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1.
Peroxidase (EC 1.11.1.7)-mediated stiffening of cell walls within the fruit skin of tomato is hypothesized to regulate fruit growth. However, to date, there is no experimental evidence demonstrating that peroxidase affects the mechanical properties of skin tissue. Here, the mechanical properties of skin strips excised from a range of fruits at different ages were determined using an 'Instron' universal material testing instrument. The stiffness of tomato fruit skin strips increases 3-fold with increasing fruit age. Application of partially-purified peroxidase from the cell walls of mature tomato fruit skin significantly increased the stiffness of fruit skin irrespective of the age of fruit. Furthermore, the application of hydrogen peroxide significantly increased the stiffness of skin strips excised from fruit of an age when endogenous peroxidase isozymes associated with the termination of growth are first detected. The results support the hypothesis that the tomato fruit skin plays an integral role in the regulation of tomato fruit growth, and that changes in its mechanical properties may be mediated by peroxidase. As far as is known, this is the first demonstration that peroxidases alter the mechanical properties of the plant cell wall.  相似文献   

2.
The cessation of tomato fruit growth has been associated with the appearance of three 'wall-bound' peroxidase isozymes in the skin of tomato fruit. However, the presence of these isozymes in the ionically eluted 'wall-bound' fraction may be an artefact of either non-specific binding of symplastic peroxidase to the cell wall, or isozymes bound to membranes included in the 'wall-bound' fraction. Therefore, subcellular localization of peroxidase in both immature and mature tomato fruit skins was studied. Immature fruits showed intense peroxidase activity associated with the tonoplast and pro-vacuolar membranes, but little or no activity associated with the cell wall. However, the presence of peroxidase activity within the cell wall of mature green fruits was confirmed. Furthermore, peroxidase activity was also observed associated with the plasma membrane and large vesicles allied to the plasma membrane. While cross-linking in cell wall components was previously assumed to be the mechanism by which peroxidase might control fruit growth, the incorporation of 'lignin-like' phenolics may also play a part. Isoelectric focusing (IEF) of both symplastic and apoplastic peroxidase extracted from immature and mature tomato fruit skin showed that all peroxidase isozymes present were highly anionic. In this current study, histochemical techniques are used to demonstrate a developmental increase in 'lignin-like' phenolics within the sub-cuticular cell walls of the fruit skin. The localization of peroxidase within tomato fruit skin is discussed in relation to its potential role in the regulation of tomato fruit growth.  相似文献   

3.
Post‐harvest storage is largely limited by fruit softening, a result of cell wall degradation. Pectin methylesterase (PE) (EC 3.1.1.11) is a major hydrolase responsible for pectin de‐esterification in the cell wall, a response to fruit ripening. Two major PE isoforms, PE1 and PE2, have been isolated from tomato (Solanum lycopersicon) pericarp tissue and both have previously been down‐regulated using antisense suppression. In this paper, PE1 and PE2 double antisense tomato plants were successfully generated through crossing the two single antisense lines. In the double antisense fruit, approximately 10% of normal PE activity remained and ripening associated pectin de‐esterification was almost completely blocked. However, double antisense fruit softened normally during ripening. In tomato fruit, the PE1 isoform was found to contribute little to total PE activity and have little effect on the degree of esterification of pectin. In contrast, the other dominant fruit isoform, PE2, has a major impact on de‐esterification of total pectin. PE2 appears to act on non‐CDTA‐soluble pectin during ripening and on CDTA‐soluble pectin before the start of ripening in a potentially block‐wise fashion.  相似文献   

4.
Recent studies suggest that fruit cuticle is an important contributing factor to tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) fruit shelf life and storability. Moreover, it has been hypothesized that variation in fruit cuticle composition may underlie differences in traits such as fruit resistance to desiccation and microbial infection. To gain a better understanding of cuticle lipid composition diversity during fruit ontogeny and to assess if there are common features that correlate with ripening, we examined developmental changes in fruit cuticle wax and cutin monomer composition of delayed‐ripening tomato fruit mutants, ripening inhibitor (rin) and non‐ripening (nor) and delayed‐ripening landrace Alcobaça. Previous reports show that fruit ripening processes such as climacteric ethylene production, cell wall degradation and color change are significantly delayed, or do not occur, in these lines. In the study presented here, however, we show that fruits from rin, nor and Alcobaça have cuticle lipid compositions that differ significantly from normal fruits of Ailsa Craig (AC) even at very early stages in fruit development, with continuing impacts throughout ripening. Moreover, rin, nor and the Alcobaça lines show quite different wax profiles from AC and each other throughout fruit development. Although cutin monomer composition differed much less than wax composition among the genotypes, all delayed‐ripening lines possessed higher relative amounts of C18 monomers than AC. Together, these results reveal new genetic associations between cuticle and fruit development processes and define valuable genetic resources to further explore the importance of cuticle in fruit shelf life.  相似文献   

