Genome-wide association analysis of Monilinia fructicola lesion in a collection of Spanish peach landraces

Publication Overview
TitleGenome-wide association analysis of Monilinia fructicola lesion in a collection of Spanish peach landraces
AuthorsN/A
TypeJournal Article
Year2023
CitationMartínez-García PJ, Mas-Gómez J, Prudencio ÁS, Barriuso JJ, Cantín CM. Genome-wide association analysis of Monilinia fructicola lesion in a collection of Spanish peach landraces. Front Plant Sci. 2023 Oct 23;14:1165847

Abstract

Brown rot, caused by the Monilinia spp., is the disease that causes the greatest losses in stone fruit worldwide. Currently, M. fructicola has become the dominant species in the main peach production area in Spain. The fruit cuticle is the first barrier of protection against external aggressions and may have a key role in the susceptibility to brown rot. However, information on the role of skin fruit on the resistance to brown rot in peach is scarce. Previous genetic analyses in peach have demonstrated that brown rot resistance is a complex and quantitative trait in which different fruit parts and resistance mechanisms are involved. To search for genomic areas involved in the control of the cultivar susceptibility to brown rot and to elucidate the role of fruit skin against this infection, we have studied, for two consecutive seasons (2019 and 2020), the fruit susceptibility to M. fructicola, together with fruit cuticle thickness (CT) and density (CD), in a collection of 80 Spanish and 5 foreign peach cultivars from the National Peach Collection at CITA (Zaragoza, Spain). Brown rot incidence, lesion diameter, and severity index were calculated after 5 days of inoculation on non-wounded fruit. The peach collection has also been genotyped using the new peach SNP chip (9 + 9K). Genotypic and phenotypic data have been used to perform a genome-wide association analysis (GWAS). Phenotyping has shown a wide variability on the brown rot susceptibility within the Spanish germplasm as well as on CD and CT. The GWAS results have identified several significant SNPs associated with disease severity index (DSI), CD, and CT, five of which were considered as reliable SNP-trait associations. A wide protein network analysis, using 127 genes within the regions of the reliable SNPs and previously identified candidate genes (169) associated with Monilinia spp. resistance, highlighted several genes involved in classical hypersensitive response (HR), genes related to wax layers as ceramidases and lignin precursors catalyzers, and a possible role of autophagy during brown rot infection. This work adds relevant information on the complexity resistance mechanisms to brown rot infection in peach fruits and the genetics behind them.
Features
This publication contains information about 19 features:
Feature NameUniquenameType
cuticle densityGWAS0001625GWAS
cuticle densityGWAS0001626GWAS
cuticle densityGWAS0001627GWAS
cuticle densityGWAS0001628GWAS
cuticle densityGWAS0001629GWAS
cuticle densityGWAS0001630GWAS
cuticle densityGWAS0001631GWAS
cuticle thicknessGWAS0001632GWAS
cuticle thicknessGWAS0001633GWAS
cuticle thicknessGWAS0001634GWAS
resistance to Monilinia fructicolaGWAS0001635GWAS
resistance to Monilinia fructicolaGWAS0001636GWAS
resistance to Monilinia fructicolaGWAS0001637GWAS
resistance to Monilinia fructicolaGWAS0001638GWAS
resistance to Monilinia fructicolaGWAS0001639GWAS
resistance to Monilinia fructicolaGWAS0001640GWAS
resistance to Monilinia fructicolaGWAS0001641GWAS
resistance to Monilinia fructicolaGWAS0001642GWAS
resistance to Monilinia fructicolaGWAS0001643GWAS
Projects
This publication contains information about 1 projects:
Project NameDescription
Peach_Monilinia_reisitance_GWAS_Martinez_Garcia_2023
Stocks
This publication contains information about 1 stocks:
Stock NameUniquenameType
Peach_Monilinia_GWAS_Martinez_Garcia_85Peach_Monilinia_GWAS_Martinez_Garcia_85panel