%0 Journal Article %T Grape berry ripening delay induced by a pre-v¨¦raison NAA treatment is paralleled by a shift in the expression pattern of auxin- and ethylene-related genes %A Fiorenza Ziliotto %A Massimiliano Corso %A Fabio Massimo Rizzini %A Angela Rasori %A Alessandro Botton %A Claudio Bonghi %J BMC Plant Biology %D 2012 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1471-2229-12-185 %X The NAA treatment caused significant changes in the transcription rate of about 1,500 genes, indicating that auxin delayed grape berry ripening also at the transcriptional level, along with the recovery of a steady state of its intracellular concentration. Hormone indices analysis carried out with the HORMONOMETER tool suggests that biologically active concentrations of auxins were achieved throughout a homeostatic recovery. This occurred within 7 days after the treatment, during which the physiological response was mainly unspecific and due to a likely pharmacological effect of NAA. This hypothesis is strongly supported by the up-regulation of genes involved in auxin conjugation (GH3-like) and action (IAA4- and IAA31-like). A strong antagonistic effect between auxin and ethylene was also observed, along with a substantial ¡®synergism¡¯ between auxins and ABA, although to a lesser extent.This study suggests that, in presence of altered levels of auxins, the crosstalk between hormones involves diverse mechanisms, acting at both the hormone response and biosynthesis levels, creating a complex response network.A large number of physiological and molecular events are known to occur during grape berry ripening, but the regulatory mechanisms controlling this critical developmental phase are still poorly understood. The onset of ripening (termed v¨¦raison) is accompanied by significant changes, at both physical (pulp firmness) and chemical (accumulation of sugars and flavor compounds, synthesis of anthocyanins and reduction of organic acids concentration) levels [1,2], concurrently with the modification of the transcription rate of a large number of related genes [3,4].Auxin, ethylene, abscisic acid (ABA) and brassinosteroids (BRs) are actively involved, throughout a complex network of interactions with other mobile signals, in the regulation of grape berry ripening [5]. Interestingly, the highest levels of auxin are observed at early berry development, then its concentration %K Vitis vinifera %K Hormones %K Cross-talk %K Fruit development %K Microarray %K HORMONOMETER %K Transcriptomics %U http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2229/12/185