作者
Selman Uluışık,Natalie H. Chapman,Rebecca A. Smith,Mervin Poole,Gary G. Adams,Richard B. Gillis,Tabot M. D. Besong,Judith Sheldon,Suzy M. Stiegelmeyer,Laura Perez,Nurul Hidayah Samsulrizal,Duoduo Wang,Ian D. Fisk,Ni Yang,Charles Baxter,Daniel Rickett,Rupert G. Fray,Bárbara Blanco-Ulate,Ann Powell,Stephen E. Harding,J. Craigon,Jocelyn K. C. Rose,Eric A. Fich,Li Sun,David S. Domozych,Paul D. Fraser,Gregory A. Tucker,Don Grierson,Graham B. Seymour
摘要
Controlling the rate of softening to extend shelf life was a key target for researchers engineering genetically modified (GM) tomatoes in the 1990s, but only modest improvements were achieved. Hybrids grown nowadays contain 'non-ripening mutations' that slow ripening and improve shelf life, but adversely affect flavor and color. We report substantial, targeted control of tomato softening, without affecting other aspects of ripening, by silencing a gene encoding a pectate lyase.