Author:
Vizoso Paula,Meisel Lee A,Tittarelli Andrés,Latorre Mariano,Saba Juan,Caroca Rodrigo,Maldonado Jonathan,Cambiazo Veronica,Campos-Vargas Reinaldo,Gonzalez Mauricio,Orellana Ariel,Silva Herman
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Cold storage is used to inhibit peach fruit ripening during shipment to distant markets. However, this cold storage can negatively affect the quality of the fruit when it is ripened, resulting in disorders such as wooliness, browning or leathering. In order to understand the individual and combined biological effects that factors such as cold storage and ripening have on the fruit and fruit quality, we have taken a comparative EST transcript profiling approach to identify genes that are differentially expressed in response to these factors.
Results
We sequenced 50,625 Expressed Sequence Tags (ESTs) from peach mesocarp (Prunus persica O'Henry variety) stored at four different postharvest conditions. A total of 10,830 Unigenes (4,169 contigs and 6,661 singletons) were formed by assembling these ESTs. Additionally, a collection of 614 full-length and 1,109 putative full-length cDNA clones within flanking loxP recombination sites was created.
Statistically analyzing the EST population, we have identified genes that are differentially expressed during ripening, in response to cold storage or the combined effects of cold storage and ripening. Pair-wise comparisons revealed 197 contigs with at least one significant difference in transcript abundance between at least two conditions. Gene expression profile analyses revealed that the contigs may be classified into 13 different clusters of gene expression patterns. These clusters include groups of contigs that increase or decrease transcript abundance during ripening, in response to cold or ripening plus cold.
Conclusion
These analyses have enabled us to statistically identify novel genes and gene clusters that are differentially expressed in response to post-harvest factors such as long-term cold storage, ripening or a combination of these two factors. These differentially expressed genes reveal the complex biological processes that are associated with these factors, as well as a large number of putative gene families that may participate differentially in these processes. In particular, these analyzes suggest that woolly fruits lack the increased boost of metabolic processes necessary for ripening. Additionally, these results suggest that the mitochondria and plastids play a major role in these processes. The EST sequences and full-length cDNA clones developed in this work, combined with the large population of differentially expressed genes may serve as useful tools and markers that will enable the scientific community to better define the molecular processes that affect fruit quality in response to post-harvest conditions and the organelles that participate in these processes.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference75 articles.
1. Lurie S, Crisosto CH: Chilling injury in peach and nectarine. Postharvest Biology and Technology. 2005, 37: 195-208. 10.1016/j.postharvbio.2005.04.012.
2. Lill R, O'Donoghue E, King G: Postharvest physiology of peaches and nectarines. Hort Rev. 1989, 11: 413-452.
3. Campos-Vargas R, Becerra O, Baeza-Yates R, Cambiazo V, Gonzalez M, Meisel L, Orellana A, Retamales J, Silva H, Defilippi BG: Seasonal variation in the development of chilling injury in 'O'Henry' peaches. Scientia Horticulturae. 2006, 110 (1): 79-83. 10.1016/j.scienta.2006.06.019.
4. Retamales J, Cooper T, Streif J, Kania J: Preventing cold storage disorders in nectarines. J Hort Sci. 1992, 67: 619-626.
5. Crisosto CH, Mitchell FG, Johnson S: Factors in fresh market stone fruit quality. Postharvest News and Information. 1995, 6 (2): 17-21.
Cited by
63 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献