Transcriptome analysis along berry development of 'Syrah' x 'Pinot Noir' offspring extreme for flavonoid content
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ABSTRACT: Anthocyanins and flavonols are natural compounds that accumulate preferentially in grapevine flowers and fruits. They are among the most abundant flavonoids and play a very important role in grape and wine quality. In particular, they confer and stabilize colour and contribute to other organoleptic characteristics of the final product. Their complex profile in terms of concentration and relative abundance varies among cultivars and makes wine typicity. The synthesis of these compounds is mainly regulated at transcriptional level. Flavonoids accumulate at specific stages and in specific tissues during flower and berry development, as a consequence of the timely expression of the genes necessary for their synthesis. Although the general flavonoid pathway has been genetically and biochemically elucidated and the main determinants of colour have been identified, the molecular reasons of the fine variation among grape cultivars are still not completely understood. To shed light on this issue, extreme genotypes of a segregating population derived from the cross Syrah x Pinot Noir were characterized at transcriptional level. The transcriptome analysis along three berry developmental stages of these genotypes has allowed the identification of a large set of transcripts differentially modulated between the two groups.
ORGANISM(S): Vitis vinifera
PROVIDER: GSE42909 | GEO | 2014/08/13
SECONDARY ACCESSION(S): PRJNA183853
REPOSITORIES: GEO
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