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Research Project: IMPROVING POTATO MARKET QUALITY THROUGH POSTHARVEST PHYSIOLOGY

Location: Sugarbeet and Potato Research

Project Number: 5442-21430-004-00
Project Type: Appropriated

Start Date: Sep 01, 2004
End Date: Aug 31, 2009

Objective:
To determine the normal and molecular processes that control the initiation, maintenance and termination of potato bud dormancy and regulate early sprout growth wound healing and skin set suberization.

Approach:
Identify physiological/biochemical mechanisms that control potato tuber dormancy/sprout growth and wound-healing/skin set. Determine the roles of endogenous hormones in tuber dormancy progression and identify the biochemical mechanisms governing hormone homeostasis in tubers as related to dormancy. Identify and characterize genes controlling tuber dormancy/sprout growth and wound-healing/skin set. Identify hormones and endogenous elicitor systems initiating and regulating wound-healing in harvest-damaged and cut-seed tubers. Determine biochemical changes in tuber periderm cell wall conferring resistance to excoriation (skinning during maturation.) Project has been classified as "Exempt" by the rating Institutional Biosafety Committee, ltr dated 6-12-02.

   

 
Project Team
Suttle, Jeffrey
Lulai, Edward
 
Project Annual Reports
  FY 2007
  FY 2006
  FY 2005
 
Publications
   Publications
 
Related National Programs
  Quality and Utilization of Agricultural Products (306)
  Plant Biological and Molecular Processes (302)
 
Related Projects
   LOCALIZATION OF GENE EXPRESSION ASSOCIATED WITH TUBER PERIDERM MATURATION AND QUALITY
   EVALUATION OF RUSSETED POTATO LINES TRANSFORMED WITH AN ANTI-SWEETENING GENE TO ASSESS ECONOMIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY
 
 
Last Modified: 10/22/2008
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