A Multidisciplinary Approach Providing New Insight into Fruit Flesh Browning Physiology in Apple (Malus x domestica Borkh.)

Publication Overview
TitleA Multidisciplinary Approach Providing New Insight into Fruit Flesh Browning Physiology in Apple (Malus x domestica Borkh.)
AuthorsDi Guardo M, Tadiello A, Farneti B, Lorenz G, Masuero D, Vrhovsek U, Costa G, Velasco R, Costa F
TypeJournal Article
Journal NamePloS one
Volume8
Issue10
Year2013
Page(s)e78004
CitationDi Guardo M, Tadiello A, Farneti B, Lorenz G, Masuero D, Vrhovsek U, Costa G, Velasco R, Costa F. A Multidisciplinary Approach Providing New Insight into Fruit Flesh Browning Physiology in Apple (Malus x domestica Borkh.). PloS one. 2013; 8(10):e78004.

Abstract

In terms of the quality of minimally processed fruit, flesh browning is fundamentally important in the development of an aesthetically unpleasant appearance, with consequent off-flavours. The development of browning depends on the enzymatic action of the polyphenol oxidase (PPO). In the 'Golden Delicious' apple genome ten PPO genes were initially identified and located on three main chromosomes (2, 5 and 10). Of these genes, one element in particular, here called Md-PPO, located on chromosome 10, was further investigated and genetically mapped in two apple progenies ('Fuji x Pink Lady' and 'Golden Delicious x Braeburn'). Both linkage maps, made up of 481 and 608 markers respectively, were then employed to find QTL regions associated with fruit flesh browning, allowing the detection of 25 QTLs related to several browning parameters. These were distributed over six linkage groups with LOD values spanning from 3.08 to 4.99 and showed a rate of phenotypic variance from 26.1 to 38.6%. Anchoring of these intervals to the apple genome led to the identification of several genes involved in polyphenol synthesis and cell wall metabolism. Finally, the expression profile of two specific candidate genes, up and downstream of the polyphenolic pathway, namely phenylalanine ammonia lyase (PAL) and polyphenol oxidase (PPO), provided insight into flesh browning physiology. Md-PPO was further analyzed and two haplotypes were characterised and associated with fruit flesh browning in apple.

Features
This publication contains information about 85 features:
Feature NameUniquenameType
fruit flesh browning rateqFB.FjxPL-LG11.T30-T0bQTL
fruit flesh browning rateqFB.FjxPL-LG10.T60-T0LQTL
fruit flesh browning rateqFB.FjxPL-LG10.T60-T0aQTL
fruit flesh browning rateqFB.FjxPL-LG11.T60-T0aQTL
fruit flesh browning rateqFB.FjxPL-LG14.T60-T30LQTL
fruit flesh browning rateqFB.FjxPL-LG14.T60-T30aQTL
fruit flesh browning rateqFB.FjxPL-LG10.T30-T0%LQTL
fruit flesh browning rateqFB.FjxPL-LG11.T30-T0%aQTL
fruit flesh browning rateqFB.FjxPL-LG10.T60-T0%LQTL
fruit flesh browning rateqFB.FjxPL-LG11.T60-T0%aQTL

Pages

Projects
This publication contains information about 1 projects:
Project NameDescription
Apple-Flesh_browning-Guardo-2013
Featuremaps
This publication contains information about 2 maps:
Map Name
Apple-FjxPL-F1-2013
Apple-GDxBr-F1-2013
Stocks
This publication contains information about 6 stocks:
Stock NameUniquenameType
BraeburnBraeburnaccession
Pink LadyPink Ladyaccession
Golden DeliciousGolden Deliciousaccession
Fuji_x_Pink LadyFuji_x_Pink Ladypopulation
GoldenDelicious_x_BraeburnGoldenDelicious_x_Braeburnpopulation
FujiFujiaccession