2 research outputs found

    Genetics and genomics of flower initiation and development in roses

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    International audienceRoses hold high symbolic value and great cultural importance in different societies throughout human history. They are widely used as garden ornamental plants, as cut flowers, and for the production of essential oils for the perfume and cosmetic industries. Domestication of roses has a long and complex history, and the rose species have been hybridized across vast geographic areas such as Europe, Asia, and the Middle East. The domestication processes selected several flower characters affecting floral quality, such as recurrent flowering, double flowers, petal colours, and fragrance. The molecular and genetic events that determine some of these flower characters cannot be studied using model species such as Arabidopsis thaliana, or at least only in a limited manner. In this review, we comment on the recent development of genetic, genomic, and transcriptomic tools for roses, and then focus on recent advances that have helped unravel the molecular mechanisms underlying several rose floral traits

    Rose genomics: challenges and perspectives

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    International audienceCultivated roses have a very ancient history. Artificial crossing led to what is today perceived as modern rose cultivars. Impressively, these modern rose cultivars were established from less than 10 species, which have contributed to the origin of the about 35,000 existing rose cultivars. Roses exhibit an extraordinary diversity of traits, both of economic and scientific importance. Several recent studies have been marked as important milestones on the journey towards deeply understanding the molecular and genetic mechanisms that govern these traits, yet we still lack information on the genome sequences of rose species and cultivars, especially those that heavily participated to rose domestication and breeding programs
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