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Tannin phenotyping of the Vitaceae reveals a phylogenetic linkage of epigallocatechin in berries and leaves.

Jean-Marc BrillouetCharles RomieuRoberto BacilieriPeter NickAnna Trias-BlasiErika MaulKatalin SolymosiPeter TeszlákJiang-Fu JiangLei SunDanielle OrtolaniJason P LondoBen GutierrezBernard PrinsMarc ReyndersFrank Van CaekenbergheDavid MaghradzeCecile MarchalAmir SultanJean-Francois ThomasDaniel ScherberichHelene FulcrandLaurent RoumeasGuillaume BillerachVugar SalimovMirza MusayevMuhammad Ejaz Ul Islam DarJean-Benoit PeltierMichel Grisoni
Published in: Annals of botany (2022)
The original ability to incorporate epigallocatechin (EGC) into grapevine condensed tannins was lost independently in both the American and Eurasian/Asian branches of the Vitaceae, with exceptional cases of reversion to the ancestral EGC phenotype. This is particularly true in the genus Vitis, where we now find two radically distinct groups differing with respect to EGC content. While Vitis species from Asia are void of EGC, 50 % of the New World Vitis harbour EGC. Interestingly, the presence of EGC is tightly coupled with the degree of leaf margin serration. Noticeably, the rare Asian EGC-forming species are phylogenetically close to Vitis vinifera, the only remnant representative of Vitis in Eurasia. Both the wild ancestral V. vinifera subsp. sylvestris as well as the domesticated V. vinifera subsp. sativa can accumulate EGC and activate galloylation biosynthesis that compete for photoassimilates and reductive power.
Keyphrases
  • dna methylation