INVESTIGADORES
PRATTA Guillermo Raul
artículos
Título:
Transcriptomics of fruit ripening in a tomato wide cross and genetic analysis of differentially expressed genes among parents and hybrid
Autor/es:
CACCHIARELLI, PAOLO; SPETALE, FLAVIO E.; ARCE, DÉBORA P.; TAPIA, ELIZABETH; PRATTA, GUILLERMO R.
Revista:
SCIENTIA HORTICULTURAE
Editorial:
ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
Referencias:
Año: 2024 vol. 330
ISSN:
0304-4238
Resumen:
Omic techniques have been used in recent years to support and make robust progress in breeding programs for different species. RNA-Seq is a powerful method for the analysis of transcriptomes to reveal genes with differ ential expression massively. The cultivated tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) is a crop with a narrow genetic basis in which fruit quality and wild genotypes are usually important targets to improve through breeding programs for obtaining new varieties. A novel framework was carried out using differential expression data (at three tomato fruit ripening stages), automatic Gene Ontology (GO) annotation, and estimating the Gene Action in our genotypes (two parental genotypes: the cultivated cv. Caimanta, the exotic LA0722 of S. pimpinellifolium, and their interspecific F1 ). The results indicate differential expression in all three genotypes, with an average of 17.26% of genes expressed throughout the genome. Functionality prediction detected 84 significant GO-terms related to the ripening process, by the FGGA method. In addition, we discovered 1,364 common genes among the GO-terms detected previously. Finally, a gene action analysis was carried out and high levels of non-additive effects to wards the wild genotype LA0722 (59.90% of the total genes, with 40.10% towards the cultivated genotype) were detected. This finding implies that the hybrid genotype is similar to the exotic parents for traits related to tomato fruit ripening, which could account for prepotent effects. Genomic regions underlying the expression of these transcripts could be target regions to develop molecular markers for assisting breeding programs.