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Several apoplastic enzymes have been implicated in the control of elongation growth of plant cells. Among them, peroxidases contribute to both loosening and stiffening of the cell wall. They appear to be regulated by various mechanisms, including the action of extracellular inhibitors. To obtain evidence of the role of the enzyme–inhibitor interaction during leaf development, the intercellular washing fluids from Helianthus annuus leaves of different ages were isolated using standard methods of vacuum infiltration and centrifugation. Peroxidase activities, assessed using tetramethylbenzidine as substrate, increased during leaf development, reaching a maximum value after the leaves were fully expanded. An inhibitor, chemically characterised as ascorbate, co‐localised with the enzyme in the apoplast. Moreover, there was a strong negative correlation between the action of peroxidase and the micromolar concentration of ascorbate in the apoplastic fluid. The results show that in growing leaves, the in planta ascorbate concentration is able to restrain peroxidase enzyme activity. Then, at the time of growth cessation, the loss of extracellular ascorbate relieves the inhibition on this enzyme that contributes to wall fixation.  相似文献   

10.
Regulation of tomato fruit growth by epidermal cell wall enzymes   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
Water relations of tomato fruit and the epidermal and pericarp activities of the putative cell wall loosening and tightening enzymes Xyloglucan endotransglycosylase (XET) and peroxidase were investigated, to determine whether tomato fruit growth is principally regulated in the epidermis or pericarp. Analysis of the fruit water relations and observation of the pattern of expansion of tomato fruit slices in vitro , has shown that the pericarp exerts tissue pressure on the epidermis in tomato fruit, suggesting that the rate of growth of tomato fruit is determined by the physical properties of the epidermal cell walls. The epidermal activities of XET and peroxidase were assayed throughout fruit development. Temporal changes in these enzyme activities were found to correspond well with putative cell wall loosening and stiffening during fruit development. XET activity was found to be proportional to the relative expansion rate of the fruit until growth ceased, and a peroxidase activity weakly bound to the epidermal cell wall appeared shortly before cessation of fruit expansion. No equivalent peroxidase activity was detected in pericarp tissue of any age. It is therefore plausible that the expansion of tomato fruit is regulated by the combined action of these enzyme activities in the fruit epidermis.  相似文献   

11.
Abscisic acid (ABA) glucose conjugation mediated by uridine diphosphate glucosyltransferases (UGTs) is an important pathway in regulating ABA homeostasis. In the present study, we investigated three tomato SlUGTs that are highly expressed in fruit during ripening, and these SlUGTs were localized to the cytoplasm and cell nucleus. Among these three UGTs, SlUGT75C1 catalyzes the glucosylation of both ABA and IAA in vitro; SlUGT76E1 can only catalyze the conjugation of ABA; and SlUGT73C4 cannot glycosylate either ABA or IAA. Therefore, SlUGT75C1 was selected for further investigation. SlUGT75C1 RNA interference significantly up‐regulated the expression level of SlCYP707A2, which encodes an ABA 8′‐hydroxylase but did not affect the expression of SlNCED1, which encodes a key enzyme in ABA biosynthesis. Suppression of SlUGT75C1 significantly accelerated fruit ripening by enhancing ABA levels and promoting the early release of ethylene. SlUGT75C1‐RNAi altered the expression of fruit ripening genes (genes involved in ethylene release and cell wall catabolism). SlUGT75C1‐RNAi seeds showed delayed germination and root growth compared with wild‐type as well as increased sensitivity to exogenous ABA. SlUGT75C1‐RNAi plants were also more resistant to drought stress. These results demonstrated that SlUGT75C1 plays a crucial role in ABA‐mediated fruit ripening, seed germination, and drought responses in tomato.  相似文献   

