Browsing by Author "Boiteux, Leonardo S."
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Item Open Access BIFURCATE FLOWER TRUSS: a novel locus controlling inflorescence branching in tomato contains a defective MAP kinase gene(Oxford University Press, 2018-03-02) Silva Ferreira, Demetryus; Kevei, Zoltan; Kurowski, Tomasz J.; de Noronha Fonseca, Maria Esther; Mohareb, Fady R.; Boiteux, Leonardo S.; Thompson, Andrew J.A mutant line, bifurcate flower truss (bif), was recovered from a tomato breeding program. Plants from the control line LAM183 produced a mean of 0.16 branches per truss, whereas the value for bif plants was 4.1. This increase in branching was accompanied by a 3.3-fold increase in flower number and showed a significant interaction with exposure to low temperature during truss development. The LAM183 and bif genomes were resequenced and the bif gene was mapped to a 2.01 Mbp interval on chromosome 12; all coding region polymorphisms in the interval were surveyed and five candidate genes displaying altered protein sequences were detected. One of these genes, SlMAPK1, encoding a MAP kinase, contained a leucine-to-stop codon mutation predicted to disrupt kinase function. SlMAPK1 is an excellent candidate for bif because knock-out mutations of an Arabidopsis orthologue MPK6 were reported to have increased flower number. An introgression browser was used to demonstrate that the origin of the bif genomic DNA at the BIF locus was Solanum galapagense and that the SlMAPK1 null mutant is a naturally occurring allele widespread only on the Galápagos Islands. This work strongly implicates SlMAPK1 as part of the network of genes controlling inflorescence branching in tomato.Item Open Access A loss-of-function allele of a TAC1-like gene (SlTAC1) located on tomato chromosome 10 is a candidate for the Erectoid leaf (Erl) mutation(Springer Verlag, 2019-04-16) González-Arcos, Matías; de Noronha Fonseca, Maria Esther; Basílio Zandonadi, Daniel; Peres, Lázaro E. P.; Arruabarrena, Ana; Ferreira, Demetryus S.; Kevei, Zoltan; Mohareb, Fady R.; Thompson, Andrew J.; Boiteux, Leonardo S.The genetic basis of an erectoid leaf phenotype was investigated in distinct tomato breeding populations, including one derived from Solanum lycopersicum ‘LT05’ (with the erectoid leaf phenotype and uniform ripening, genotype uu) × S. pimpinellifollium ‘TO-937’ (with the wild-type leaf phenotype and green fruit shoulder, genotype UU). The erectoid leaf phenotype was inherited as a semi-dominant trait and it co-segregated with the u allele of gene SlGLK2 (Solyc10g008160). This genomic location coincides with a previously described semi-dominant mutation named as Erectoid leaf (Erl). The genomes of ‘LT05’, ‘TO-937’, and three other unrelated accessions (with the wild-type Erl+ allele) were resequenced with the aim of identifying candidate genes. Comparative genomic analyses, including the reference genome ‘Heinz 1706’ (Erl+ allele), identified an Erectoid leaf-specific single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in the gene Solyc10g009320. This SNP caused a change of a glutamine codon (present in all the wild-type genomes) to a TAA (= ochre stop-codon) in the Erl allele, resulting in a smaller version of the predicted mutant protein (221 vs. 279 amino acids). Solyc10g009320, previously annotated as an ‘unknown protein’, was identified as a TILLER ANGLE CONTROL1-like gene. Linkage between the Erl and Solyc10g009320 was confirmed via Sanger sequencing of the PCR amplicons of the two variant alleles. No recombinants were detected in 265 F2 individuals. Contrasting S7 near-isogenic lines were also homozygous for each of the alternate alleles, reinforcing Solyc10g009320 as a strong Erl candidate gene and opening the possibility for fine-tuning manipulation of tomato architecture in breeding programs.