Abstract

BackgroundThe tomato (Solanum lycopersicum L.) plant is both an economically important food crop and an ideal dicot model to investigate various physiological phenomena not possible in Arabidopsis thaliana. Due to the great diversity of tomato cultivars used by the research community, it is often difficult to reliably compare phenotypes. The lack of tomato developmental mutants in a single genetic background prevents the stacking of mutations to facilitate analysis of double and multiple mutants, often required for elucidating developmental pathways.ResultsWe took advantage of the small size and rapid life cycle of the tomato cultivar Micro-Tom (MT) to create near-isogenic lines (NILs) by introgressing a suite of hormonal and photomorphogenetic mutations (altered sensitivity or endogenous levels of auxin, ethylene, abscisic acid, gibberellin, brassinosteroid, and light response) into this genetic background. To demonstrate the usefulness of this collection, we compared developmental traits between the produced NILs. All expected mutant phenotypes were expressed in the NILs. We also created NILs harboring the wild type alleles for dwarf, self-pruning and uniform fruit, which are mutations characteristic of MT. This amplified both the applications of the mutant collection presented here and of MT as a genetic model system.ConclusionsThe community resource presented here is a useful toolkit for plant research, particularly for future studies in plant development, which will require the simultaneous observation of the effect of various hormones, signaling pathways and crosstalk.

Highlights

  • The tomato (Solanum lycopersicum L.) plant is both an economically important food crop and an ideal dicot model to investigate various physiological phenomena not possible in Arabidopsis thaliana

  • As for every model organism, comparative studies using tomato mutants tend to be limited by the difference in genetic backgrounds, given that the same gene function can have diverse effects depending on epistatic interactions with other genes [11,12]

  • By using a series of backcrosses, we introduce a rich collection of tomato hormonal and phytochrome mutants introgressed into a unique background, the MT cultivar

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Summary

Introduction

The tomato (Solanum lycopersicum L.) plant is both an economically important food crop and an ideal dicot model to investigate various physiological phenomena not possible in Arabidopsis thaliana. Due to the great diversity of tomato cultivars used by the research community, it is often difficult to reliably compare phenotypes. Regardless of the presence of mutations that cause the MT’s dwarf size, it has been proven to be suitable as a standard genotype in tomato research [see 3, 7], including the study of novel hormonal interactions [8,9]. As for every model organism, comparative studies using tomato mutants tend to be limited by the difference in genetic backgrounds, given that the same gene function can have diverse effects depending on epistatic interactions with other genes [11,12]. Most of the known mutations are distributed in various genetic backgrounds including heirlooms, hybrids, and wild species [2]

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