Frontiers in Genetics (Mar 2023)

Genetics of destemming in pepper: A step towards mechanical harvesting

  • Theresa Hill,
  • Vincenzo Cassibba,
  • Israel Joukhadar,
  • Bradley Tonnessen,
  • Charles Havlik,
  • Franchesca Ortega,
  • Sirisupa Sripolcharoen,
  • Bernard Jurriaan Visser,
  • Kevin Stoffel,
  • Paradee Thammapichai,
  • Armando Garcia-Llanos,
  • Shiyu Chen,
  • Amanda Hulse-Kemp,
  • Stephanie Walker,
  • Allen Van Deynze

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2023.1114832
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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Introduction: The majority of peppers in the US for fresh market and processing are handpicked, and harvesting can account for 20–50% of production costs. Innovation in mechanical harvesting would increase availability; lower the costs of local, healthy vegetable products; and perhaps improve food safety and expand markets. Most processed peppers require removal of pedicels (stem and calyx) from the fruit, but lack of an efficient mechanical process for this operation has hindered adoption of mechanical harvest. In this paper, we present characterization and advancements in breeding green chile peppers for mechanical harvesting. Specifically, we describe inheritance and expression of an easy-destemming trait derived from the landrace UCD-14 that facilitates machine harvest of green chiles.Methods: A torque gauge was used for measuring bending forces similar to those of a harvester and applied to two biparental populations segregating for destemming force and rate. Genotyping by sequencing was used to generate genetic maps for quantitative trait locus (QTL) analyses.Results: A major destemming QTL was found on chromosome 10 across populations and environments. Eight additional population and/or environment-specific QTL were also identified. Chromosome 10 QTL markers were used to help introgress the destemming trait into jalapeño-type peppers. Low destemming force lines combined with improvements in transplant production enabled mechanical harvest of destemmed fruit at a rate of 41% versus 2% with a commercial jalapeńo hybrid. Staining for the presence of lignin at the pedicel/fruit boundary indicated the presence of an abscission zone and homologs of genes known to affect organ abscission were found under several QTL, suggesting that the easy-destemming trait may be due to the presence and activation of a pedicel/fruit abscission zone.Conclusion: Presented here are tools to measure the easy-destemming trait, its physiological basis, possible molecular pathways, and expression of the trait in various genetic backgrounds. Mechanical harvest of destemmed mature green chile fruits was achieved by combining easy-destemming with transplant management.

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