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Changes in the activity of enzymes of phenylpropanoid metabolism in tomatoes stored at low temperatures
Authors:Michael JC Rhodes  Leonard SC Wooltorton
Institution:Agricultural Research Council, Food Research Institute, Colney Lane, Norwich, NR4 7UA, U.K.
Abstract:A large increase in the activity of an enzyme involved in chlorogenic acid metabolism, hydroxycinnamyltransferase occurs in tomatoes stored at low temperatures. In contrast, the activity of the enzyme remains constant or falls slightly during normal ripening at 20°. The rise in activity occurs at temperatures below 10° and fails to occur at 15° or 20°. This increase in activity during low temperature storage occurs with fruit at all stages of ripening from mature green to fully ripe. The hydroxycinnamyltransferase of chilled tomatoes falls rapidly on transfer to 20° with a lag of about 4–8 hr and within 48 hr returns to that of unchilled fruit. The effects of such warming treatments are reversible since when a chilling period is resumed following warming to 20°, the rise in hydroxycinnamyltransferase activity is also resumed. Of the 5 other enzymes of phenylpropanoid metabolism studied, only PAL shows a similar increase in activity during low temperature storage although the activity of the other enzymes was maintained at higher levels in fruit at 2° than at 20°. The possible relationship between the behaviour of hydroxycinnamyltransferase activity at various temperatures and the known susceptibility of tomatoes to chilling injury is discussed.
Keywords:Solanaceae  tomato fruit  chilling injury  phenylpropanoid metabolism  hydroxycinnamate CoA  quinate hydroxycinnamyltransferase (hydroxycinnamyltransferase)  
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