Frontiers in Plant Science (Aug 2016)

CsAP3: a cucumber homolog to Arabidopsis APETALA3 with novel characteristics

  • Jinjing Sun,
  • Jinjing Sun,
  • Feng Li,
  • Donghui Wang,
  • Xia Li,
  • Xiaofeng Liu,
  • Na Liu,
  • Haitao Gu,
  • Cheng Zou,
  • Jingchu Luo,
  • Chaoxing He,
  • Sanwen Huang,
  • Xiaolan Zhang,
  • Zhihong Xu,
  • Shu-Nong Bai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2016.01181
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7

Abstract

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In our previous efforts to understand the regulatory mechanisms of cucumber unisexual flower development, we observed a stamen-specific down-regulation of the ethylene receptor CsETR1 in stage 6 female flowers of cucumber (Cucumis sativus L). This down-regulation is correlated with the primordial anther-specific DNA damage that characterizes inappropriate stamen development in cucumber female flowers. To understand how CsETR1 is down regulated in the stamen, we characterized a cucumber MADS box gene homologous to Arabidopsis AP3, CsAP3. We demonstrated that CsAP3 is functionally equivalent to the Arabidopsis B-class MADS gene AP3. However, three novel characteristics of CsAP3 were found. These include firstly, binding and activating CsETR1 promoter in vitro and in vivo; secondly, containing a GV repeat in its C-terminus, which is conserved in cucurbits and required for the transcription activation; and thirdly, decreased expression as the node number increases, which is similar to that found for CsETR1. These findings revealed not only the conserved function of CsAP3 as a B-class floral identity gene, but also its unique functions in regulation of female flower development in cucumber.

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