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Article|01 Dec 2020|OPEN
Melon short internode (CmSi) encodes an ERECTA-like receptor kinase regulating stem elongation through auxin signaling
Sen Yang1 , Kaige Zhang1 , Huayu Zhu1 , Xiaojing Zhang1 , Wenkai Yan2 , Nana Xu1 , Dongming Liu1 , Jianbin Hu1 , Yufeng Wu2 , Yiqun Weng3 and Luming Yang,1 ,
1College of Horticulture, Henan Agricultural University, 63 Nongye Road, 450002 Zhengzhou, China
2State Key Laboratory of Crop Genetics and Germplasm Enhancement, Bioinformatics Center, Nanjing Agricultural University, 210095 Nanjing, China
3USDA-ARS, Vegetable Crops Research Unit, Horticulture Department, University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison, WI 53706, USA
*Corresponding author. E-mail: lumingyang@henau.edu.cn

Horticulture Research 7,
Article number: 202 (2020)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41438-020-00426-6
Views: 674

Received: 26 Jul 2020
Revised: 22 Sep 2020
Accepted: 30 Sep 2020
Published online: 01 Dec 2020

Abstract

Plant height is one of the most important agronomic traits that directly determines plant architecture, and compact or dwarf plants can allow for increased planting density and land utilization as well as increased lodging resistance and economic yield. At least four dwarf/semidwarf genes have been identified in different melon varieties, but none of them have been cloned, and little is known about the molecular mechanisms underlying internode elongation in melon. Here, we report map-based cloning and functional characterization of the first semidwarf gene short internode (Cmsi) in melon, which encodes an ERECTA-like receptor kinase regulating internode elongation. Spatial-temporal expression analyses revealed that CmSI exhibited high expression in the vascular bundle of the main stem during internode elongation. The expression level of CmSI was positively correlated with stem length in the different melon varieties examined. Ectopic expression of CmSI in Arabidopsis and cucumber suggested CmSI as a positive regulator of internode elongation in both species. Phytohormone quantitation and transcriptome analysis showed that the auxin content and the expression levels of a number of genes involved in the auxin signaling pathway were altered in the semidwarf mutant, including several well-known auxin transporters, such as members of the ABCB family and PIN-FORMED genes. A melon polar auxin transport protein CmPIN2 was identified by protein–protein interaction assay as physically interacting with CmSI to modulate auxin signaling. Thus, CmSI functions in an auxin-dependent regulatory pathway to control internode elongation in melon. Our findings revealed that the ERECTA family gene CmSI regulates stem elongation in melon through auxin signaling, which can directly affect polar auxin transport.