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  • Allele-specific expression reveals complex cis- and trans-regulatory divergence underlying fruit phenotypic differences between cultivated and wild tomato species

Tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) is one of the most important agricultural crops and serves as a model system for fleshy fruit biology. However, domestication bottlenecks have led to limited genetic diversity for further crop improvement. Wild relatives represent a rich reservoir of phenotypic diversity, yet the molecular basis underlying such phenotypic diversity remains largely unknown. As gene expression variation is a major driver of phenotypic diversity, we performed genome-wide allele-specific expression analyses in F1 hybrids between cultivated tomato and three wild relatives spanning a range of evolutionary distances, across three fruit tissues and multiple developmental stages. Our analysis generated a multi-species map of cis- and trans-regulatory variation, revealing a predominant role of cis-regulatory effects in expression divergence across species, tissues, and stages. The majority of cis effects were tissue- and/or stage-specific, underscoring the importance of tissue context in regulatory variation. Regulatory mechanisms and inheritance patterns shifted with evolutionary distance, with more distantly related species showing increased cis-regulatory contributions. Finally, we identified extensive regulatory divergence in biosynthetic pathways related to fruit nutritional value and flavor quality, including carotenoids, flavonoids, alkaloids, sugars, and volatiles. This study presents a high-resolution map of regulatory variation underlying tomato fruit development and provides evolutionary insights into the regulation of fruit nutrition and flavor traits.

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