Inheritance of Fruit Red-Flesh Patterns in Peach

Plants (Basel). 2023 Jan 14;12(2):394. doi: 10.3390/plants12020394.

Abstract

Fruit color is an important trait in peach from the point of view of consumer preference, nutritional content, and diversification of fruit typologies. Several genes and phenotypes have been described for peach flesh and skin color, and although peach color knowledge has increased in the last few years, some fruit color patterns observed in peach breeding programs have not been carefully described. In this work, we first describe some peach mesocarp color patterns that have not yet been described in a collection of commercial peach cultivars, and we also study the genetic inheritance of the red dots present in the flesh (RDF) and red color around the stone (CAS) in several intra- and interspecific segregating populations for both traits. For RDF, we identified a QTL at the beginning of G5 in two intraspecific populations, and for CAS we identified a major QTL in G4 in both an intraspecific and an interspecific population between almond and peach. Finally, we discuss the interaction between these QTLs and some other genes previously identified in peach, such as dominant blood flesh (DBF), color around the stone (Cs), subacid (D) and the maturity date (MD), and the implications for peach breeding. The results obtained here will help peach germplasm curators and breeders to better characterize their plant materials and to develop an integrated system of molecular markers to select these traits.

Keywords: Prunus; QTLs; anthocyanins; fruit quality; marker-assisted breeding.

Grants and funding

We acknowledge financial support through the Severo Ochoa Programme for Centres of Excellence in R&D (SEV-2015-0533 and CEX2019-000902-S), projects PID2019-110599RR-I00 and PCI2019-103670 funded by MCIN/AEI, project RTA2015-00050-00-00 funded by MINECO and INIA, projects AGL2015-68329-R, RTI2018-100795-B-I00 and AGL2012-40228 funded by MINECO and FEDER, and project AGL2009-07305 funded by MICINN. A grant to (BES-2016-077104) Naveen Kalluri was funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and ESF—Investing in Your Future. Nathalia Zaracho grant was funded by the Programa Nacional de Becas en el Exterior “Don Carlos Antonio López” from the Paraguay Government.