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Mailing Address:
The Robert H. Smith Institute of
Plant Sciences and Genetics
in Agriculture
Herzl 229, Rehovot 7610001, Israel

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Neomi Maimon 
Tel: 972-8-948-9251,
Fax: 972-8-948-9899,
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Prof. Naomi Ori
Tel: 972-8-948-9605
E-mail: naomi.ori@mail.huji.ac.il

 

Canalization of tomato fruit metabolism

Citation:

Alseekh, S. ; Tong, H. ; Scossa, F. ; Brotman, Y. ; Vigroux, F. ; Tohge, T. ; Ofner, I. ; Zamir, D. ; Nikoloski, Z. ; Fernie, A. R. . Canalization Of Tomato Fruit Metabolism. Plant Cell 2017, 29, 2753-2765.

Abstract:

To explore the genetic robustness (canalization) of metabolism, we examined the levels of fruit metabolites in multiple harvests of a tomato introgression line (IL) population. The IL partitions the whole genome of the wild species Solanum pennellii in the background of the cultivated tomato (Solanum lycopersicum). We identified several metabolite quantitative trait loci that reduce variability for both primary and secondary metabolites, which we named canalization metabolite quantitative trait loci (cmQTL). We validated nine cmQTL using an independent population of backcross inbred lines, derived from the same parents, which allows increased resolution in mapping the QTL previously identified in the ILs. These cmQTL showed little overlap with QTL for the metabolite levels themselves. Moreover, the intervals they mapped to harbored few metabolism-associated genes, suggesting that the canalization of metabolism is largely controlled by regulatory genes. © American Society of Plant Biologists.

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