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1.
‘Fortune’ mandarins are prone to develop pitting and necrosis upon exposure to low temperatures. We have examined the effect of field temperature during fruit maturation and the effect of conditioning temperatures (from 2 to 37°C) prior to cold storage on the content of polyamines (PAs) and on chilling susceptibility in order to understand the role of PAs in maturation and chilling tolerance of this citrus cultivar. Chilling susceptibility and the content of PAs were more affected by seasonal changes in field temperature than by the stage of fruit maturity. The highest putrescine (Put) and spermidine (Spd) content was found in fruits exposed to the lowest field temperatures. These fruits were in turn more susceptible to develop chilling injury (CI) after storage at 2°C. Spermine (Spm), however, decreased in attached fruit with time of exposure to temperatures below 12°C. Temperature pretreatments for 3 days above 20°C of fruits detached from the tree reduced CI, the more so the higher the conditioning temperature. Put and Spd increased with temperature conditioning in detached fruits, differing from the response of fruits attached to the tree. No direct relationship between induced levels of these PAs and the tolerance to CI was found. Levels of Put and Spd increased at temperatures (22, 30 and 37°C) which increased the tolerance and also at temperatures (6 and 12°C) which accelerated the appearance of chilling symptoms. In contrast, a significant increase in Spm levels was only found after conditioning at 30 or 37°C. After cold storage a general decline in PA levels occurred in all temperature‐conditioned mandarins. In most cases no significant differences among fruit exposed to effective and non‐effective pretreatments were observed. PA content increased again after transferring cold‐stored fruits to 20°C, whereas the CI index was barely affected. In conclusion, PA changes in the flavedo of ‘Fortune’ mandarins appear to be related to variations in temperature rather than to stage of maturity or tolerance to chilling.  相似文献   

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Zucchini fruit is susceptible to develop chilling injuries (CI) when stored at low temperature. In this study, the effects of a preconditioning treatment during cold storage and its relation with the physiological response to chilling tolerance have been investigated. The commercial variety Sinatra, whose fruit are very sensitive to cold storage, has been used. After harvest, fruit were kept at 4°C or preconditioned during 48 h at 15°C before cold storage. Weight loss, electrolyte leakage and lipid peroxidation were lower in preconditioned at the end of storage time, and CI index was significantly reduced in preconditioned compared to control fruit. The preconditioning treatment improved the energy status of the fruit increasing the pool of ATP, and maintaining the energy charge. The preconditioned fruit improved their antioxidant status with lower H2O2 content and induction of ascorbate peroxidase (APX) and catalase (CAT) activities. A reduction in putrescine was detected in preconditioned fruit along with a lower expression of arginine decarboxylase (ADC) and ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) and a rise in activity of diamine oxidase (DAO). The concentrations of glutamate and γ‐aminobutyrate (GABA) were lower during preconditioning, while that of proline was higher. In summary, preconditioning treatment induces chilling tolerance in zucchini fruit triggering a defence‐response against oxidative stress and increasing ATP pool and proline content.  相似文献   

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Gene expression at harvest was compared for two stone fruit cultivars, a peach and its near-isogenic nectarine mutant, using two microarray platforms, μPEACH1.0 and ChillPeach. Together, both platforms covered over 6,000 genes out of which 417 were differentially expressed between the fruits of the two cultivars at a p value of 0.05. A total of 47 genes in nectarine and 60 genes in peach were at least twofold higher relative to each other. Nectarine had much better storage characteristics than peach and could be stored for over 5 weeks at 5 °C without storage disorders. In an attempt to determine whether gene expression at harvest could give an indication of storage potential, the expression analysis of the two cultivars was compared to that of two genotypes with different sensitivities to chilling injury. Principal component analysis of gene expression results across four fruit types differing in chilling sensitivity resulted in 41 genes whose expression levels separated the fruits according to sensitivity to storage disorders, suggesting that the genes have a role in cold response adaptation.  相似文献   

