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1.
Papaya ( Carica papaya L. cv. Eksotika) fruit softens differentially in relation to position of the tissue. The inner mesocarp tissue is softer, and its firmness decreases more rapidly during ripening than that of the outer mesocarp tissue. As the fruit ripens, pectin solubility and depolymerisation increase. Hemicellulose, too, appears to be depolymerised but, unlike pectins, this apparent degradation of hemicellulose is associated with an increase rather than a decrease in its level. Pectin and hemicellulose depolymerisation began in the inner mesocarp tissue at about the same time as β-galactosidase (EC 3.2,1.23) activity started to increase and tissue firmness began to decrease more rapidly. In contrast, pectin solubilisation in both outer and inner mesocarp tissues occurred steadily throughout ripening at a comparable rate and paralleled closely the increase of polygalacturonase (PG; EC 3.2.1.67) and pectinesterase (EC 3.1.1.11). In general, irrespective of enzyme distribution, tissue softening during ripening was more closely related to changes in β-galactosidase activity than to PG or pectinesterase activity. Papaya, β-galactosidase appears to be an important wall degrading enzyme and may contribute significantly to differential softening, perhaps by complementing the action of polygalacturonase. Polygalacturonase activity increased with increasing depth of the mesocarp tissue, as did softening of the fruit.  相似文献   

2.
The Cnr ( C olourless n on- r ipening) tomato ( Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) mutant has an aberrant fruit-ripening phenotype in which fruit do not soften and have reduced cell adhesion between pericarp cells. Cell walls from Cnr fruit were analysed in order to assess the possible contribution of pectic polysaccharides to the non-softening and altered cell adhesion phenotype. Cell wall material (CWM) and solubilised fractions of mature green and red ripe fruit were analysed by chemical, enzymatic and immunochemical techniques. No major differences in CWM sugar composition were detected although differences were found in the solubility and composition of the pectic polysaccharides extracted from the CWM at both stages of development. In comparison with the wild type, the ripening-associated solubilisation of homogalacturonan-rich pectic polysaccharides was reduced in Cnr. The proportion of carbohydrate that was chelator-soluble was 50% less in Cnr cell walls at both the mature green and red ripe stages. Chelator-soluble material from ripe-stage Cnr was more susceptible to endo-polygalacturonase degradation than the corresponding material from wild-type fruit. In addition, cell walls from Cnr fruit contained larger amounts of galactosyl- and arabinosyl-containing polysaccharides that were tightly bound in the cell wall and could only be extracted with 4 M KOH, or remained in the insoluble residue. The complexity of the cell wall alterations that occur during fruit ripening and the significance of different extractable polymer pools from cell walls are discussed in relation to the Cnr phenotype.  相似文献   

3.
The role of the ripening-specific expansin Exp1 protein in fruit softening and cell wall metabolism was investigated by suppression and overexpression of Exp1 in transgenic tomato plants. Fruit in which Exp1 protein accumulation was suppressed to 3% that of wild-type levels were firmer than controls throughout ripening. Suppression of Exp1 protein also substantially inhibited polyuronide depolymerization late in ripening but did not prevent the breakdown of structurally important hemicelluloses, a major contributor to softening. In contrast, fruit overexpressing high levels of recombinant Exp1 protein were much softer than controls, even in mature green fruit before ripening commenced. This softening was correlated with the precocious and extensive depolymerization of structural hemicelluloses, whereas polyuronide depolymerization was not altered. These data are consistent with there being at least three components to fruit softening and textural changes. One component is a relaxation of the wall directly mediated by Exp1, which indirectly limits part of a second component due to polyuronide depolymerization late in ripening, perhaps by controlling access of a pectinase to its substrate. The third component is caused by depolymerization of hemicelluloses, which occurs independently of or requires only very small amounts of Exp1 protein.  相似文献   

4.
Softening of mango fruit has been investigated by analysis of ripening related changes in the composition of the fruit cell walls. There is an apparent overall loss of galactosyl and deoxyhexosyl residues during ripening, the latter indicating degradation of the pectin component of the wall. The loss of galactose appears to be restricted to the chelator soluble fraction of the wall pectin, whilst loss of deoxyhexose seems to be more evenly distributed amongst the pectin. The chelator soluble pectin fraction is progressively depolymerised and becomes more polydisperse during ripening. These changes are similar to those occurring in other fruit and are related to the action of wall hydrolases during ripening.  相似文献   

