Evidence of the Role of QTL Epistatic Interactions in the Increase of Melon Fruit Flesh Content during Domestication
Autor
Riahi, Chaymaa; Reig-Valiente, Juan L.; Picó, Belén; Díaz, Aurora; Gonzalo, María J.; Monforte, Antonio J.Fecha
2020Cita bibliográfica
Riahi, C., Reig-Valiente, J. L., Picó, B., Díaz, A., Gonzalo, M. J., & Monforte, A. J. (2020). Evidence of the Role of QTL Epistatic Interactions in the Increase of Melon Fruit Flesh Content during Domestication. Agronomy, 10(8), 1064.Resumen
Cultivated melon was domesticated from wild melons, which produce small fruits with
non-edible fruit flesh. The increase in fruit flesh is one of the major domestication achievements in
this species. In previous work, a quantitative trait locus (QTL) on chromosome 6 (paqt6.1) linked to
fruit flesh content was detected in a cross between cultivated (“Piel de Sapo”, PS) and wild (Ames
24294, TRI) accessions. The QTL was introgressed into the PS background, generating the TRI_6-3
introgression line (IL) that confirmed the e ects of paqt6.1. The primary objective of this work was to
fine-map paqt6.1 as the first step for the map-based cloning. Two di erent approaches were carried
out; however, the results were not consistent, precluding the fine mapping of paqt6.1. TRI_6-3 and
other related ILs were genotyped by genotyping-by-sequencing, finding additional introgressions
in other chromosomes. In an F2 population from TRI_6-3-x-PS, we found an epistatic interaction
between paqt6.1 and another locus on chromosome 11. The interaction was verified in advanced
populations, suggesting that the e ects of paqt6.1 are conditioned by the allelic composition at another
locus in chromosome 11. Both loci should have TRI alleles to reduce the flesh content in the PS
background. The implications on the history of melon domestication are discussed.