Abstract

Sweet pepper (Capsicum annuum L.) is a high value crop and one of the most widely grown vegetables belonging to the Solanaceae family. In addition to commercial varieties and F1 hybrids, a multitude of landraces are grown, whose genetic combination is the result of hundreds of years of random, environmental, and farmer selection. High genetic diversity exists in the landrace gene pool which however has scarcely been studied, thus bounding their cultivation. We re-sequenced four pepper inbred lines, within as many Italian landraces, which representative of as many fruit types: big sized blocky with sunken apex (‘Quadrato’) and protruding apex or heart shaped (‘Cuneo’), elongated (‘Corno’) and smaller sized sub-spherical (‘Tumaticot’). Each genomic sequence was obtained through Illumina platform at coverage ranging from 39 to 44×, and reconstructed at a chromosome scale. About 35.5k genes were predicted in each inbred line, of which 22,017 were shared among them and the reference genome (accession ‘CM334’). Distinctive variations in miRNAs, resistance gene analogues (RGAs) and susceptibility genes (S-genes) were detected. A detailed survey of the SNP/Indels occurring in genes affecting fruit size, shape and quality identified the highest frequencies of variation in regulatory regions. Many structural variations were identified as presence/absence variations (PAVs), notably in resistance gene analogues (RGAs) and in the capsanthin/capsorubin synthase (CCS) gene. The large allelic diversity observed in the four inbred lines suggests their potential use as a pre-breeding resource and represents a one-stop resource for C. annuum genomics and a key tool for dissecting the path from sequence variation to phenotype.

Highlights

  • Sweet pepper (Capsicum annuum L.) is a high value crop and one of the most widely grown vegetables belonging to the Solanaceae family

  • We found out clustering of receptor like kinases (RLKs), receptor like proteins (RLP), NBS-encoding and TM-CC genes in some chromosome of the four inbred lines (Table S7), in agreement with classical genetics and analysis from large scale sequencing data in plant genomes[36]

  • In spite of the high organoleptic and sensorial quality of their products, landraces of horticultural species have been displaced over time from market-driven production due to their lower yields, poorer pest and disease resistance, and often limited postharvest shelf-life in respect to bred commercial varieties and F1 hybrids

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Sweet pepper (Capsicum annuum L.) is a high value crop and one of the most widely grown vegetables belonging to the Solanaceae family. We re-sequenced four pepper inbred lines, within as many Italian landraces, which representative of as many fruit types: big sized blocky with sunken apex (‘Quadrato’) and protruding apex or heart shaped (‘Cuneo’), elongated (‘Corno’) and smaller sized sub-spherical (‘Tumaticot’). The large allelic diversity observed in the four inbred lines suggests their potential use as a pre-breeding resource and represents a one-stop resource for C. annuum genomics and a key tool for dissecting the path from sequence variation to phenotype. Both studies highlighted that the pepper genome size is ~3–3.5 Gb, it is characterized by a high percentage (over 80%) of repetitive elements, and includes 35 K genes. We report on the resequencing of four sweet pepper inbred lines, which we selected within four Italian landraces representative of as many fruit types, ranging from blocky to elongated and sub-spherical. Functionally characterised SNP/Indels and PAV in genes affecting berry size, shape and pigmentation were spotted

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.