A. R. Schuelter, V. Casali, S. Brommonschenkel, F. Finger, C. T. Guimarães, A. Teixeira, Amaral
{"title":"Associations among fruit firmness, morphological traits and RAPD markers in the \"firm\" tomato mutant","authors":"A. R. Schuelter, V. Casali, S. Brommonschenkel, F. Finger, C. T. Guimarães, A. Teixeira, Amaral","doi":"10.12702/1984-7033.V03N01A02","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The Santa Clara Cultivar is widely known in the tomato-producing region of Vicosa (MG). Recently, tomato plants from the same cultivar with changes in morphological traits and post-harvest fruit characteristics have been identified. The inheritance study and the allelism test carried out by Schuelter et al. (2002) determined that a recessive gene with pleiotropic effects modified the expression of morphological traits, such as the color of stigma and fruits and the early leaf senescence. This gene, present in the ‘firm’ mutant ( frm ), was mapped on the tomato chromosome 10 region - the same region of the lutescent-2 ( l-2 ) gene. However, the identification and location of the genes that increase the firmness of ‘firm’ mutant fruits remain unknown. Therefore, the objective of this study was to analyze the inheritance of morphological and firmness characteristics of fruits which were modified by the mutation using RAPD markers. Results demonstrated that the genomic region comprising the l-2 gene increases the fruit firmness, explaining from 6.27 to 25.09% the phenotypic variation for this trait along the 15 day-period of storage. However, the AQ16 747 and AS8 622 markers, mapped at 11.67 and 21.67 cM from the mutation frm, indicated that the further they were located from this region, the smaller proportion of the phenotypic variation they had. Thus, we can conclude that that the genomic region flanking the l-2 gene also increases fruit firmness in the ‘firm’ mutant, a trait that has never been associated with this gene.","PeriodicalId":49085,"journal":{"name":"Crop Breeding and Applied Biotechnology","volume":"34 1","pages":"11-18"},"PeriodicalIF":1.3000,"publicationDate":"2003-03-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Crop Breeding and Applied Biotechnology","FirstCategoryId":"97","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.12702/1984-7033.V03N01A02","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"农林科学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"AGRONOMY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2
Abstract
The Santa Clara Cultivar is widely known in the tomato-producing region of Vicosa (MG). Recently, tomato plants from the same cultivar with changes in morphological traits and post-harvest fruit characteristics have been identified. The inheritance study and the allelism test carried out by Schuelter et al. (2002) determined that a recessive gene with pleiotropic effects modified the expression of morphological traits, such as the color of stigma and fruits and the early leaf senescence. This gene, present in the ‘firm’ mutant ( frm ), was mapped on the tomato chromosome 10 region - the same region of the lutescent-2 ( l-2 ) gene. However, the identification and location of the genes that increase the firmness of ‘firm’ mutant fruits remain unknown. Therefore, the objective of this study was to analyze the inheritance of morphological and firmness characteristics of fruits which were modified by the mutation using RAPD markers. Results demonstrated that the genomic region comprising the l-2 gene increases the fruit firmness, explaining from 6.27 to 25.09% the phenotypic variation for this trait along the 15 day-period of storage. However, the AQ16 747 and AS8 622 markers, mapped at 11.67 and 21.67 cM from the mutation frm, indicated that the further they were located from this region, the smaller proportion of the phenotypic variation they had. Thus, we can conclude that that the genomic region flanking the l-2 gene also increases fruit firmness in the ‘firm’ mutant, a trait that has never been associated with this gene.
期刊介绍:
The CBAB – CROP BREEDING AND APPLIED BIOTECHNOLOGY (ISSN 1984-7033) – is the official quarterly journal of the Brazilian Society of Plant Breeding, abbreviated CROP BREED APPL BIOTECHNOL.
It publishes original scientific articles, which contribute to the scientific and technological development of plant breeding and agriculture. Articles should be to do with basic and applied research on improvement of perennial and annual plants, within the fields of genetics, conservation of germplasm, biotechnology, genomics, cytogenetics, experimental statistics, seeds, food quality, biotic and abiotic stress, and correlated areas. The article must be unpublished. Simultaneous submitting to another periodical is ruled out. Authors are held solely responsible for the opinions and ideas expressed, which do not necessarily reflect the view of the Editorial board. However, the Editorial board reserves the right to suggest or ask for any modifications required. The journal adopts the Ithenticate software for identification of plagiarism. Complete or partial reproduction of articles is permitted, provided the source is cited. All content of the journal, except where identified, is licensed under a Creative Commons attribution-type BY. All articles are published free of charge. This is an open access journal.