Metabolite profiling of tubers of an early- and a late-maturing potato line and their grafts

Author:

Villányi Vanda,Gondor Orsolya Kinga,Bánfalvi ZsófiaORCID

Abstract

Abstract Introduction Earliness of tuberisation and the quality of potato tubers are important traits in potato breeding. The qualitative traits rely on the metabolite profile of tubers, which are storage organs and net importers of assimilates. Thus, the quality of tubers largely depends on the metabolites transported from leaves to developing tubers. Objectives To test the influence of canopy on the quality of tubers by metabolite profiling of tubers of an early- and a late-maturing potato line and their grafts. Methods Potatoes were grown under greenhouse conditions, grafted and the tubers harvested at the end of the scions’ vegetation period. Metabolite profiling of freshly harvested tubers was performed using gas chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry. Statistical analyses were applied to determine the significant differences between the different tubers. Results 99 metabolites were identified and an additional 181 peaks detected in chromatograms, out of which 186 were polar and 94 non-polar compounds. The concentrations of 113 metabolites were significantly different in the tubers from the early-maturing CE3130 and the late-maturing CE3027 line. Hetero-grafting resulted in considerable changes in the metabolite content of tubers. Especially, the effect of CE3027 on the metabolite composition of tubers formed on CE3130 rootstocks was readily apparent. Nevertheless, many compounds were present at similar levels in the tubers of hetero-grafted plants as was found in the tubers of their scion counterparts. Conclusion Hetero-grafting resulted in many compounds at similar concentrations in rootstock tubers as in scion tubers suggesting that these are transported from the source leaves to tubers.

Funder

National Research, Development and Innovation Office

Hungarian University of Agriculture and Life Sciences

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Clinical Biochemistry,Biochemistry,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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