Abstract

Cluster compactness is a trait with high agronomic relevance, affecting crop yield and grape composition. Rachis architecture is a major component of cluster compactness determinism, and is a target trait toward the breeding of grapevine varieties less susceptible to pests and diseases. Although its genetic basis is scarcely understood, a preliminary result indicated a possible involvement of the VviUCC1 gene. The aim of this study was to characterize the VviUCC1 gene in grapevine and to test the association between the natural variation observed for a series of rachis architecture traits and the polymorphisms detected in the VviUCC1 sequence. This gene encodes an uclacyanin plant-specific cell-wall protein involved in fiber formation and/or lignification processes. A high nucleotide diversity in the VviUCC1 gene promoter and coding regions was observed, but no critical effects were predicted in the protein domains, indicating a high level of conservation of its function in the cultivated grapevine. After correcting statistical models for genetic stratification and linkage disequilibrium effects, marker-trait association results revealed a series of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) significantly associated with cluster compactness and rachis traits variation. Two of them (Y-984 and K-88) affected two common cis-transcriptional regulatory elements, suggesting an effect on phenotype via gene expression regulation. This work reinforces the interest of further studies aiming to reveal the functional effect of the detected VviUCC1 variants on grapevine rachis architecture.

Highlights

  • Current grapevine diversity has been shaped over millennia

  • The present study provides an in-depth analysis of the nucleotide diversity of the VviUCC1 gene sequence in the cultivated grapevine

  • Association analyses indicate that VviUCC1 may participate in the development of grapevine inflorescence and impact cluster compactness, a trait with major agronomic relevance

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Summary

Introduction

Current grapevine diversity has been shaped over millennia. Genetic analyses estimate that there are 6000–10,000 different genotypes of cultivated grapevines (Vitis vinifera ssp. sativa) around the world, originally derived from the wild grape subspecies, Vitis vinifera ssp. sylvestris, in a process that started ca. 8,000 years ago somewhere in the Transcaucasian region [1,2]. Genetic analyses estimate that there are 6000–10,000 different genotypes of cultivated grapevines The different objectives aimed in table and wine grapes led to the artificial selection of different berry and cluster traits, contributing to the wide diversity observable nowadays [3]. Grapes from wine cultivars used to have higher acidity and sugar content than table grapes, two desirable traits for successful winemaking [3]. This divergent selection led to the unconscious selection of some loci, which can be surveyed through the use of novel high-throughput sequencing and high-resolution phenotyping technologies [5,6,7]

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