2000
DOI: 10.1126/science.289.5476.85
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fw2.2 : A Quantitative Trait Locus Key to the Evolution of Tomato Fruit Size

Abstract: Domestication of many plants has correlated with dramatic increases in fruit size. In tomato, one quantitative trait locus (QTL), fw2.2, was responsible for a large step in this process. When transformed into large-fruited cultivars, a cosmid derived from the fw2.2 region of a small-fruited wild species reduced fruit size by the predicted amount and had the gene action expected for fw2.2. The cause of the QTL effect is a single gene, ORFX, that is expressed early in floral development, controls carpel cell num… Show more

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Cited by 1,263 publications
(915 citation statements)
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“…This probably reXects a large diVerence in ovarian cell number and may thereby explain the large diVerence in absolute fruit growth between domestic tomato and the wild species right after the initiation of the cell division phase. A major Quantitative Trait Locus for fruit size is encoded by the fw2.2 gene (Frary et al 2000). The diVerence between the domesticated and the wild alleles is in the regulation of expression rather than in changes in the fw2.2.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This probably reXects a large diVerence in ovarian cell number and may thereby explain the large diVerence in absolute fruit growth between domestic tomato and the wild species right after the initiation of the cell division phase. A major Quantitative Trait Locus for fruit size is encoded by the fw2.2 gene (Frary et al 2000). The diVerence between the domesticated and the wild alleles is in the regulation of expression rather than in changes in the fw2.2.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In tomato the fruit weight 2.2 (fw2.2) has been identified as a quantitative trait locus, which is responsible for about 30% of the fruit size (Alpert and Tanksley, 1996;Frary et al, 2000). When ORFX, the corresponding gene, was introduced into a cultivar producing large fruits, tomato fruit size decreased.…”
Section: Identification and Properties Of Pcrsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus it is not surprising that some of the earliest work in gene and genome mapping as well as comparative genomics was done in the Solanaceae family. The construction of the first high-density molecular linkage map in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) (Tanksley et al 1992) was essential in establishing that species as a forerunner in the realm of quantitative trait locus (QTL) mapping and cloning (Alpert et al 1995;Frary et al 2000). The close relationship of tomato to potato (S. tuberosum), eggplant (S. melongena), and pepper (Capsicum spp.)…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%