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A comparative study of ripening among berries of the grape cluster reveals an altered transcriptional programme and enhanced ripening rate in delayed berries

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Title A comparative study of ripening among berries of the grape cluster reveals an altered transcriptional programme and enhanced ripening rate in delayed berries
Names Gouthu, Satyanarayana (creator)
O'Neil, Shawn T. (creator)
Di, Yanming (creator)
Ansarolia, Mitra (creator)
Megraw, Molly (creator)
Deluc, Laurent G. (creator)
Date Issued 2014-11 (iso8601)
Note This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the author(s) and published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Experimental Biology. The published article can be found at: http://jxb.oxfordjournals.org/.
Abstract Transcriptional studies in relation to fruit ripening generally aim to identify the transcriptional states associated
with physiological ripening stages and the transcriptional changes between stages within the ripening programme.
In non-climacteric fruits such as grape, all ripening-related genes involved in this programme have not been identified,
mainly due to the lack of mutants for comparative transcriptomic studies. A feature in grape cluster ripening
(Vitis vinifera cv. Pinot noir), where all berries do not initiate the ripening at the same time, was exploited to
study their shifted ripening programmes in parallel. Berries that showed marked ripening state differences in a
véraison-stage cluster (ripening onset) ultimately reached similar ripeness states toward maturity, indicating the
flexibility of the ripening programme. The expression variance between these véraison-stage berry classes, where
11% of the genes were found to be differentially expressed, was reduced significantly toward maturity, resulting
in the synchronization of their transcriptional states. Defined quantitative expression changes (transcriptional
distances) not only existed between the véraison transitional stages, but also between the véraison to maturity
stages, regardless of the berry class. It was observed that lagging berries complete their transcriptional programme
in a shorter time through altered gene expressions and ripening-related hormone dynamics, and enhance
the rate of physiological ripening progression. Finally, the reduction in expression variance of genes can identify
new genes directly associated with ripening and also assess the relevance of gene activity to the phase of the
ripening programme.
Genre Article
Access Condition http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/us/
Topic Enhanced ripening
Identifier Gouthu, S., O’Neil, S. T., Di, Y., Ansarolia, M., Megraw, M., & Deluc, L. G. (2014). A comparative study of ripening among berries of the grape cluster reveals an altered transcriptional programme and enhanced ripening rate in delayed berries. Journal of Experimental Botany, 65(20), 5889-5902. doi:10.1093/jxb/eru329

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