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QTL mapping of fruit-related traits in pepper (Capsicum annuum)

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TLDR
Several QTL in pepper appeared to correspond to positions in tomato for loci controlling the same traits, suggesting the hypothesis that these QTL may be orthologous in the two species.
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The Genetic, Developmental, and Molecular Bases of Fruit Size and Shape Variation in Tomato

TL;DR: Fruit, corresponding to the plant's ovary (or ovaries), protect seed development and serve as the vehicle for seed dispersal to different habitats for species propagation.
Journal ArticleDOI

In Posidonia oceanica cadmium induces changes in DNA methylation and chromatin patterning

TL;DR: The data demonstrate that Cd perturbs the DNA methylation status through the involvement of a specific methyltransferase, linked to nuclear chromatin reconfiguration likely to establish a new balance of expressed/repressed chromatin.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genetic and molecular regulation of fruit and plant domestication traits in tomato and pepper

TL;DR: This review will present an overview of the history of tomato and pepper and discuss key plant traits that were specifically selected during domestication of the two species, questioning whether mutations at orthologous loci occurred independently in these two species or whether unique plant and fruit features resulted in selection at different genes.
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Domestication of Plants in the Americas: Insights from Mendelian and Molecular Genetics

TL;DR: As the modes of action of the genes involved in domestication and the metabolic pathways leading to particular phenotypes become better understood, it should be possible to determine whether similar phenotypes have similar underlying genetic controls, or whether human selection in genetically related but independently domesticated taxa has fixed different mutants with similar phenotypic effects.
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Conservation of gene function in the solanaceae as revealed by comparative mapping of domestication traits in eggplant.

TL;DR: The results suggest that domestication of the Solanaceae has been driven by mutations in a very limited number of target loci with major phenotypic effects, that selection pressures were exerted on the same loci despite the crops' independent domestications on different continents, and that the morphological diversity of these four crops can be explained by divergent mutations at these loci.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

AFLP: a new technique for DNA fingerprinting.

TL;DR: The AFLP technique provides a novel and very powerful DNA fingerprinting technique for DNAs of any origin or complexity that allows the specific co-amplification of high numbers of restriction fragments.
Journal ArticleDOI

MAPMAKER: An interactive computer package for constructing primary genetic linkage maps of experimental and natural populations

TL;DR: A computer package, called MAPMAKER, designed specifically for the construction of linkage maps in a number of organisms, including the human and several plants, and it is outlined the mapping strategies that have been used.
Journal ArticleDOI

Seed Banks and Molecular Maps: Unlocking Genetic Potential from the Wild

TL;DR: The tools of genome research may finally unleash the genetic potential of the authors' wild and cultivated germplasm resources for the benefit of society.
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High density molecular linkage maps of the tomato and potato genomes.

TL;DR: Currently tomato and potato are among the most thoroughly mapped eukaryotic species and the availability of high density molecular linkage maps should facilitate chromosome walking, quantitative trait mapping, marker-assisted breeding and evolutionary studies in these two important and well studied crop species.
Journal ArticleDOI

An introgression line population of Lycopersicon pennellii in the cultivated tomato enables the identification and fine mapping of yield-associated QTL

TL;DR: A novel population consisting of 50 introgression lines originating from a cross between the green-fruited species Lycopersicon pennellii and the cultivated tomato (cv M82) is presented, which provides complete coverage of the genome and a set of lines nearly isogenic to M82.
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