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Two large-effect QTLs, Ma and Ma3, determine genetic potential for acidity in apple fruit : breeding insights from a multi-family study

Authors :
Verma, S.
Evans, K.
Guan, Y.
Luby, J.J.
Rosyara, U.R.
Howard, N.P.
Bassil, N.
Bink, M.C.A.M.
van de Weg, W.E.
Peace, C.P.
Verma, S.
Evans, K.
Guan, Y.
Luby, J.J.
Rosyara, U.R.
Howard, N.P.
Bassil, N.
Bink, M.C.A.M.
van de Weg, W.E.
Peace, C.P.
Source :
ISSN: 1614-2942
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Acidity is a critical component of the apple fruit consumption experience. In previous biparental family studies, two large-effect acidity QTLs were reported using freshly harvested fruit. Objectives of this study were to determine the number and location of QTLs for acidity variation in a large apple breeding program and ascertain the quantitative effects and breeding relevance of QTL allelic combinations at harvest and after commercially relevant periods of cold storage. Pedigree-connected germplasm of 16 full-sib families representing nine important breeding parents, genotyped for the 8K SNP array, was assessed for titratable acidity at harvest and after 10- and 20-week storage treatments, for three successive seasons. Using pedigree-based QTL mapping software, FlexQTL™, evidence was found for only two QTLs, on linkage groups 16 (the reported Ma locus) and LG 8 (here called Ma3) that jointly explained 66 ± 5% of the phenotypic variation. An additive allele dosage model for the two QTLs effectively explained most acidity variation, with an average of + 1.8 mg/L at harvest per high-acidity allele. The more high-acidity alleles, the faster the depletion with storage, with all combinations appearing to eventually converge to a common baseline. All parent cultivars and selections had one or two of the four possible high-acidity alleles. Each QTL had a rare second high-acidity allele with stronger or reduced effect. Diagnostic SNP markers were identified for QTL alleles derived from distinct sources. Combined QTL effects highlighted utility of the DNA-based information in new cultivar development for targeting desired fruit acidity levels before or after storage.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
ISSN: 1614-2942
Notes :
application/pdf, Tree Genetics and Genomes 15 (2019) 2, ISSN: 1614-2942, ISSN: 1614-2942, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1200321265
Document Type :
Electronic Resource