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ARS Home » Southeast Area » Fort Pierce, Florida » U.S. Horticultural Research Laboratory » Citrus and Other Subtropical Products Research » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #304719

Title: Identification of a strawberry flavor gene candidate using an integrated genetic-genomic-analytical chemistry approach

Author
item CHAMBERS, ALAN - University Of Florida
item PILLET, JEREMY - University Of Florida
item Plotto, Anne
item Bai, Jinhe
item WHITAKER, VANCE - University Of Florida
item FOLTA, KEVIN - University Of Florida

Submitted to: BMC Genomics
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed Journal
Publication Acceptance Date: 3/17/2014
Publication Date: 4/17/2014
Citation: Chambers, A., Pillet, J., Plotto, A., Bai, J., Whitaker, V., Folta, K. 2014. Identification of a strawberry flavor gene candidate using an integrated genetic-genomic-analytical chemistry approach. Biomed Central (BMC) Genomics. 15(1):217-231.

Interpretive Summary: Specific volatile organic compounds contribute to flavor and consumer liking in strawberry (Fragaria spp.), '-decalactone being one of them with fruity flavor. In this work, a gene and a marker for production of '-decalactone in the fruit were identified. The marker will allow breeders to select strawberry lines with high potential for '-decalactone at the seedling stage, saving time and greenhouse/field space, thus increasing breeding efficiency.

Technical Abstract: Background: There is interest in improving the flavor of commercial strawberry (Fragaria × ananassa) varieties. Fruit flavor is shaped by combinations of sugars, acids and volatile compounds. Many efforts seek to use genomics-based strategies to identify genes controlling flavor, and then designing durable molecular markers to follow these genes in breeding populations. In this report, fruit from two cultivars, varying for presence-absence of volatile compounds, along with segregating progeny, were analyzed using GC/MS and RNAseq. Expression data were bulked in silico according to presence/absence of a given volatile compound, in this case '-decalactone, a compound conferring a peach flavor note to fruits. Results: Computationally sorting reads in segregating progeny based on '-decalactone presence eliminated transcripts not directly relevant to the volatile, revealing transcripts possibly imparting quantitative contributions. One candidate encodes an omega-6 fatty acid desaturase, an enzyme known to participate in lactone production in fungi, noted here as FaFAD1. This candidate was induced by ripening, was detected in certain harvests, and correlated with '-decalactone presence. The FaFAD1 gene is present in every genotype where '-decalactone has been detected, and it was invariably missing in non-producers. A functional, PCR-based molecular marker was developed that cosegregates with the phenotype in F1 and BC1 populations, as well as in many other cultivars and wild Fragaria accessions. Conclusions: Genetic, genomic and analytical chemistry techniques were combined to identify FaFAD1, a gene likely controlling a key flavor volatile in strawberry. The same data may now be re-sorted based on presence/absence of any other volatile to identify other flavor-affecting candidates, leading to rapid generation of gene-specific markers.