Authors
Barbara Blanco-Ulate, Katherine CH Amrine, Thomas S Collins, Rosa M Rivero, Ariel R Vicente, Abraham Morales-Cruz, Carolyn L Doyle, Zirou Ye, Greg Allen, Hildegarde Heymann, Susan E Ebeler, Dario Cantu
Publication date
2015/12/1
Journal
Plant physiology
Volume
169
Issue
4
Pages
2422-2443
Publisher
American Society of Plant Biologists
Description
Noble rot results from exceptional infections of ripe grape (Vitis vinifera) berries by Botrytis cinerea. Unlike bunch rot, noble rot promotes favorable changes in grape berries and the accumulation of secondary metabolites that enhance wine grape composition. Noble rot-infected berries of cv Sémillon, a white-skinned variety, were collected over 3 years from a commercial vineyard at the same time that fruit were harvested for botrytized wine production. Using an integrated transcriptomics and metabolomics approach, we demonstrate that noble rot alters the metabolism of cv Sémillon berries by inducing biotic and abiotic stress responses as well as ripening processes. During noble rot, B. cinerea induced the expression of key regulators of ripening-associated pathways, some of which are distinctive to the normal ripening of red-skinned cultivars. Enhancement of phenylpropanoid metabolism, characterized by a …
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