12.
Reeve , R. M. (U.S.D.A., Albany, California.) Histological and histochemical changes in developing and ripening peaches. II. The cell walls and pectins. Amer. Jour. Bot. 46(4): 241–247. Illus. 1959.—Histological and histochemical observations on developing and ripening clingstone and freestone peaches have revealed that, after cell divisions have ceased in the mesocarp, cell wall thickening and cell enlargement in the mesocarp parenchyma increase until the fruit is nearly full cell size. The cell walls then decrease in thickness as the fruit ripens and softens. Degree of methyl esterification of the pectic substances, as estimated histochemically, remains at about 75–80% in immature fruits during their cell-enlargement phase of growth. Percent of methyl esterification apparently is much lower, or amounts of esterified pectates are very low during the meristematic phases of fruit growth. Just prior to ripening, degree of esterification increases and approaches 100% in hard, ripe fruit at about the same time that the parenchyma cell walls exhibit their greatest thickness or degree of hydration. The degree of esterification of the pectic substances then rapidly decreases and the cell walls become appreciably thinner as the ripening fruit softens. Further relation of these changes in wall thickness, in degree of esterification of the pectins, and in other cell wall carbohydrates to the textural qualities of ripening fruits is discussed. Interpretations concerning cell wall plasticity, cell growth and relation between auxin and changes in pectins also are presented.  相似文献   

13.
In the years since we last reviewed the use of mutants to study tomato fruit ripening ( Grierson et al. 1987 ), considerable information has been gained by the cloning, sequencing and identification of many mRNAs implicated in this developmental process. Genes involved in cell wall degradation, colour change and ethylene synthesis have been cloned, and antisense techniques have been developed and used to produce genetically engineered mutant fruit deficient in these aspects of ripening (see Gray et al. 1992 ). Recently, a previously cloned ripening gene has been used to complement a naturally occurring fruit colour mutant, yellow flesh ( Fray & Grierson 1993a ), and a ripening impaired mutant, ripening inhibitor, has been used to identify several new ripening-related mRNAs ( Picton et al. 1993b ). The chromosomal region bearing the ripening inhibitor mutation has been subjected to high-resolution mapping ( Churchill, Giovannoni & Tanksley 1993 ) and chromosome walking experiments are in progress to identify this gene.  相似文献   

14.
Polyamines (PAs) are ubiquitous, polycationic biogenic amines that are implicated in many biological processes, including plant growth and development, but their precise roles remain to be determined. Most of the previous studies have involved three biogenic amines: putrescine (Put), spermidine (Spd) and spermine (Spm), and their derivatives. We have expressed a yeast spermidine synthase (ySpdSyn) gene under constitutive (CaMV35S) and fruit‐ripening specific (E8) promoters in Solanum lycopersicum (tomato), and determined alterations in tomato vegetative and fruit physiology in transformed lines compared with the control. Constitutive expression of ySpdSyn enhanced intracellular levels of Spd in the leaf, and transiently during fruit development, whereas E8ySpdSyn expression led to Spd accumulation early and transiently during fruit ripening. The ySpdSyn transgenic fruits had a longer shelf life, reduced shriveling and delayed decay symptom development in comparison with the wild‐type (WT) fruits. An increase in shelf life of ySpdSyn transgenic fruits was not facilitated by changes in the rate of water loss or ethylene evolution. Additionally, the expression of several cell wall and membrane degradation‐related genes in ySpdSyn transgenic fruits was not correlated with an extension of shelf life, indicating that the Spd‐mediated increase in fruit shelf life is independent of the above factors. Crop maturity, indicated by the percentage of ripening fruits on the vine, was delayed in a CaMV35SySpdSyn genotype, with fruits accumulating higher levels of the antioxidant lycopene. Notably, whole‐plant senescence in the transgenic plants was also delayed compared with WT plants. Together, these results provide evidence for a role of PAs, particularly Spd, in increasing fruit shelf life, probably by reducing post‐harvest senescence and decay.  相似文献   

