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Whole-genome re-sequencing of two Italian tomato landraces reveals sequence variations in genes associated with stress tolerance, fruit quality and long shelf-life traits

Authors :
Pasquale Termolino
Marina Tucci
Clara Conicella
Irantzu Anzar
Silvana Grandillo
Nunzio D’Agostino
Maria Cammareri
Samuela Palombieri
Chiara Colantuono
Valentina Tranchida-Lombardo
Simone Landi
Monica De Palma
Riccardo Aiese Cigliano
Walter Sanseverino
Domenico Carputo
Riccardo Aversano
Federica Consiglio
Antonio Di Matteo
Giorgia Batelli
Stefania Grillo
Hamed Bostan
Maria Luisa Chiusano
Tranchida-lombardo, Valentina
Aiese Cigliano, Riccardo
Anzar, Irantzu
Landi, Simone
Palombieri, Samuela
Colantuono, Chiara
Bostan, Hamed
Termolino, Pasquale
Aversano, Riccardo
Batelli, Giorgia
Cammareri, Maria
Carputo, Domenico
Chiusano, Maria Luisa
Conicella, Clara
Consiglio, Federica
De Palma, Monica
Di Matteo, Antonio
Grandillo, Silvana
Sanseverino, Walter
Tucci, Marina
Grillo, Stefania
Source :
DNA Research: An International Journal for Rapid Publication of Reports on Genes and Genomes
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Tomato is a high value crop and the primary model for fleshy fruit development and ripening. Breeding priorities include increased fruit quality, shelf life and tolerance to stresses. To contribute towards this goal, we re-sequenced the genomes of Corbarino (COR) and Lucariello (LUC) landraces, which both possess the traits of plant adaptation to water deficit, prolonged fruit shelf-life and good fruit quality. Through the newly developed pipeline Reconstructor, we generated the genome sequences of COR and LUC using datasets of 65.8 M and 56.4 M of 30–150 bp paired-end reads, respectively. New contigs including reads that could not be mapped to the tomato reference genome were assembled, and a total of 43, 054 and 44, 579 gene loci were annotated in COR and LUC. Both genomes showed novel regions with similarity to Solanum pimpinellifolium and Solanum pennellii. In addition to small deletions and insertions, 2, 000 and 1, 700 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) could exert potentially disruptive effects on 1, 371 and 1, 201 genes in COR and LUC, respectively. A detailed survey of the SNPs occurring in fruit quality, shelf life and stress tolerance related-genes identified several candidates of potential relevance. Variations in ethylene response components may concur in determining peculiar phenotypes of COR and LUC.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
DNA Research: An International Journal for Rapid Publication of Reports on Genes and Genomes
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....898dc1ddba2e41ccb033f20e2b1d180e