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Fruit weight is controlled by Cell Size Regulator encoding a novel protein that is expressed in maturing tomato fruits

PLoS Genetics, ISSN: 1553-7404, Vol: 13, Issue: 8, Page: e1006930
2017
  • 139
    Citations
  • 96
    Usage
  • 186
    Captures
  • 12
    Mentions
  • 16
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    139
  • Usage
    96
  • Captures
    186
  • Mentions
    12
    • News Mentions
      10
      • News
        10
    • Blog Mentions
      2
      • Blog
        2
  • Social Media
    16
    • Shares, Likes & Comments
      16
      • Facebook
        16

Most Recent Blog

How the beefsteak got so beefy: Taking tomatoes from tiny to tremendous

By J. Merritt Melancon Geneticists at the University of Georgia have found the gene variants that control a tomato’s size. Van der Knaap and her research team investigated a gene they named Cell Size Regulator, or CSR, that boosts fruit weight by increasing the size of the individual cells in the fleshy part of the tomato. Large fruit required many more mutations in other genes to allow the plant

Most Recent News

How the Beefsteak Got So Beefy: The Complicated Tale of Taking Tomatoes From Tiny to Tremendous

Return to Article List UGA researchers pinpoint a mutation that triggered the development of the modern tomato from its tiny berry-sized ancestor Article ID: 679918

Article Description

Increases in fruit weight of cultivated vegetables and fruits accompanied the domestication of these crops. Here we report on the positional cloning of a quantitative trait locus (QTL) controlling fruit weight in tomato. The derived allele of Cell Size Regulator (CSR-D) increases fruit weight predominantly through enlargement of the pericarp areas. The expanded pericarp tissues result from increased mesocarp cell size and not from increased number of cell layers. The effect of CSR on fruit weight and cell size is found across different genetic backgrounds implying a consistent impact of the locus on the trait. In fruits, CSR expression is undetectable early in development from floral meristems to the rapid cell proliferation stage after anthesis. Expression is low but detectable in growing fruit tissues and in or around vascular bundles coinciding with the cell enlargement stage of the fruit maturation process. CSR encodes an uncharacterized protein whose clade has expanded in the Solanaceae family. The mutant allele is predicted to encode a shorter protein due to a 1.4 kb deletion resulting in a 194 amino-acid truncation. Co-expression analyses and GO term enrichment analyses suggest association of CSR with cell differentiation in fruit tissues and vascular bundles. The derived allele arose in Solanum lycopersicum var cerasiforme and appears completely fixed in many cultivated tomato’s market classes. This finding suggests that the selection of this allele was critical to the full domestication of tomato from its intermediate ancestors.

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