There are multiple genes that can affect fruit color in tomatoes. Although the major genes have individual effects, it is often the interaction between these major genes that produces the fruit color phenotype. What we see as fruit color is a combination of pigmentation in three separate tissue types; the epidermis, a sub-epidermal layer, and the fruit pericarp (flesh). The genes listed below describe most of the known major genes controlling fruit color, and the various alleles of those genes with their associated phenotypes. A few uncommonly found genes/alleles are omitted to try and simplify an already complicated matrix of gene interactions determining the fruit color phenotype. Most of this information is from a thorough literature review on this topic, and combined with some personal experience and observation when appropriate.
In this document the wild type allele (responsible for the typical
phenotype in cultivated tomatoes) is noted as + and mutant alleles at a locus are
noted by the allele abbreviation (see TGRC list of accepted allele abbreviations), either in lower case (if the allele is recessive
to the wild type), or upper case (if the allele is dominant to the wild type). Thus +/+ denotes that the plant is
homozygous for the wild type allele at a particular locus (gene) and exhibits
the wild type phenotype; t/t notes the plant is homozygous for the recessive “t” allele at the tangerine locus and
has the tangerine phenotype; and Del/+ notes the plant is heterozygous for
the dominant Del allele at the delta-carotene locus and has the Del phenotype. The “-“ character denotes that all alleles have an equal effect on
phenotype, for example at the tangerine locus +/- means either +/+ or +/t,
since either will result in the wild type phenotype.
Major genes responsible for fruit color in tomatoes
Pigmentation in the Epidermis and Sub-epidermis
In tomato fruit the epidermis is a single layer of cells designed to
protect the fruit from desiccation and mechanical injury. In the wild type tomato the epidermis
is yellow (Y allele). This
coloration is due to the flavonoid pigment naringenin chalcone which is
embedded in the cuticle. It is
thought that this pigmentation protects against UV radiation and may provide
some protection against pathogens.
The biosynthetic pathway for naringenin chalcone is controlled by a
myb12 transcription factor. The recessive
y allele is due to a loss of function mutation in this myb12 gene, resulting in
a clear cuticle without significant naringenin chalcone pigmentation. The myb12 loss of function associated
with the y allele also results in a cuticle that is thinner, lower in cutin
content, and with less elasticity (see photo and graphs below). Myb12 also has broad effects on
flavonoid and carotenoid pathways beyond the cuticle and the y allele is associated
with generally lower levels of these compounds in the fruit (reference).
In the presence of the genes Aft and atv, anthocyanin pigment is
accumulated in a few layers of cells in the fruit epidermis and sub-epidermis
(see Breeding the Blue Tomato). Both genes were introgressed from wild
relatives and are up-regulated by direct exposure to UV light. There is considerable variation in
intensity of pigmentation among Aft/Aft atv/atv plants, strongly suggesting an epistatic
effect from one or more unknown modifier genes.
Yellow fruit with indigo |
Epidermal peal of yellow/indigo |
We have found there can also be sub-epidermal accumulation of carotenoid
pigments. As a result, the color
of the “skin” may be very different than the color of the flesh. We have developed several lines with
red or reddish orange pigmentation of the sub-epidermis with yellow or green
flesh (see photos). There is no
previous report of this phenomenon in the literature. This trait is heritable and appears to be controlled by a
single recessive gene. Last year
we identified plants with a green sub-epidermis and red flesh. Although there appears to be
considerable potential to modify “skin color” independent of flesh color in
tomatoes, there is much to be learned.
2013 taste test winner - green on red |
The green stripe trait, which is governed by the recessive gs allele, causes chlorophyll accumulation in irregular stripes in the fruit epidermis/sub-epidermis of unripe fruit, changing to stripes of various colors in mature fruit (see Genetic Control of Fruit Stripes in Tomato). The pattern of the stripes can vary widely, though the genetic basis for this variation is not understood. The color of the stripes in mature fruit is determined in part by flesh color, but also subject to other factors, yet unknown. In particular some striped tomatoes have metallic silver, bronze, green of gold stripes – the nature of which is currently a mystery (see photo)
Painted with metallic green |
Orange w/ broad gold stripes |
Fruit stripes are dark longitudinal stripes that develop on ripening
tomato fruit in the sub-epidermis.
