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  4. Morphological Diversity, Genetic Characterization, and Phytochemical Assessment of the Cypriot Tomato Germplasm
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Morphological Diversity, Genetic Characterization, and Phytochemical Assessment of the Cypriot Tomato Germplasm

Journal
Plants
Date Issued
August 18, 2021
Author(s)
Athinodorou, Filio  
Foukas, Petros  
Tsaniklidis, Georgios  
Kotsiras, Anastasios  
Chrysargyris, Antonios  
Delis, Costas  
Kyratzis, Angelos C.  
Tzortzakis, Nikos G.  
Nikoloudakis, Nikolaos  
DOI
10.3390/plants10081698
Abstract
Tomato (Solanum lycopersicum L.) is considered one of the most valuable and versatile vegetable crops globally and also serves as a significant model species for fruit developmental biology. Despite its significance, a severe genetic bottleneck and intense selection of genotypes with specific qualitative traits have resulted in the prevalence of a restricted number of (geno)types, also causing a lack of diversity across widespread cultivated types. As a result, the re-emergence of landraces as well as traditional and heirloom varieties is largely acknowledged as a countermeasure to restore phenotypic, phytochemical and genetic diversity while enriching the aroma/taste tomato palette. On those grounds, the Cypriot tomato germplasm was assessed and characterized. Ten landrace accessions were evaluated under greenhouse conditions and data were collected for 24 IPGRI discrete phenotypic traits. Grouping of accessions largely reflected the fruit shape and size; four different fruit types were recorded across accessions (flattened, heart-shaped, rounded and highly rounded). Moreover, a single run panel consisting of ten SSRs was developed and applied in order to genetically characterize 190 Cypriot genotypes and foreign heirloom varieties. Based on genetic indexes it was established that tomato landraces have a rather low level of heterogeneity and genetic variation. Finally, mineral and phytochemical analyses were conducted in order to estimate biochemical attributes (total phenolics, ascorbic acid, lycopene, β-carotene, total soluble content, titratable acidity) across genotypes; thus, ascertaining that the Cypriot panel has a high nutritional value. Due to the thermo-drought adaptation and tolerance of these genotypes, the current study serves as a roadmap for future breeding efforts in order to incorporate desirable traits or develop novel tomato lines combining resilience and alimentary value.
Subjects

Solanum lycopersicon

Ascorbic acid

Carotenoids

Heirloom varieties

Landraces

Microsatellites

Minerals

Phenolics

File(s)
Thumbnail Image
Name

plants-10-01698-v2.pdf

Size

4.02 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

a2600e9cb156bedbc80c8ec3686f2ae1

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