Floral scent emission of Epiphyllum oxypetalum: discovery of its cytosol-localized geraniol biosynthesis
Yiyang Zhang, Yuhan Zhang, Andong Zhang, Qiurui Tian, Bin Yang, Likun Wei, Wei Wu, Ting Zhu, Zhiwei Zhou, Jiaqi Wang, Zhibin Liu, Wei Tang, Haijun Xiao, Mingchun Liu, Tao Li, Qun SunAbstract
Epiphyllum oxypetalum, a renowned ornamental species in Cactaceae, releases attractive fragrance during its infrequent, transient and nocturnal blooms. However, the floral fragrance composition and biosynthesis remain largely unexplored. Employing volatilomics, transcriptomics and biochemistry, we systematically characterized the composition, emission dynamics and biosynthesis of the floral scent of E. oxypetalum. The floral scent composition of E. oxypetalum was highly dynamic. Starting after 20:00 local time, volatile emission increased 200-fold within six hours. At full bloom, geraniol accounted for 72.54% of the total emission, followed by benzyl alcohol (12.96%) and methyl salicylate (3.75%). These scents predominantly originated from petals and sepals. Transcriptomic analysis and inhibition assays using pathway-specific inhibitors revealed that the mevalonate pathway was the precursor source for geraniol biosynthesis. Functionally characterized cytosol localizing geraniol synthase EoTPSa1 was the key enzyme responsible for geraniol biosynthesis. Together, these findings pinpointed a cytosolic biosynthetic route for the major scent volatile geraniol in E. oxypetalum. Our study provides new insights into the emission dynamics and biosynthesis of E. oxypetalum floral scents. In particular, we demonstrated a distinctive mevalonate pathway-based geraniol biosynthetic pathway, which may hold potential for the development of novel perfume products.