4.7 Article

The multi-allelic APRR2 gene is associated with fruit pigment accumulation in melon and watermelon

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
Volume 70, Issue 15, Pages 3781-3794

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jxb/erz182

Keywords

APRR2; BSA-Seq; carotenoids; chlorophyll; fruit quality; GWAS; melon; QTL; RNA-Seq; watermelon

Categories

Funding

  1. Israeli Ministry of Agriculture Chief Scientist grants [20-01-0141, 20-10-0071]
  2. United States-Israel Binational Agricultural Research and Development Fund (BARD) grant [IS-4911-16]

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Color and pigment contents are important aspects of fruit quality and consumer acceptance of cucurbit crops. Here, we describe the independent mapping and cloning of a common causative APRR2 gene regulating pigment accumulation in melon and watermelon. We initially show that the APRR2 transcription factor is causative for the qualitative difference between dark and light green rind in both crops. Further analyses establish the link between sequence or expression level variations in the CmAPRR2 gene and pigment content in the rind and flesh of mature melon fruits. A genome-wide association study (GWAS) of young fruit rind color in a panel composed of 177 diverse melon accessions did not result in any significant association, leading to an earlier assumption that multiple genes are involved in shaping the overall phenotypic variation in this trait. Through resequencing of 25 representative accessions and allelism tests between light rind accessions, we show that multiple independent single nucleotide polymorphisms in the CmAPRR2 gene are causative of the light rind phenotype. The multi-haplotypic nature of this gene explains the lack of detection power obtained through genotyping by sequencing-based GWAS and confirms the pivotal role of this gene in shaping fruit color variation in melon. This study demonstrates the power of combining bi- and multi-allelic designs with deep sequencing, to resolve lack of power due to high haplotypic diversity and low allele frequencies. Due to its central role and broad effect on pigment accumulation in fruits, the APRR2 gene is an attractive target for carotenoid bio-fortification of cucurbit crops.

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