The developmental regulation and organ-specific expression of
shikimate dehydrogenase was studied in seedlings
of Capsicum annuum L. during their early development. The
results obtained suggest that there is both a
developmental regulation and an organ-specific expression of
shikimate dehydrogenase in seedlings of C. annuum,
seen mainly in the cotyledons. For example, shikimate dehydrogenase
isoenzyme 3 was differentially expressed in
cotyledons, but not at all in roots or hypocotyls. When the amounts
of shikimate dehydrogenase were compared
with the end-products of the shikimate pathway, chlorogenic acid and
lignins, it was observed that the fall in
shikimate dehydrogenase activity in cotyledons coincided with a
decrease in the concentrations of phenolics during
primary leaf development. However, this did not seem to be the case
with the hypocotyls, where the fall in
phenolics was not related to the amount of shikimate dehydrogenase but
rather to an increase in lignin deposition,
supporting the view that chlorogenic acid might act as a precursor of
the aromatic moiety of cinnamoyl alcohols during cell wall lignification.