Abstract
Muscadine grapes (Vitis rotundifolia Michx.) are a specialty crop cultivated in the southern United States. Muscadines (2n = 40) belong to the Muscadinia subgenus of Vitis, while other cultivated grape species belong to the subgenus Euvitis (2n = 38). The muscadine berry color locus was mapped to a 0.8 Mbp region syntenic with chromosome 4 of Vitis vinifera. In this study, we identified glutathione S-transferase4 as a likely candidate gene for anthocyanin transport within the berry color locus. PCR and Kompetitive allele-specific PCR genotyping identified a single intragenic SNP (C/T) marker corresponding to a proline to leucine mutation within the muscadine glutathione S-transferase4 (VrGST4) that differentiated black (CC and CT) from bronze (TT) muscadines in 126 breeding selections, 76 cultivars, and 359 progeny from 3 mapping populations. Anthocyanin profiling on a subset of the progeny indicated a dominant VrGST4 action. VrGST4 was expressed in skins of both black and bronze muscadines at similar levels. While nonsynonymous polymorphisms between black and bronze muscadines were discovered in VrGSTF12, another Type I GST-coding gene in the muscadine color locus, this gene was ruled out as a possible candidate for berry color because RNA sequencing indicated it is not expressed in berry skins at véraison from black or bronze genotypes. These results suggest that the bronze phenotype in muscadines is regulated by a mechanism distinct from the MybA gene cluster responsible for berry color variation in Vitis vinifera.
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