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Citrus fruits are sensitive to low temperatures and this often results in the development of chilling injuries during postharvest storage. In order to gain more insight into the molecular mechanisms involved in the acquisition of fruit chilling tolerance, we initiated a grapefruit ( Citrus paradisi, cv. Marsh Seedless) flavedo cDNA sequencing project and used it to identify a cDNA similar to other Poncirus trifoliata and Citrus unshiu dehydrin genes reported to be responsive to low temperatures. The grapefruit dehydrin cDNA, designated cor15 , encodes a predicted polypeptide of 15.1 kDa, that is almost completely identical with other reported citrus dehydrin proteins, except that it contains two large amino acid repeats, whereas P. trifoliata COR11 has only one such repeat and P. trifoliata COR19 and C. unshiu COR19 have three repeats. Together, the various grapefruit, P. trifoliata and C. unshiu dehydrins form a closely related and unique dehydrin gene family that differs from most other plant dehydrins in having an unusual K-segment similar to that of gymnosperms and in having a serine cluster (S-segment) at an unusual position at the carboxy-terminus. The grapefruit cor15 gene is consistently expressed in the fruit peel tissue at harvest, but its message levels dramatically decrease during storage at 2°C. However, a pre-storage hot water treatment, which enhances fruit chilling tolerance, elicited retention of the constant level of cor15 gene expression during cold storage and eliminated its decline. The hot water treatment had no inductive effect on cor15 gene expression when the fruit were held at non-chilling temperatures. The effects of other stresses, such as exposure to ethylene, UV irradiation and wounding, on cor15 gene expression, were temporary and persisted for 1-2 days after the treatments.  相似文献   

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In order to continuously supply horticultural products for long periods, it is essential to store them after harvest in low temperatures. However, many tropical and subtropical fruits and vegetables, such as citrus, are sensitive to chilling. In previous studies, the authors have shown that a short hot water rinsing treatment (at 62°C for 20 s) increased chilling tolerance in grapefruit. In order to gain more insight into the molecular mechanisms involved in heat‐induced chilling tolerance, PCR cDNA subtraction analysis was performed which isolated four different PCR fragments whose expression was enhanced 24 h after the heat treatment, and that showed high sequence homology with various plant HSP18‐I, HSP18‐II, HSP22 and HSP70 genes. It was found that the short hot water treatment given at 62°C for 20 s, but not at lower temperatures of 20 or 53°C, increased the expression of the various HSP cDNAs in grapefruit peel tissue. However, when the fruits were kept at ambient temperatures, the increases in HSP mRNA levels following the hot water treatment were temporary and lasted only between 6 and 48 h. Similar temporary increases in the HSP mRNA levels were detected following exposure of the fruit to a hot air treatment at 40°C for 2 h. Nevertheless, when the fruits were treated with hot water but afterwards stored at chilling temperatures of 2°C, the mRNA levels of the various HSP18‐I, HSP18‐II, HSP22 and HSP70 cDNAs increased and remained high and stable during the entire 8‐week cold‐storage period, suggesting their possible involvement in heat‐induced chilling‐tolerance responses. The chilling treatment by itself increased the expression of the HSP18‐I cDNA, but had no effect on the mRNA levels of any of the other HSP cDNAs. Exposure of fruit to other stresses, such as wounding, UV irradiation, anaerobic conditions and exposure to ethylene, had no effect on the expression of the various HSPs. Overall, the study explored the correlation between the expression and persistence of various HSP cDNAs in grapefruit peel tissue during cold storage, on the one hand, and the acquisition of chilling tolerance, on the other hand, and the results suggest that HSPs may play a general role in protecting plant cells under both high‐ and low‐temperature stresses.  相似文献   

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Tomato fruits are sensitive to storage at low temperatures after harvest. Under these conditions, the main mechanism induced in fruits is oxidative stress, which can translate as lipid peroxidation and in turn deteriorate fruit quality. The aim of the present work was to investigate whether the effect of a biofortification program with potassium (K) improves the postharvest storage of cherry tomato fruits at 4 °C, through a better antioxidant response. Three K treatments were applied during the crop cycle of the plants: 5, 10, and 15 mM of KCl. The parameters in fruits on the day of harvest and after 21 days of postharvest cold storage at 4 °C, such as activity of lipoxygenase, malondialdehyde, catalase, superoxide dismutase, and the enzymes involved in the AsA–GSH cycle as well as the forms of ascorbate (AsA) and glutathione (GSH), were analyzed. The tomato fruits harvested from plants treated with 15 mM of KCl after 21 days of postharvest at 4 °C showed a lower degree of lipid peroxidation, an effective regeneration of AsA, and the highest pool of this compound in comparison with the other treatments. This response was because it presented the highest ascorbate peroxidase and monodehydroascorbate reductase activity. In addition, the treatments of 10 and 15 mM KCl presented the highest GSH pool, as well as a satisfactory regeneration of this tripeptide. All these results lead to the conclusion that the rate of 15 mM of KCl applied to this tomato variety (Solanum lycopersicum L. cv AsHiari grafted on cv. Maxifort rootstock) is adequate to mitigate the negative effects of postharvest chilling.  相似文献   

