Breeding Watermelon for Human Nutrition
New Flesh Colors and Nutrients
- by Todd C. Wehner
- Department of Horticultural Science
- North Carolina State University
- Raleigh, NC 27695-7609
Introduction
Watermelon flesh color is controlled by several genes to produce scarlet red, coral red, orange, salmon yellow, canary yellow, or white. Genes conditioning flesh colors are B, C, i-C, Wf, y, and y-o. Canary yellow (C) is dominant to other colored flesh (c). Coral red flesh (Y) is dominant to salmon yellow (y). Orange flesh (y-o) is a member of multiple allelic system at that locus, where Y (coral red flesh) is dominant to both y-o (orange flesh) and y (salmon yellow), and y-o (orange flesh) is dominant to y (salmon yellow). In a separate study, two loci with epistatic interaction controlled white, yellow, and red flesh. Yellow flesh (B) is dominant to red flesh. The gene Wf is epistatic to B, so genotypes WfWf BB or WfWf bb were white fleshed, wfwf BB was yellow fleshed, and wfwf bb was red fleshed. Canary yellow flesh is dominant to coral red, and i-C inhibitory to C, resulting in red flesh. In the absence of i-C, C is epistatic to Y.
A single dominant gene, Scr, produces the scarlet red flesh color of 'Dixielee' and 'Red-N-Sweet' instead of the lighter, coral red (scr) flesh color of 'Angeleno Black Seeded'. Additional studies are needed to determine the interaction of Scr with Y, y-o and y, and the interaction of C with Y, y-o and y.
Although flesh color is shown to be controlled by single genes, the fruit in a segregating generation from a cross between two different inbreds is often confusing. Often there are different flesh colors in different areas of the same fruit. One possible hypothesis to explain the presence of the abnormal types is that the expression of the pigment is caused by several different genes, one for each area of the fruit. Thus, the mixed colorations would have been caused by recombination of these genes. It may be useful to have a separate rating of the color of different parts of the flesh to determine whether there are genes controlling the color of each part: the endocarp between the carpel walls and the mesocarp (white rind); the flesh within the carpels, originating from the stylar column; and the carpel walls.
Human nutrition
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The morphological and resistance genes of watermelon,
including gene symbol, synonym, description, references,
availability (y), and photograph.(z)
Symbol |
Gene
description and type lines |
Human nutrition |
Photograph
(click for larger image) |
C |
Canary
yellow flesh; dominant to pink; i-C inhibitory to C, resulting in red flesh;
in the absence of i-C, C is epistatic to Y; CC from 'Honey Cream'* and NC-517, cc from 'Dove'*; CC YY I-C I-C from 'Yellow
Baby' F1** and 'Yellow Doll' F1**; cc yoyo I-C
I-C from 'Tendersweet Orange Flesh'**; cc
yy I-C I-C from 'Golden Honey'**; cc YY i-C
i-C from 'Sweet Princess'**. |
Citrulline |
|
Scr |
Scarlet red flesh color; dark red color of the fruit flesh (darker red than the YY red color of 'Angeleno Black Seeded'); Scr from 'Dixielee' and 'Red-N-Sweet'; scr from 'Angeleno Black Seeded'. |
Lycopene |
|
| Wf |
White flesh; (named
white flesh by Robinson*); Wf is epistatic
to B (Y renamed B by Henderson**); WfWf BB or WfWf bb white fleshed; wfwf BB yellow fleshed; wfwf bb red
fleshed; B from breeding line V.No.3 and b from V.No.1; flesh color segregated into 12 white, 3
yellow and 1 red in the F2. |
None |
 |
| y |
yellow flesh; recessive
to coral (light) red flesh (Y); y from 'Golden Honey'; Y from 'Angeleno' (black seeded). |
Citrulline |
 |
| y-o |
orange flesh; allelic
to y; Y (red flesh) is dominant to y-o (orange flesh) and y (salmon yellow flesh); y-o (orange flesh) is dominant to y (yellow flesh); cc y-oy-o I-C I-C from 'Tendersweet
Orange Flesh'; cc yy I-C I-C from 'Golden Honey'; cc YY i-C i-C from 'Sweet Princess'. |
Prolycopene |
 |