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High-Resolution Mapping of a Fruit Firmness-Related Quantitative Trait Locus in Tomato Reveals Epistatic Interactions Associated with a Complex Combinatorial Locus

Authors :
Guiping Sun
Peter Glen Walley
Mathilde Causse
Julien Bonnet
Neil S. Graham
Mervin Poole
Laurent Grivet
Graham B. Seymour
Rebecca Smith
James R. Lynn
Charles Baxter
Graham J.W. King
Natalie H. Chapman
University of Nottingham, UK (UON)
Syngenta France
Appl Stat Solut
Partenaires INRAE
Sch Life Sci
La Trobe University
Campden BRI
Génétique et Amélioration des Fruits et Légumes (GAFL)
Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)
Southern Cross University (SCU)
Syngenta Ltd
UK Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council [BB/D00103X, BB/G02491X]
Syngenta
European Solanaceae Integrated Project EUSOL [Food-CT-2006-016214]
Source :
Plant Physiology, Plant Physiology, American Society of Plant Biologists, 2012, 159 (4), pp.1644-1657. ⟨10.1104/pp.112.200634⟩
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2012.

Abstract

Publication Inra prise en compte dans l'analyse bibliométrique des publications scientifiques mondiales sur les Fruits, les Légumes et la Pomme de terre. Période 2000-2012. http://prodinra.inra.fr/record/256699; International audience; Fruit firmness in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) is determined by a number of factors including cell wall structure, turgor, and cuticle properties. Firmness is a complex polygenic trait involving the coregulation of many genes and has proved especially challenging to unravel. In this study, a quantitative trait locus (QTL) for fruit firmness was mapped to tomato chromosome 2 using the Zamir Solanum pennellii interspecific introgression lines (ILs) and fine-mapped in a population consisting of 7,500 F2 and F3 lines from IL 2-3 and IL 2-4. This firmness QTL contained five distinct subpeaks, Fir(s.p.)QTL2.1 to Fir(s.p.)QTL2.5, and an effect on a distal region of IL 2-4 that was nonoverlapping with IL 2-3. All these effects were located within an 8.6-Mb region. Using genetic markers, each subpeak within this combinatorial locus was mapped to a physical location within the genome, and an ethylene response factor (ERF) underlying Fir(s.p.)QTL2.2 and a region containing three pectin methylesterase (PME) genes underlying Fir(s.p.)QTL2.5 were nominated as QTL candidate genes. Statistical models used to explain the observed variability between lines indicated that these candidates and the nonoverlapping portion of IL 2-4 were sufficient to account for the majority of the fruit firmness effects. Quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction was used to quantify the expression of each candidate gene. ERF showed increased expression associated with soft fruit texture in the mapping population. In contrast, PME expression was tightly linked with firm fruit texture. Analysis of a range of recombinant lines revealed evidence for an epistatic interaction that was associated with this combinatorial locus.

Details

ISSN :
15322548 and 00320889
Volume :
159
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Plant Physiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5f751c3b4f5d22e0ed148d4f8ed5716b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.112.200634