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The role of ethylene in the prevention of chilling injury in nectarines   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Woolliness is a chilling injury phenomenon occurring in nectarines held at low temperatures for extended periods. It is a disorder marked by altered cell wall metabolism during ripening leading to a dry, woolly texture in the fruit. Two treatments were found to alleviate this disorder. One was holding the fruits for 2 days at 20 °C before 0 °C storage (delayed storage) and the second was having ethylene present during cold storage (ethylene). Immediately stored fruit (control) had 88 percnt; woolliness while 7 percnt; of delayed storage and 15 percnt; of ethylene fruit showed woolliness. The severity of the injury in individual fruits was closely related to inhibition of ethylene evolution. Woolly fruit had higher levels of 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC) and less 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid oxidase (ACO, EC 1.4.3) activity than healthy fruit. It is suggested that ethylene is essential for promoting the proper sequence of cell wall hydrolysis necessary for normal fruit softening. This is in contrast to chilling injury in other fruits, whereby ethylene is often a sign of incipient damage. Respiration was also found to be associated with chilling injury, in that fruit with woolliness had a depressed respiration.  相似文献   

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Quantitative trait loci (QTL) mapping is a step towards the identification of factors regulating traits such as fruit ascorbic acid content. A previously identified QTL controlling variations in tomato fruit ascorbic acid has been fine mapped and reveals that the QTL has a polygenic and epistatic architecture. A monodehydroascorbate reductase (MDHAR) allele is a candidate for a proportion of the increase in fruit ascorbic acid content. The MDHAR enzyme is active in different stages of fruit ripening, shows increased activity in the introgression lines containing the wild-type ( Solanum pennellii ) allele, and responds to chilling injury in tomato along with the reduced/oxidized ascorbate ratio. Low temperature storage of different tomato introgression lines with all or part of the QTL for ascorbic acid and with or without the wild MDHAR allele shows that enzyme activity explains 84% of the variation in the reduced ascorbic acid levels of tomato fruit following storage at 4 °C, compared with 38% at harvest under non-stress conditions. A role is indicated for MDHAR in the maintenance of ascorbate levels in fruit under stress conditions. Furthermore, an increased fruit MDHAR activity and a lower oxidation level of the fruit ascorbate pool are correlated with decreased loss of firmness because of chilling injury.  相似文献   

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The use of synthetic antioxidants has been associated with serious concerns for human and environmental health. During ripening stages, tomato fruit is exposed to different abiotic stresses which not only influence its nutritional, mechanical, and functional properties at harvest, but also affect the quality and shelf life of the fruit during storage. This study investigated the pattern of changes in dietary antioxidants during various ripening stages of tomato fruit (cv. Red Rose) and their impact on storage behavior of the fruit during cold storage. Tomato fruits were harvested at mature green, breaker, turning, pink, light-red and red stages of maturity. Then, they were analysed for flesh firmness, soluble solids content, titratable acidity, total sugars, pH, dry matter content, lipophilic (lycopene, β-carotene, and total carotenoids), and hydrophilic (ascorbic acid, phenolic and flavonoids) antioxidants. Additional fruits were harvested at each maturity stage and divided into three equal lots, then were subjected to low-temperature (10 ± 1 °C) storage with 80 ± 5% RH, for 7, 14, and 21 days. Flesh firmness, and the levels of dietary antioxidants were analysed following the subsequent storage periods. The results revealed that the peak of hydrophilic antioxidants such as ascorbic acid, phenolic compounds, and flavonoids was between the ‘pink’ and the ‘light-red’ stages of fruit maturity. Whereas tomatoes harvested at the ‘red’ stage of maturity had the highest levels of lycopene and β-carotene. Both the stage of fruit maturity at harvest and duration of cold storage influenced flesh firmness, organoleptic and functional properties of ‘Red Rose’ tomato fruit. In conclusion, the results of the current investigation have practical implications in formulating foods with improved functional properties at processing industries.  相似文献   