15.
Ultrastructural changes in the cell walls of “Calville de San Sauveur” apples (Malus sylvestris Mill) and “Spadona” pear (Pyrus communis L.) fruit were followed during ripening. In apple, structural alterations in cell walls became apparent at advanced stages of softening and showed predominantly dissolution of the middle lamella. In pears softening was also associated with the dissolution of the middle lamella, and in addition a gradual disintegration of fibrillar material throughout the cell wall. In fully ripe fruit almost all of the fibrillar arrangement in the cell wall was lost. Application of enzyme solutions containing polygalacturonase and cellulase to tissue discs from firm pear fruit led to ultrastructural changes observed in naturally ripening pears. In apple polygalacturonase alone was sufficient to dissolve the middle lamella region of the cell walls, as was also found to occur in naturally ripening fruit. In both apple and pear the cell wall areas containing plasmodesmata maintained their structural integrity throughout the ripening process. At advanced stages of ripening vesicles appeared in the vicinity of plasmodesmata.  相似文献   

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Changes in the galactose content of the noncellulosic polysaccharides of tomato (Mill) fruit cell walls were analyzed under various conditions. On the plant, galactan decreased gradually during fruit growth. As normal fruits ripened, the loss of galactan increased sharply; this was not observed in attached rin fruits beyond the fully mature stage. The ability to produce new wall galactan in vitro was retained in mature fruit tissue but declined with ripening. Normal tomatoes ripening on the plant showed a transient increase in galactan content at the climacteric. It is suggested that the decline in wall galactan is partly due to reduced synthesis in senescing, normal fruits and in detached rin tomatoes.  相似文献   

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Degradation of Cell Wall Polysaccharides during Tomato Fruit Ripening   总被引:26,自引:17,他引:9       下载免费PDF全文
Changes in neutral sugar, uronic acid, and protein content of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill) cell walls during ripening were characterized. The only components to decline in amount were galactose, arabinose, and galacturonic acid. Isolated cell walls of ripening fruit contained a water-soluble polyuronide, possibly a product of in vivo polygalacturonase action. This polyuronide and the one obtained by incubating walls from mature green fruit with tomato polygalacturonase contained relatively much less neutral sugar than did intact cell walls. The ripening-related decline in galactose and arabinose content appeared to be separate from polyuronide solubilization. In the rin mutant, the postharvest loss of these neutral sugars occurred in the absence of polygalacturonase and polyuronide solubilization. The enzyme(s) responsible for the removal of galactose and arabinose was not identified; a tomato cell wall polysaccharide containing galactose and arabinose (6:1) was not hydrolyzed by tomato β-galactosidase.  相似文献   

20.
Xyloglucan endotransglycosylase (XET) activity was measured in apple (Malus domestica Borkh. cv. Braeburn) pericarp and kiwifruit (Actinidia deliciosa [A. Chev.] C. F. Liang et A. R. Ferguson var. deliciosa cv. Hayward) outer pericarp and core tissues in order to establish whether a correlation exists between the activity of the enzyme and different stages of fruit development Whereas the growth rate of kiwifruit paralleled changes in XET activity throughout fruit growth, that of apple did not. Both fruits showed the highest XET activity, on a fresh weight basis, in the first two weeks after anthesis when cell division was at its highest. XET activity then decreased sharply, but as the fruit increased in size (4–8 weeks after anthesis) there was a concomitant increase in XET activity in both fruits. In the latter stage of fruit development (16–26 weeks after anthesis) XET activity increased to peak at harvest in apple fruit. During this time there was relatively little increase in fruit size and presumably therefore minimal cell expansion. XET activity then declined as fruit softened after harvest. In core tissue from kiwifruit, XET activity increased throughout the later stages of fruit growth to harvest maturity in a similar manner to apple, but continued to increase after harvest until fruit were ripe. In contrast, XET activity in the outer pericarp of kiwifruit did not increase until ripening after harvest. In apple tissue up to 30% of the XET activity was cell wall bound and could not be solubilised, even in buffer containing 2 M NaCl. The results implicate XET in cell wall assembly during cell division and expansion early in apple and kiwifruit growth. However, the disparity between apple and kiwifruit with respect to XET activity late in fruit development and ripening and the different affinities of the enzyme for the cell wall in each fruit, suggest that XET has several roles in plant development, not all of which are related to cell wall loosening during periods of accelerated growth.  相似文献   

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