In the literature this trait is described as being controlled by a
dominant “Fs” allele. Our
experience is that the trait is very sensitive to environment, not consistently
expressed, and that dominance appears to be incomplete. Fs/Fs in combination with gs/gs can
give some very interesting striping patterns (e.g. Beauty Queen), and Fs/Fs in a Aft/Aft – atv/atv
background has shown a very striking tiger-like striping (see Siberian/Bengal Tiger blog).
Bengal Tiger |
Freckles are another possible feature of the epidermis that can
significantly alter fruit phenotype.
A detailed discussion on what is known about the genetic control of
freckles can be found here, but there is little
reported in the literature and still a lot is not well understood. One interesting manifestation of this
trait is in combination with the anthocyanin fruit phenotype, with gold/yellow
flecks on a indigo background (see photo below).
Freckled Indigo |
Pericarp pigmentation
Coloration of the tomato pericarp (flesh) is a result of accumulation of various carotenoid pigments. The pathway for biosynthesis of these various carotenoid compounds is illustrated below. In the next few paragraphs the common mutations that lead to variations from the wild type phenotype are described, discussed and illustrated (our photos unless noted otherwise).
Coloration of the tomato pericarp (flesh) is a result of accumulation of various carotenoid pigments. The pathway for biosynthesis of these various carotenoid compounds is illustrated below. In the next few paragraphs the common mutations that lead to variations from the wild type phenotype are described, discussed and illustrated (our photos unless noted otherwise).
"Wild type" |
F3 segregating for the t allele (red/tangerine) |
At another independent locus, the “Del” allele of the delta-carotene
gene is a much less common determinate of orange flesh in cultivated tomatoes. This gene was found in various wild
relatives and has been introgressed into tomatoes. CYC-E is an enzyme that drives convertion of lycopene to
delta-carotene. In the wild type
the gene controlling this enzyme is only very weakly expressed during fruit
maturation. The Del allele of
this gene is expressed 30x higher than the wild type leading to an increase in
delta-carotene concentration and a corresponding decrease in lycopene content. Del has functional incomplete
dominance and Del/+ plants have red/orange flesh with <50% of total
pigment being delta-carotene and Del/Del plants having orange/red flesh
with >50% of the total pigment being delta-carotene. Like tangerine gene, the phenotypic
expression of the Del phenotype is partially dependent on the genotype at the R locus.
Del (photo by Keith Mueller) |
Del + high pigment (hp1/hp1) - Mueller photo |
UC Davis TGRC photo |
In wild type tomatoes the gene coding for the CYC-B enzyme, that
converts lycopene to beta-carotene, is expressed at a low level in ripening
fruit - lycopene content is normally >50x the content of beta-carotene. There are two important variants of the CYC-B gene, alleles which can significantly alter the red fleshed wild type
phenotype. The “B” allele was
introduced from tomato wild relatives and greatly increases expression of CYC-B,
resulting in increased beta-carotene content at the expense of lycopene –
resulting in orange fruit. "B" is
inherited as a dominant allele.
The second variant “
bog” (AKA old gold crimson) is a loss of function mutant for the
gene coding for CYC-B and reduces the normally low levels of beta-carotene to
near zero, with a corresponding increase in lycopene content. Crimson type tomatoes, with elevated
lycopene content are bog/bog in a red fleshed background (see photo).
Crimson striped mini-heart |
at/at - photo by Keith Mueller |
Recently scientists have identified several QTL markers, associated with
independent genes of unknown function, that enhance lycopene concentration in
tomato fruit (reference). These are independent of, and perhaps
additive to, bog/bog (i.e. crimson trait).
The Green ripe trait is one of several that affect normal fruit
maturation. The mutant Gr allele
(allelic to Nr – never ripe) is a deletion in a wild type gene that has the
effect of making the fruit less
sensitive to the plant hormone ethylene.
Ethylene governs many key steps in fruit maturation and plants
containing the Gr allele (Gr/-) make fruit that never fully ripen. The color of ripe fruit is green with a
yellowing blush, often with a red/pink center. The fruit remains very firm and does not significantly
accumulate sugars, acids or other flavor compounds. The delayed ripening genes “rin” and “nor” when homozygous,
give a similar fruit phenotype.
Plants that are rin/+ or nor/+ have normal fruit coloration and delayed
fruit senescence (see Fountain of Youth blog).
