Eggplant berries are rich in anthocyanins like delphinidin-3-rutinoside (D3R) and nasunin (NAS), which are accumulated at high amounts in the peel. NAS is derived by D3R through acylation and glycosylation steps. The presence of D3R or NAS is usually associated with black-purple or lilac fruit coloration of the most cultivated varieties, respectively. Building on QTL mapping position, a candidate gene approach was used to investigate the involvement of a BAHD anthocyanin acyltransferase () in determining anthocyanin type. The cDNA sequence comparison revealed the presence of a single-base deletion in D3R-type line '305E40' () with respect to the NAS-type reference line '67/3'. This is predicted to cause a frame shift mutation, leading to a loss of function and, thus, D3R retention. RT-qPCR analyses confirmed and expression during berry maturation. In D3R-type lines, '305E40' and 'DR2', overexpressing the functional allele from '67/3', the transcript levels of the transgene correlated with the accumulation of NAS in fruit peel. Furthermore, it was also found a higher expression of the transcript for glucosyltransferase , putatively involved with in the last steps of anthocyanin decoration. Finally, an indel marker matching with anthocyanin type in the '305E40' × '67/3' segregating population was developed and validated in a wide number of accessions, proving its usefulness for breeding purposes.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8431300 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms22179174 | DOI Listing |
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