Abstract
Sugar is the key factor in the formation of fruit quality. Hexose is the main form of sugar accumulated in ordinary cultivated tomatoes, while a small number of wild-type tomato varieties can also accumulate sucrose. Although several studies have focused on wild sucrose-accumulating tomatoes, the sugar accumulation mechanism in tomato is still unclear. Here, two cherry tomatoes lines that accumulated sucrose and hexose respectively were selected to analyze the assimilates unloading pathway and sugar accumulation mechanism using CF tracing, cytological observation, proteomics methods, etc. The results indicated that the later stages of fruit development were key stages for sugar accumulation, and sucrose-accumulating (S) cherry tomatoes had higher sucrose contents in the fruits, while hexose-accumulating (H) cherry tomatoes accumulated more glucose, fructose and starch. The unloading pathway of assimilates in the S cherry tomato was switched from apoplastic to symplastic during fruit development, and the opposite was true in the H type. Plasmodesmata transport may be the main means of sucrose accumulation and high activity or expression levels of acid invertase (AI) and SUT1 may be important factors in hexose accumulation in H and S cherry tomatoes, respectively. In addition to sugar metabolism, photosynthesis, fatty acid metabolism and other secondary metabolism pathways also play important roles in sugar accumulation. This study provides detailed evidence for the tomato sugar accumulation mechanism from the perspective of cell structure, physiology and molecular biology, providing a theoretical basis for the improvement of tomato quality and aiding the utilization of tomato genetic resources.