TY - JOUR
T1 - Co-mapping studies of QTLs for fruit acidity and candidate genes of organic acid metabolism and proton transport in sweet melon (Cucumis melo L.)
AU - Cohen, Shimon
AU - Tzuri, G.
AU - Harel-Beja, R.
AU - Itkin, Maxim
AU - Portnoy, V.
AU - Sa'ar, U.
AU - Lev, Sima
AU - Yeselson, L.
AU - Petrikov, M.
AU - Rogachev, Ilana
AU - Aharoni, Asaph
AU - Ophir, R.
AU - Tadmor, Y.
AU - Lewinsohn, E.
AU - Burger, Y.
AU - Katzir, N.
AU - Schaffer, A. A.
N1 - Ministry of Agriculture; Israel Bio-Tov Consortium & MAGNET, Israeli Ministry of Industry, Trade and Labor; Binational Agriculture Research and Development (BARD) [IS-2270-94, IS-3877-06]; Israel Science Foundation [386/06]; EU [FOOD-CT-2006-036220]; European Research Council (ERC) SAMITThe authors gratefully acknowledge financial support from of the Chief Scientist, Ministry of Agriculture; The Israel Bio-Tov Consortium & MAGNET program, Israeli Ministry of Industry, Trade and Labor; Binational Agriculture Research and Development (BARD) Grant IS-2270-94 and IS-3877-06; Israel Science Foundation Grant No. 386/06. This work was supported by the EU Framework Programme 6 project Meta-Phor (grant no. FOOD-CT-2006-036220). The work in AA lab was supported by the European Research Council (ERC) SAMIT project. This paper is journal series # 003-12 of the Agricultural Research Organization.
PY - 2012/7
Y1 - 2012/7
N2 - Sweet melon cultivars contain a low level of organic acids and, therefore, the quality and flavor of sweet melon fruit is determined almost exclusively by fruit sugar content. However, genetic variability for fruit acid levels in the Cucumis melo species exists and sour fruit accessions are characterized by acidic fruit pH of <5, compared to the sweet cultivars that are generally characterized by mature fruit pH values of >6. In this paper, we report results from a mapping population based on recombinant inbred lines (RILs) derived from the cross between the non-sour 'Dulce' variety and the sour PI 414323 accession. Results show that a single major QTL for pH co-localizes with major QTLs for the two predominant organic acids in melon fruit, citric and malic, together with an additional metabolite which we identified as uridine. While the acidic recombinants were characterized by higher citric and malic acid levels, the non-acidic recombinants had a higher uridine content than did the acidic recombinants. Additional minor QTLs for pH, citric acid and malic acid were also identified and for these the increased acidity was unexpectedly contributed by the non-sour parent. To test for co-localization of these QTLs with genes encoding organic acid metabolism and transport, we mapped the genes encoding structural enzymes and proteins involved in organic acid metabolism, transport and vacuolar H+ pumps. None of these genes co-localized with the major pH QTL, indicating that the gene determining melon fruit pH is not one of the candidate genes encoding this primary metabolic pathway. Linked markers were tested in two additional inter-varietal populations and shown to be linked to the pH trait. The presence of the same QTL in such diverse segregating populations suggests that the trait is determined throughout the species by variability in the same gene and is indicative of a major role of the evolution of this gene in determining the important domestication trait of fruit acidity within the species.
AB - Sweet melon cultivars contain a low level of organic acids and, therefore, the quality and flavor of sweet melon fruit is determined almost exclusively by fruit sugar content. However, genetic variability for fruit acid levels in the Cucumis melo species exists and sour fruit accessions are characterized by acidic fruit pH of <5, compared to the sweet cultivars that are generally characterized by mature fruit pH values of >6. In this paper, we report results from a mapping population based on recombinant inbred lines (RILs) derived from the cross between the non-sour 'Dulce' variety and the sour PI 414323 accession. Results show that a single major QTL for pH co-localizes with major QTLs for the two predominant organic acids in melon fruit, citric and malic, together with an additional metabolite which we identified as uridine. While the acidic recombinants were characterized by higher citric and malic acid levels, the non-acidic recombinants had a higher uridine content than did the acidic recombinants. Additional minor QTLs for pH, citric acid and malic acid were also identified and for these the increased acidity was unexpectedly contributed by the non-sour parent. To test for co-localization of these QTLs with genes encoding organic acid metabolism and transport, we mapped the genes encoding structural enzymes and proteins involved in organic acid metabolism, transport and vacuolar H+ pumps. None of these genes co-localized with the major pH QTL, indicating that the gene determining melon fruit pH is not one of the candidate genes encoding this primary metabolic pathway. Linked markers were tested in two additional inter-varietal populations and shown to be linked to the pH trait. The presence of the same QTL in such diverse segregating populations suggests that the trait is determined throughout the species by variability in the same gene and is indicative of a major role of the evolution of this gene in determining the important domestication trait of fruit acidity within the species.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84863546828&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s00122-012-1837-3
DO - 10.1007/s00122-012-1837-3
M3 - مقالة
SN - 0040-5752
VL - 125
SP - 343
EP - 353
JO - Theoretical and Applied Genetics
JF - Theoretical and Applied Genetics
IS - 2
ER -