Publications by authors named "Gian Piero Soressi"

Parthenocarpy allows fruit set independently of fertilization. In parthenocarpic-prone tomato genotypes, fruit set can be achieved under pollen-limiting environmental conditions and in sterile mutants. Parthenocarpy is also regarded as a quality-related trait, when seedlessness is associated with positive fruit quality aspects.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Researchers discovered a tomato genotype named Sun Black (SB) that produces high levels of anthocyanins, giving its fruit a deep purple color, and showing increased fertility and unique cell structures compared to regular tomatoes.
  • * The SB genotype also demonstrated the ability to accumulate anthocyanins in seedlings when exposed to light, especially when sucrose was added to the growth medium, which could improve in vitro anthocyanin production.
  • * Preliminary tests indicated that SB skin extracts inhibited the proliferation of human cancer cell lines in a dose-dependent manner, emphasizing the potential nutraceutical benefits of purple tomatoes compared to other anthocyanin-rich produce.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To dissect the role of gibberellins in tomato development, we have constitutively down-regulated the gene GA 20-oxidase1 (GA20ox1). Plants co-suppressed for GA20ox1 (referred to as CO-6 plants) showed vegetative defects typical of GA deficiency such as darker and mis-shaped leaves and dwarfism. CO-6 plants flowered as the controls, although their flowers had subtle defects in the pedicel and in organ insertion.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The development of the ovary into a fruit depends on pollination and fertilization. It has been proposed that the restriction of ovary growth before pollination is because of the stamens acting as negative regulators. Accordingly, the silencing of genes responsible for stamen identity has been correlated with parthenocarpy in different species.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The study of phenotypic and genetic diversity in landrace collections is important for germplasm conservation. In addition, the characterisation of very diversified materials with molecular markers offers a unique opportunity to define significant marker-trait associations of biological and agronomic interest. Here, 50 tomato landraces (mainly collected in central Italy), nine vintage and modern cultivars, and two wild outgroups were grown at two locations in central Italy and characterised for 15 morpho-physiological traits and 29 simple sequence repeat (SSR) loci.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We investigated the role of gibberellins (GAs) in the phenotype of parthenocarpic fruit (pat), a recessive mutation conferring parthenocarpy in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum L.). Novel phenotypes that parallel those reported in plants repeatedly treated with gibberellic acid or having a GA-constitutive response indicate that the pat mutant probably expresses high levels of GA.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A critical aspect dealing with the use of transgenic plants is the global evaluation of their environmental impact. The polyphagous mite Tetranychus urticae can be considered a suitable species to investigate unpredictable and undesirable effects on phytophagous arthropods. Three tomato near isogenic lines, that is, the cv.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Four tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) near-isogenic lines were treated by foliar spraying with the insecticide fenthion. Two, Riogrande and Rimone, differed from each other only for the presence in the latter of the Fen gene, conferring propensity to develop foliar symptoms upon exposure to fenthion.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A tomato plant (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) with necrotic leaf spots mimicking disease lesions was singled out in progeny under selection in Moscow (breeding material of Ignatova Svetlana). The progeny from spontaneous selfing of such a plant (V20368), in the presence of increasing temperature and high light intensity, exhibited spontaneous necrotic lesions on the leaves, with acropetal progression (autonecrosis).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF