Unravelling the molecular regulation mechanisms of slow ripening trait in prunus persica
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2021Metadata
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Núñez Lillo, Gerardo
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Unravelling the molecular regulation mechanisms of slow ripening trait in prunus persica
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Abstract
Fruit development is a complex process that involves the interplay of cell division, expansion, and differentiation. As a model to study fruit development, nectarines incapable of ripening
were described as slow ripening. Slow ripening fruits remained firm and exhibited no rise in CO2
or ethylene production rates for one month or more at 20 ◦C. Different studies suggest that this
trait is controlled by a single gene (NAC072). Transcriptome analysis between normal and slow
ripening fruits showed a total of 157, 269, 976, and 5.224 differentially expressed genes in each fruit
developmental stage analyzed (T1, T2, T3, and T7, respectively), and no expression of NAC072
was found in the slow ripening individuals. Using this transcriptomic information, we identified a
correlation of NAC072 with auxin-related genes and two genes associated with terpene biosynthesis.
On the other hand, significant differences were observed in hormonal biosynthetic pathways during
fruit development between the normal and slow ripening individuals (gibberellin, ethylene, jasmonic
acid and abscisic acid). These results suggest that the absence of NAC072 by the direct or indirect
expression control of auxins or terpene-related genes prevents normal peach fruit development.
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Agencia Nacional de Investigacion y Desarrollo (ANID) through the Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Cientifico y Tecnologico, FONDECYT 1200804
Comision Nacional de Investigacion Cientifica y Tecnologica (CONICYT)
CONICYT FONDECYT 3210011
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