ABSTRACT
Autophagy, a cellular degradation pathway, and the phytohormone ethylene function in plant development, senescence, and stress responses. However, the manner of their interaction is mostly unknown. We reasoned that this may be revealed by studying autophagy in a climacteric fruit ripening context, for which ethylene is crucial. During ripening, fruits undergo softening, color change, toxic compound degradation, volatile production, and sugar assembly by fine-tuning synthesis and degradation of their cellular content. For autophagy activity assessment, we analyzed autophagy-related 8 (ATG8) lipidation and GFP-ATG8-labeled autophagosome flux in tomato fruit cells. Autophagy activity increased sharply from ripening initiation, climaxed at its middle stage, and declined towards its end, resembling ethylene production dynamics. Silencing the core-autophagy genes SlATG2, SlATG7, and SlATG4 separately in mature fruits resulted in early ethylene production and ripening onset, which was abrogated by 1-methylcyclopropene (1-MCP), an ethylene signaling inhibitor. Beyond ripening, Arabidopsis atg5 and atg7 mutant seedlings exhibited elevated ethylene production and sensitivity to 1-Aminocyclopropane 1-carboxylic acid (ACC), ethylenès precursor, which induces autophagy. This research demonstrates that autophagy limits tomato fruit ripening via a general role in ethylene restriction, opening the path for a mechanistic understanding of autophagy-ethylene crosstalk and harnessing autophagy for fruit shelf-life extension.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
The authors' affiliations were updated, and a few typos were corrected. The open questions model (Fig. 5C) was slightly revised.