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IVES 9 IVES Conference Series 9 Grapevine Breeding and Genetics 9 Grapevine Breeding and Genetics 2026 9 GBG 2026 – Session 7: Fruit development, grape and wine composition 9 Biochemical markers for grape berry splitting resistance: prospects for targeted breeding

Biochemical markers for grape berry splitting resistance: prospects for targeted breeding

Abstract

Berry splitting is a major physiological disorder in fleshy fruits that undermines quality, yield, and shelf life. In table grapes (Vitis vinifera L.), susceptibility to splitting is a primary cause of sour rot disease, resulting in significant commercial and economic losses.

Due to the lack of effective agrotechnical practices to prevent grape berry splitting, breeding split-resistant cultivars is a priority objective in modern viticulture. However, genetic progress is constrained by a lack of reliable biochemical markers and a limited understanding of the structural and chemical mechanisms governing this trait.

This study addresses the knowledge gap by evaluating six distinct table grape cultivars grown under identical environmental conditions that exhibit a wide range of splitting susceptibility. Through comprehensive histological and biochemical analyses, we quantified skin epidermal cell density, cell wall polysaccharides, and cuticle thickness. We found that neither epidermal cell density nor cuticle thickness was associated with splitting susceptibility. Instead, cell wall pectin content was the only polysaccharide to exhibit a significant negative correlation with splitting, suggesting its potential role in mitigating the disorder by enhancing exocarp structural integrity.

Furthermore, utilizing GC MS analysis, we performed the first comprehensive profiling of grape berry cutin monomers. This analysis uncovered a dynamic, developmentally regulated metabolic shift in cutin biosynthesis, characterized by a transition from aliphatic components in early development to a predominance of phenolic monomers during the ripening stage.

Notably, the accumulation of specific phenolic monomers, especially cinnamic acid-3,5-dimethoxy and methyl-3,4-dihydroxybenzoate, alongside C16 and C18 fatty acids, was significantly associated with enhanced splitting resistance. These findings highlight cell wall pectin content and cutin monomer composition as key determinants of grape splitting susceptibility. These biochemical traits offer promising new selectable markers and provide clear molecular targets for developing resilient table grape cultivars.

Publication date: June 22, 2026

Issue: GBG 2026

Type: Poster

Authors

Archana Prasad1, Ekaterina Manasherova2, Oded Degani1, Hagai Cohen2, Noam Reshef1,*

1 Department of Fruit and Tree Sciences, Institute of Plant Sciences, Agricultural Research Organization (ARO), Volcani Institute, Rishon LeZion 7505101, Israel

2 Department of Vegetable and Field Crops, Institute of Plant Sciences, Agricultural Research Organization (ARO), Volcani Institute, Rishon LeZion 7505101, Israel

Contact the author*

Keywords

cutin monomers, epidermal cell density, fruit splitting, pectin, Vitis vinifera

Tags

GBG | GBG 2026 | IVES Conference Series

Citation

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