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Coordinated Regulation of Cold Induced Sweetening in Tetraploid Potato Families by Isozymes of UDP-Glucose Pyrophosphorylase and Vacuolar Acid Invertase.

Authors :
Sowokinos, Joseph R.
Hayes, Ryan J.
Thill, Christian A.
Source :
American Journal of Potato Research. Oct2018, Vol. 95 Issue 5, p487-494. 8p.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Past investigations have suggested that both UGPase and AcInv activities can be used as markers to screen genetically diverse potato clones for cold induced sweetening resistance (CIS-R). The goal of this study was to define their cooperative interaction in regulating sweetening. Inter- and intra-ploidy hybridizations of good (G) and poor (P) processing 24 or 48 chromosome potato clones were used to create 24 potato families. Potatoes were field grown and 460 progeny (≤20 each family) were stored for five months in the cold (4 C). Tubers from each progeny plant were evaluated for cold induced sweetening resistance (CIS-R) and correlated with the percentage of A-II isozymes of UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (UGPase; EC 2.7.7.9); and acid invertase activity (AcInv; EC 3.2.1.26). Each progeny was given a CIS-R score of 1-10 (1-most resistance, 10 least resistance). The families were grouped into four classes based on (1) high or low AcInv activity (low being a SA of 0.30 or less) (2) high or low percentage of A-II isozymes (low being 50% or less), and (3) CIS-R score. In high AcInv families, CIS-R was low regardless of the percentage of A-II isozymes present. In low AcInv activity families, there was a trend for average chip color to improve as the percentage of A-II isozymes increased from 0% to 40%. This increase in CIS-R in low AcInv families is likely due to the kinetic properties unique to the A-II forms of UGPase (principally UGP5) which limit the formation of sucrose via sucrose-6-phosphate synthase (SPS; EC 2.4.1.14). Lower concentrations of sucrose can lead to a decrease in reducing sugar production via vacuolar AcInv and lighter chip and fry colors. In selecting tetraploid parents, for the development of processing potato clones with improved CIS-R, it is recommended they have a basal AcInv SA of 0.30 or less and have A-II isozymes of UGPase. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1099209X
Volume :
95
Issue :
5
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
American Journal of Potato Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
131497805
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12230-018-9653-1