Plants (Dec 2022)

How Temperatures May Affect the Synthesis of Fatty Acids during Olive Fruit Ripening: Genes at Work in the Field

  • Cibeles Contreras,
  • Pierluigi Pierantozzi,
  • Damián Maestri,
  • Martín Tivani,
  • Peter Searles,
  • Magdalena Brizuela,
  • Fabricio Fernández,
  • Alejandro Toro,
  • Carlos Puertas,
  • Eduardo R. Trentacoste,
  • Juan Kiessling,
  • Roberto Mariotti,
  • Luciana Baldoni,
  • Soraya Mousavi,
  • Paula Fernandez,
  • Sebastián Moschen,
  • Mariela Torres

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants12010054
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
p. 54

Abstract

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A major concern for olive cultivation in many extra-Mediterranean regions is the adaptation of recently introduced cultivars to environmental conditions different from those prevailing in the original area, such as the Mediterranean basin. Some of these cultivars can easily adapt their physiological and biochemical parameters in new agro-environments, whereas others show unbalanced values of oleic acid content. The objective of this study was to evaluate the effects of the thermal regime during oil synthesis on the expression of fatty acid desaturase genes and on the unsaturated fatty acid contents at the field level. Two cultivars (Arbequina and Coratina) were included in the analysis over a wide latitudinal gradient in Argentina. The results suggest that the thermal regime exerts a regulatory effect at the transcriptional level on both OeSAD2 and OeFAD2-2 genes and that this regulation is cultivar-dependent. It was also observed that the accumulated thermal time affects gene expression and the contents of oleic and linoleic acids in cv. Arbequina more than in Coratina. The fatty acid composition of cv. Arbequina is more influenced by the temperature regime than Coratina, suggesting its greater plasticity. Overall, findings from this study may drive future strategies for olive spreading towards areas with different or extreme thermal regimes serve as guidance for the evaluation olive varietal patrimony.

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