Abstract
White button mushrooms discolor after mechanical damage of the cap skin. This hampers the development of a mechanical harvest system for the fresh market. To unravel the genetic basis for bruising sensitivity, two haploid populations (single spore cultures) were generated derived from crosses between parental lines differing in discoloration after mechanical damage (bruising sensitivity). The haploids were crossed with different homokaryotic tester lines to generate mushrooms and allow assessment of the bruising sensitivity in different genetic backgrounds. Bruising sensitivity appears to be a polygenic highly heritable trait (H2: 0.88-0.96) and a significant interaction between genotypes and tester lines and genotypes and flushes was found. Using SNP markers evenly spread over all chromosomes, a very low recombination was found between markers allowing only assignment of QTL for bruising sensitivity to chromosomes and not to sub-regions of chromosomes. The cap color of the two parental lines of population 1 is white and brown respectively. A major QTL for bruising sensitivity was assigned to chromosome 8 in population 1 that also harbors the main determinant for cap color (brown versus white). Splitting offspring in white and non-white mushrooms made minor QTL for bruising sensitivity on other chromosomes (e.g. 3 and 10) more prominent. The one on chromosome 10 explained 31% phenotypic variation of bruising sensitivity in flush 2 in the subpopulations of population 1. The two parental lines of population 2 are both white. Major QTL of bruising sensitivity were detected on chromosome 1 and 2, contributing totally more than 44% variation of the bruising sensitivity in flush 1 and 54% variation of that in flush 2. A considerable consistency was found in QTL for bruising sensitivity in the different populations studied across tester lines and flushes indicating that this study will provide a base for breeding cultivars that are less sensitive for bruising allowing the use of mechanical harvest and automatic postharvest handling for produce for the fresh market. The low recombination between homologous chromosomes, however, underlines the need to introduce a normal recombination pattern found in a subspecies of the button mushroom.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 69-81 |
Number of pages | 13 |
Journal | Fungal Genetics and Biology |
Volume | 77 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 Apr 2015 |
Keywords
- Bruising sensitivity
- Cap color
- Discoloration
- Mechanical harvesting
- QTL
- Agaricus bisporus
- article
- breeding
- bruising sensitivity
- chromosome 1
- chromosome 10
- chromosome 2
- chromosome 3
- chromosome 8
- color
- controlled study
- fungal genetics
- fungal strain
- genetic linkage
- genetic variability
- genotype
- nonhuman
- phenotype
- physical parameters
- population distribution
- priority journal
- quantitative trait locus mapping
- single nucleotide polymorphism
- species diversity
- strain difference