%0 Journal Article %T Selective defoliation affects plant growth, fruit transcriptional ripening program and flavonoid metabolism in grapevine %A Chiara Pastore %A Sara Zenoni %A Marianna Fasoli %A Mario Pezzotti %A Giovanni Battista Tornielli %A Ilaria Filippetti %J BMC Plant Biology %D 2013 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1471-2229-13-30 %X We found that pre-bloom defoliation improved berry quality traits such as sugar and anthocyanin content, whereas defoliation at veraison had a detrimental effect, e.g. less anthocyanin and higher incidence of sunburn damage. Genome-wide expression analysis during berry ripening revealed that defoliation at either stage resulted in major transcriptome reprogramming, which slightly delayed the onset of ripening. However, a closer investigation of individual gene expression profiles identified genes that were specifically modulated by defoliation at each stage, reflecting the uncoupling of metabolic processes such as flavonoid biosynthesis, cell wall and stress metabolism, from the general ripening program.The specific transcriptional modifications we observed following defoliation at different time points allow the identification of the developmental or metabolic processes affected in berries thus deepening the knowledge of the mechanisms by which these agronomical practices impact the final berry ripening traits. %U http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2229/13/30/abstract