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  4. Genomic sequencing of Japanese plum (Prunus salicina Lindl.) mutants provides a new model for rosaceae fruit ripening studies
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Genomic sequencing of Japanese plum (Prunus salicina Lindl.) mutants provides a new model for rosaceae fruit ripening studies

Journal
Frontiers in Plant Science
Date Issued
January 19, 2018
Author(s)
Marti, Angel Fernandez Ι.  
Saski, Christopher A.  
Manganaris, George A.  
Gasic, Ksenija  
Crisosto, Carlos H.  
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2018.00021
10.3389/fpls.2018.00021
Abstract
It has recently been described that the Japanese plum “Santa Rosa” bud sport series contains variations in ripening pattern: climacteric, suppressed-climacteric and non-climacteric types. This provides an interesting model to study the role of ethylene and other key mechanisms governing fruit ripening, softening and senescence. The aim of the current study was to investigate such differences at the genomic level, using this series of plum bud sports, with special reference to genes involved in ethylene biosynthesis, signal transduction, and sugar metabolism. Genomic DNA, isolated from leaf samples of six Japanese plumcultivars (“Santa Rosa”, “July Santa Rosa”, “Late Santa Rosa”, “Sweet Miriam”, “Roysum”, and “Casselman”), was used to construct paired-end standard Illumina libraries. Sequences were aligned to the Prunus persica genome, and genomic variations (SNPs, INDELS, andCNV’s) were investigated. Results determined12 potential candidate genes with significant copy number variation (CNV), being associated with ethylene perception andsignal transduction components. Additionally, the Maximum Likelihood (ML) phylogenetic tree showed two sorbitol dehydrogenase genes grouping into a distinct clade, indicating that this natural group is well-defined and presents high sequence identity among its members. In contrast, the ethylene group, which includes ACO1, ACS1, ACS4, ACS5, CTR1, ERF1, ERF3, and ethylene-receptor genes, was widely distributed and clustered into 10 different groups. Thus, ACS, ERF, and sorbitol dehydrogenase proteins potentially share a common ancestor for different plant genomes, while the expansion rate may be related to ancestral expansion rather than species-specific events. Based on the distribution of the clades, we suggest that gene function diversification for the ripening pathway occurred prior to family extension. We herein report all the frameshift mutations in genes involved in sugar transport and ethylene biosynthesis detected as well as the gene CNV implicated in ripening differences.
Subjects

Climacteric

Copy number variation...

Molecular evolution

Non-climacteric

PE Illumina libraries...

Ripening

SNPs/INDELS

Suppressed-climacteri...

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