US scientists build watermelon supergenome

Published 2023년 9월 8일

Tridge summary

Researchers at the Boyce Thompson Institute have created a "superpangenome" of watermelons and their wild relatives, identifying genes that were lost during domestication. These genes could potentially improve disease resistance and fruit quality in watermelons. By understanding the genetic makeup of watermelons, breeders and researchers can develop varieties with higher yields, greater disease resistance, and adaptability.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Researchers at the Boyce Thompson Institute have built a “superpangenome” of the modern watermelon and its wild relatives, discovering beneficial genes lost during domestication that could improve disease resistance and fruit quality in this globally important fruit. “The superpangenome provides a valuable genetic toolkit for breeders and researchers to improve commercial watermelon,” said Professor Zhangjun Fei, lead author of the study. “By understanding the genetic makeup and evolutionary patterns of watermelons, we can develop varieties with higher yields, greater disease resistance and greater adaptability.” Genes from wild watermelon varieties that researchers were able to isolate within the superpangenome control things like sweetness, flesh color, and rind thickness that have been lost over centuries of domestication. A particularly exciting discovery was their ability to isolate the “tandem duplication of the ClTST2 sugar transporter gene that increases sugar ...
Source: Agrolink

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