Cultivated strawberry (Fragaria × ananassa) is a berry crop widely appreciated worldwide due to its
nutritional and organoleptic properties. However, the main breeding targets in these crops have been
the control of flowering (for fruit yield), runnering (for vegetative propagation) and the trade-off
between the two. For this reason, nowadays, breeders are mainly focused on recovering fruit quality
attributes in order to gain consumers acceptance. Those characteristics are determined by the
metabolic composition of the fruit, thus the modulation of its metabolism can help to reach this aim.
Regarding aroma, esters are the main responsible of this trait in strawberry fruit. Some of them are
derived from the catabolism of branched-chain amino acids (valine, leucine and isoleucine). Although
the synthesis of these amino acids has been well stablished in strawberry fruit, its degradation remains
unclear. Using a F1 F. × ananassa mapping population we identified a stable QTL (Quantitative Trait
Loci) for these amino acids. Based on its differential gene expression in contrasting lines for these
metabolites and its annotation, we identified an amino acid transporter as a candidate gene for the
regulation of branched-chain amino acid content in strawberry. To elucidate the involvement of this
gene in branched-chain amino acid metabolism, we have done functional analysis based on transient
overexpression lines on Nicotiana benthamiana showing changes in amino acids content. Currently,
we are performing further experiments in order to elucidate the role of this gene on strawberry volatile
metabolism.