White grapes arose through the mutation of two similar and adjacent regulatory genes
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation · Plant Industry
Abstract
Most of the thousands of grapevine cultivars (Vitis vinifera L.) can be divided into two groups, red and white, based on the presence or absence of anthocyanin in the berry skin, which has been found from genetic experiments to be controlled by a single locus. A regulatory gene, VvMYBA1, which could activate anthocyanin biosynthesis in a transient assay, was recently shown not to be transcribed in white berries due to the presence of a retrotransposon in the promoter. We have found that the berry colour locus comprises two very similar genes, VvMYBA1 and VvMYBA2, located on a single bacterial artificial chromosome. Either gene can regulate colour in the grape berry. The white berry allele of VvMYBA2 is…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 38.19
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 42
Authors
6- ARAmanda R. WalkerCorresponding
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Plant Industry
- ELElizabeth Lee
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Plant Industry
- JBJochen Bogs
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Plant Industry
- DMD.A.J. McDavid
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Plant Industry
- MRMark R. Thomas
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Plant Industry
Topics & keywords
- Berry
- Genetics
- Biology
- Locus (genetics)
- Gene
- Allele
- White (mutation)
- Regulator gene