| Name: | Description: | Size: | Format: | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3.69 MB | Adobe PDF |
Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
The first genome of Vitis vinifera vinifera (PN40024), published in 2007, boosted grapevine related
studies. While this reference genome is a suitable tool for the overall studies in the field, it lacks
the ability to unveil changes accumulated during V. v. vinifera domestication. The subspecies V.
v. sylvestris preserves wild characteristics, making it a good material to provide insights into V. v.
vinifera domestication. The difference in the reproductive strategy between both subspecies is one of
the characteristics that set them apart. While V. v. vinifera flowers are hermaphrodite, V. v. sylvestris
is mostly dioecious. In this paper, we compare the re-sequencing of the genomes from a male and
a female individual of the wild sylvestris, against the reference vinifera genome (PN40024). Variant
analysis reveals a low number but with high impact modifications in coding regions, essentially nonsynonymous
single nucleotide polymorphisms and frame shifts caused by insertions and deletions.
The sex-locus was manually inspected, and the results obtained are in line with the most recent
works related with wild grapevine sex. In this paper we also describe for the first time RNA editing in
transcripts of 14 genes in the sex-determining region, including VviYABBY and VviPLATZ
Description
Keywords
Vitis vinifera sylvestris genome re-sequencing
Pedagogical Context
Citation
Scientific Reports (2020) 10:18993
Publisher
Nature