As fruit of wild type tomato plants mature, concentration of the green
photosynthetic pigment chlorophyll decreases and carotenoid pigments increase –
chloroplasts become chromoplasts, and the fruit begin to turn their predestined
color: red, orange or yellow. The
green flesh allele “gf” is a loss of function mutant in SGR1, a gene responsible for producing a protein
required for chlorophyll breakdown in maturing tomato fruit. It was recently reported that there are
at least five independent loss of function mutations in this gene, giving rise
to several alleles of gf, all with the same gf phenotype. Tomato plants homozygous for this
recessive mutation (gf/gf) retain chlorophyll in mature fruit, but also
accumulate their normal carotenoid pigments as determined by the major genes
described above. In the presence
of retained chlorophyll, fruit predestined to have red flesh become muddy brown
(AKA “black”), pink becomes purple, orange becomes orangish/green and yellow
becomes green when ripe (GWR).
gf/gf F2 segregate (Michael Pollan x Cowlicks Brandywine) |
In tomatoes the term bicolor generally refers to fruit that has some
combination of two (or three) flesh colors, in a vast array of potential
patterns. As discussed earlier, the ry allele at the R locus confers red steaks in yellow flesh (e.g. Big Rainbow
and many others) with blotchy red pigmentation often evident even on the fruit
surface. In a gf/gf background ry/ry probably leads to red streaks in green flesh, as in the variety Berkeley Tie
Dye and others. However, there are
much more complex combination of bi/tri-color flesh pigmentation (see photos)
not easily explained by these or any other combinations of the genes discussed
above.
Typical genotypes for common fruit colors in
tomato
Fruit Phenotype
|
Y locus
|
R locus
|
T locus
|
B locus
|
Gf locus
|
example
|
Red fruit
|
+/-
|
+/-
|
+/-
|
+/+
|
+/-
|
Big Boy
|
Pink fruit
|
y/y
|
+/-
|
+/-
|
+/+
|
+/-
|
Brandywine
|
Brown (black) fruit
|
+/-
|
+/-
|
+/-
|
+/+
|
gf/gf
|
Black from Tula
|
Purple fruit
|
y/y
|
+/-
|
+/-
|
+/+
|
gf/gf
|
Cherokee Purple
|
Yellow fruit
|
+/-
|
r/r
|
+/-
|
+/+
|
+/-
|
Yellow Pear
|
“White” fruit
|
y/y
|
r/r
|
+/-
|
+/+
|
+/-
|
Blonde Boar
|
Orange (tangerine)
|
-/-
|
-/-
|
t/t
|
+/+
|
-/-
|
Woodle Orange
|
Orange (b-carotene)
|
-/-
|
-/-
|
+/-
|
B/-
|
-/-
|
Caro-red
|
Crimson fruit
|
-/-
|
+/-
|
+/-
|
bog/bog
|
+/-
|
Tasti-Lee
|
GWR fruit
|
y/y
|
r/r
|
+/-
|
+/+
|
gf/gf
|
Green Zebra
|
Yellow/red
bicolor
|
+/-
|
ry/ ry
|
+/-
|
+/+
|
+/-
|
Big
Rainbow
|
Green/red
bicolor
|
+/-
|
ry/ ry
|
+/-
|
+/+
|
gf/gf
|
Captain Lucky
|
Not just for color
The degradation of carotenoid pigments leads to the formation of
numerous aromatic/volatile compounds that affect tomato flavor. This is particularly true for the +/-
red wild type, crimson, tangerine and delta-carotene type tomatoes, and much
less so for the r/r, B/- and at/at low lycopene types (reference).
As we hopefully learn more about particular volatile compounds and their
effect on flavor – a breeding strategy for manipulating pigment
types/concentrations may one path for better tasting tomatoes.
The carotenoid and flavonoid compounds found in tomato also have direct
benefits in human nutrition. These
compounds generally are very effective anti-oxidants, and have demonstrated
significant anti-cancer activity.
Beta-carotene is also a direct precursor for vitamin A.
Summary
Our primary interest in better understanding the genetics and inheritance of fruit color in tomatoes is to better predict the phenotype of crosses between various types, and to best design selection strategies for achieving complex combinations of colors, stripes, etc. The fact that we continue to get unexpected results from crosses and find a few very novel phenotypes not described in the literature – suggests to us there are still a lot of unknown genetic factors at work, probably mostly modifier genes with an epistatic effect on one or more of the major genes described above.