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Peaches are highly perishable and deteriorate quickly at ambient temperature. Cold storage is commonly used to prevent fruit decay; however, it affects fruit quality causing physiological disorders collectively termed ‘chilling injury’ (CI). To prevent or ameliorate CI, heat treatment is often applied prior to cold storage. In the present work, metabolic profiling was performed to determine the metabolic dynamics associated with the induction of acquired CI tolerance in response to heat shock. ‘Dixiland’ peach fruits exposed to 39 °C, cold stored, or after a combined treatment of heat and cold, were compared with fruits ripening at 20 °C. Dramatic changes in the levels of compatible solutes such as galactinol and raffinose were observed, while amino acid precursors of the phenylpropanoid pathway were also modified due to the stress treatments, as was the polyamine putrescine. The observed responses towards temperature stress in peaches are composed of both common and specific response mechanisms to heat and cold, but also of more general adaptive responses that confer strategic advantages in adverse conditions such as biotic stresses. The identification of such key metabolites, which prime the fruit to cope with different stress situations, will likely greatly accelerate the design and the improvement of plant breeding programs.  相似文献   

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Non-freezing low temperature storage causes injury to melons and most other fruit and vegetables of tropical and subtropical origin. We demonstrate here that ethylene suppression through an antisense ACC oxidase (ACO) gene considerably reduced the sensitivity of Charentais cantaloupe melons to chilling injury. In contrast to wild-type fruit, antisense ACO melons did not develop the characteristic chilling injury of pitting and browning of the rind neither when stored at low temperature (3 weeks at 2 °C) nor upon rewarming. Treating antisense melons with 10 p.p.m. ethylene for more than 1 d prior to cold storage resulted in the restoration of chilling sensitivity. When the ethylene treatment was performed after cold storage, the chilling injury symptoms did not appear. The tolerance to chilling was associated with a lower accumulation of ethanol and acetaldehyde, reduced membrane deterioration and higher capacity of the fruit to remove active oxygen species. The activities of catalase, superoxide dismutase and peroxidase were markedly increased in antisense ACO fruit in comparison with wild-type fruit, particulary upon rewarming and post-storage ethylene treatment. Severe chilling injury symptoms were correlated with a lower activity of activated oxygen scavenging enzymes. These results demonstrate that ethylene acts in conjunction with low temperature to induce metabolic shifts that participate in the development of chilling injury.  相似文献   

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A comparative proteomic analysis between tomato fruits stored at chilling and non-chilling temperatures was carried out just before the appearance of visible symptoms of chilling injury. At this stage of the stress period it was possible to discriminate between proteins involved in symptoms and proteins implicated in response. To investigate the changes in the tomato fruit proteome under this specific stressful condition, two-dimensional differential in-gel electrophoresis coupled with spot identification by mass spectrometry was applied. This proteomic approach allowed the identification of differentially expressed proteins which are involved in two main biological functions: (i) defensive mechanisms represented by small heat shock and late embryogenesis proteins; and (ii) reaction to the uncoupling of photosynthetic processes and the protein degradation machinery. One of the first changes observed in chilled fruits is the down-regulation of ATP synthase, 26S proteasome subunit RPN11 and aspartic proteinase, whereas the first responses in order to deal with the stress are mainly multifunctional proteins involved not only in metabolism but also in stress regulation such as glyceraldehyde phosphate dehydrogenase, 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase and invertase. In addition, our data seem to indicate a possible candidate to be used as a protein marker for further studies on cold stress: aldose-1-epimerase, which seems to have an important role in low temperature tolerance.  相似文献   

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The shelf-life of fresh-cut tomatoes mainly depends on loss of tissue integrity and firmness that occurs also in intact fruits after long-term cold storage due to chilling injury. Round-fruit tomatoes (Solanum lycopersicum L.) cv. Jama were stored in 1.1-L plastic (polyethylene) fresh-cut produce containers as 10.0-mm-thick tomato slices and as intact tomatoes at 4 ± 0.5 °C. The aim of this work was to study the loss of membrane integrity and biochemical processes involved in membrane disruption. Electrolyte leakage and lipid peroxidation were studied at different stages of maturity: mature green, pink (PK), fully ripe and two different storage temperatures: 4 and 15 °C. The tomato slices of PK stage stored at 4 °C did not show changes for both parameters, while significant increase in membrane leakage and lipid peroxidation was observed at 15 °C, especially after 24 h of storage. The enzymes showed a simultaneous increase in their activities with a rise in electrolyte leakage and lipid peroxidation after 7 days of storage. Finally, phospholipase C (PLC) and phospholipase D (PLD) were investigated for intact fruit and tomato slices stored at 4 °C. The PLC had higher activity compared with PLD. In conclusion, the loss of membrane integrity in fresh-cut tomatoes is mainly affected by ripening stages, storage temperature and duration. The wounds enhance the PLC and PLD activities and they play a role late during storage.  相似文献   

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