sought after in many fruit crops. A team led by Jietang Zhao and Huicong Wang, of South China Agricultural University, studied the genes controlling seed set and size in small-seeded, large-seeded and seed-abortive cultivars of litchi (Litchi chinensis). They identified five members of the CWIN family, of which one, LcCWIN5, was shown to regulate early seed development, while another, LcCWIN2, was active during the later “seed-filling” stage. These results could aid the development of more attractive, small-seeded or seedless varieties of litchi.