4.7 Article

Seeing the Forest through the (Phylogenetic) Trees: Functional Characterisation of Grapevine Terpene Synthase (VviTPS) Paralogues and Orthologues

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 10, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants10081520

Keywords

grapevine; terpene synthase; sesquiterpene; genotypic variation; gene structure

Categories

Funding

  1. Wine Industry Network for Expertise and Technology (Winetech) [IWBT P14/02]
  2. National Research Foundation (NRF), Thuthuka [TTK13070220277]
  3. Technology and Human Resources for Industry Programme (THRIP) of the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI)
  4. Stellenbosch University

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study explores the functional characterization of Vitis vinifera sesquiterpene synthases and highlights the challenges in studying this gene family due to limitations of the reference genome and extensive duplications. The recent release of multiple phased diploid grapevine genomes and extensive whole-genome resequencing efforts provide new sequence information to overcome these limitations. Findings reveal genotype-specific structural variations and polymorphisms affecting gene function, shedding light on how grapevine domestication shaped VviTPS landscape.
Gene families involved in specialised metabolism play a key role in a myriad of ecophysiological and biochemical functions. The Vitis vinifera sesquiterpene synthases represent the largest subfamily of grapevine terpene synthase (VviTPS) genes and are important volatile metabolites for wine flavour and aroma, as well as ecophysiological interactions. The functional characterisation of VviTPS genes is complicated by a reliance on a single reference genome that greatly underrepresents this large gene family, exacerbated by extensive duplications and paralogy. The recent release of multiple phased diploid grapevine genomes, as well as extensive whole-genome resequencing efforts, provide a wealth of new sequence information that can be utilised to overcome the limitations of the reference genome. A large cluster of sesquiterpene synthases, localised to chromosome 18, was explored by means of comparative sequence analyses using the publicly available grapevine reference genome, three PacBio phased diploid genomes and whole-genome resequencing data from multiple genotypes. Two genes, VviTPS04 and -10, were identified as putative paralogues and/or allelic variants. Subsequent gene isolation from multiple grapevine genotypes and characterisation by means of a heterologous in planta expression and volatile analysis resulted in the identification of genotype-specific structural variations and polymorphisms that impact the gene function. These results present novel insight into how grapevine domestication likely shaped the VviTPS landscape to result in genotype-specific functions.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available