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Multisite evaluation of phenotypic plasticity for specialized metabolites, some involved in carrot quality and disease resistance
Author(s) -
Wilfried Chevalier,
Sitti-Anlati Moussa,
Miguel Medeiros Netto Ottoni,
Cécile Dubois-Laurent,
Sébastien Huet,
Christophe Aubert,
Elsa Desnoues,
B. Navez,
V. Cottet,
Guillaume Chalot,
Michel Jost,
Laure Barrot,
Gerald Freymark,
Maarten Uittenbogaard,
François Chaniet,
Anita Suel,
Marie-Hélène Bouvier Merlet,
Latifa Hamama,
Valérie Le Clerc,
Mathilde Briard,
Didier Peltier,
Emmanuel Geoffriau
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0249613
Subject(s) - biology , phenotypic plasticity , metabolomics , abiotic component , carotenoid , abiotic stress , metabolite , food science , terpene , microbiology and biotechnology , ecology , biochemistry , bioinformatics , gene
Renewed consumer demand motivates the nutritional and sensory quality improvement of fruits and vegetables. Specialized metabolites being largely involved in nutritional and sensory quality of carrot, a better knowledge of their phenotypic variability is required. A metabolomic approach was used to evaluate phenotypic plasticity level of carrot commercial varieties, over three years and a wide range of cropping environments spread over several geographical areas in France. Seven groups of metabolites have been quantified by HPLC or GC methods: sugars, carotenoids, terpenes, phenolic compounds, phenylpropanoids and polyacetylenes. A large variation in root metabolic profiles was observed, in relation with environment, variety and variety by environment interaction effects in decreasing order of importance. Our results show a clear diversity structuration based on metabolite content. Polyacetylenes, β-pinene and α-carotene were identified mostly as relatively stable varietal markers, exhibiting static stability. Nevertheless, environment effect was substantial for a large part of carrot metabolic profile and various levels of phenotypic plasticity were observed depending on metabolites and varieties. A strong difference of environmental sensitivity between varieties was observed for several compounds, particularly myristicin, 6MM and D-germacrene, known to be involved in responses to biotic and abiotic stress. This work provides useful information about plasticity in the perspective of carrot breeding and production. A balance between constitutive content and environmental sensitivity for key metabolites should be reached for quality improvement in carrot and other vegetables.

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