Comparative transcriptome analysis provides insight into the molecular mechanisms of long-day photoperiod in Moringa oleifera

Physiol Mol Biol Plants. 2022 May;28(5):935-946. doi: 10.1007/s12298-022-01186-4. Epub 2022 May 21.

Abstract

Moringa oleifera, is commonly cultivated as a vegetable in tropical and subtropical regions because of nutritional and medicinal benefits of its fruits, immature pods, leaves, and flowers. Flowering at the right time is one of the important traits for crop yield in M.oleifera. Under normal conditions, photoperiod is one of the key factors in determining when plant flower. However, the molecular mechanism underlying the effects of a long-day photoperiod on Moringa is not clearly understood. In the present study, deep RNA sequencing and sugar metabolome were conducted of Moringa leaves under long-day photoperiod. As a result, differentially expressed genes were significantly associated with starch and sucrose pathway and the circadian rhythm-plant pathway. In starch and sucrose pathway, sucrose, fructose, trehalose, glucose, and maltose exhibited pronounced rhythmicity over 24 h, and TPS (trehalose-6-phosphate synthase) genes constituted key regulatory genes. In an Arabidopsis overexpression line hosting the MoTPS1 or MoTPS2 genes, flowering occurred earlier under a short-day photoperiod. These results will support molecular breeding of Moringa and may help clarify to genetic architecture of long-day photoperiod related traits.

Supplementary information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s12298-022-01186-4.

Keywords: Moringa oleifera; Photoperiod; Sugar metabolite profiling; TPS; Transcriptome.