5.
Hemicelluloses were extracted from isolated tomato ( Lycopersicon esculentum Mill. cv. Rutgers) pericarp cell wall material at 3 different stages of ripeness with 4 M and 8 M KOH. Little change in molecular weight or composition of 4 M KOH-extracted material was observed during ripening. However, the composition of 8 M KOH-extracted material changed, and a relative increase in polymers of < 40 kDa was observed during ripening. Changes in glycosyl linkage composition of the 8 M KOH hemicellulosic material were detected, including increases in 4-linked mannosyl, 4,6-linked mannosyl, and 4-linked glucosyl, and decreases in 5-linked arabinosyl residues in polymers of < 40 kDa, and decreases in terminal glocosyl residues in polymers of > 40 kDa. These data may indicate that de novo hemicellulose synthesis occurs throughout tomato fruit ripening, even at the red ripe stage.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Fleshy fruit soften during ripening mainly as a consequence of solubilization and depolymerization of cell wall components. We have performed a comparative study of the polysaccharide content of fruit cell walls during final steps of development and ripening of three strawberry (Fragaria x ananassa Duch.) cultivars with different softening rates. The three chosen varieties showed very different firmness; Camarosa was the firmest, Toyonaka the softest, and Pajaro intermediate between them. Cell walls were extracted, quantified and fractioned by sequential extraction to obtain particular subclasses of cell wall polymers. Cell wall content diminished during the process in the three cultivars. Differences among cultivar cell wall contents were detected only in immature stages. The amount of water soluble polymers (WSP) increased in all cultivars from small green (SG) to white (W) stage, although from the W to 100% red (100%R) stage the WSP remained constant in Camarosa and Pajaro and decreased in Toyonaka. On the contrary, the hydrochloric acid-soluble pectins (HSP) decreased during ripening of all the cultivars analyzed. Camarosa had the largest amount of HSP, but there were no differences between Pajaro and Toyonaka. The amount of hemicellulosic polysaccharides and cellulose also decreased in the three cultivars. Camarosa had the highest amounts of both polysaccharides while Toyonaka had the lowest at immature stages, but there were no differences among cultivars at 100%R stage. WSP showed depolymerization only in Toyonaka cultivar, while HSP showed depolymerization in Pajaro and Toyonaka cultivars. A slight depolymerization was observed in hemicelluloses extracted from any of three cultivars.  相似文献   

8.
β‐Galactosidases (EC 3.2.1.23) from ripe papaya ( Carica papaya L. cv. Eksotika) fruits having galactanase activities were fractionated by a combination of cation exchange and gel‐filtration chromatography into three isoforms, viz., β‐galactosidase I, II and III. The native proteins of the respective isoforms have apparent molecular masses of 67, 67 and 55 kDa, each showing one predominant polypeptide upon SDS‐PAGE of about 31 and 33 kDa for β‐galactosidases I and III, respectively, and of 67 kDa for β‐galactosidase II. The β‐galactosidase I protein, which was undetectable in immature fruits, appeared to be specifically accumulated during ripening. The β‐galactosidase II protein was present in developing fruits, but its level seemed to decrease with ripening. β‐Galactosidase I seemed to be an important softening enzyme; its activity increased dramatically (4‐ to 8‐fold) to a peak early during ripening and correlated closely with differential softening as related to position in the fruit tissue. The inner mesocarp tissue was softer, and its wall pectins were modified earlier and firmness decreased more rapidly during ripening compared to the outer mesocarp tissue. β‐Galactosidase II also may contribute significantly to softening because of its ability to catalyse increased solubility and depolymerization of pectins as well as through its ability to modify the alkali‐soluble hemicellulose fraction of the cell wall. The physiological significance of both β‐galactosidase isoforms may partly be attributed to their functional capacity as β‐(1,4)‐galactanases.  相似文献   

9.
Bananas, Musa (AAA group, Cavendish subgroup) 'Giant Cavendish', were ripened in a biotron at 25°C with ethylene during 4 days. Changes in mechanical properties of pulp were detected by a stress-relaxation technique. The decrease in T0, the parameter for minimum stress-relaxation time, began between day 0.5 and 1, while the decrease in initial stress began between day 0 and 0.5, suggesting that the decrease in elasticity and viscosity of pulp is a crucial physical event of pulp softening. Cellulose and moisture contents were about 3 and 780 mg (g fresh weight)−1, respectively, which were unchanged during ripening. The decrease in starch content of cell materials and in uronic acid content of the pectic polysaccharides of the cell walls began between day 0.5 and 1. As regards the sugar composition of the hemicellulose fraction, decreases in arabinose, mannose and galactose contents began between day 0 and 0.5. The results show that the partial decrease in hemicelluloses preceded the breakdown of starch and suggest that the coordinated degradation of pectic and hemicellulosic polysaccharides and starch is the main cause for the pulp softening process.  相似文献   

10.
  1. Changes in polysaccharide and monosaccharide components in thecell wall were studied during cell division, cell enlargmementand softening in Japanese pear fruit. Wall polysaccharides werefractionated into water soluble carbohydrate, NaClO2 solublecarbohydrate, EDTA soluble carbohydrate, acid soluble hemicellulose,alkali soluble hemicellulose and cellulose. These polysaccharideswere composed of glucose, uronic acid, xylose, arabinose, galactose,rhamnose, mannose and fucose.
  2. The total polysaccharide contentof the cell wall per cell (DNAcontent basis) remained constantduring the cell division period(S1). But during the pre-enlargementperiod (S2) it began toincrease rapidly in spite of the slightnessof cell enlargement.Thereafter, during the enlargement period(S3) the polysaccharidesremained almost constant although thefruits enlarged dramatically,and the polysaccharides increasedsomewhat with ripening. Thequality of the polysaccharides,however, seemed to change activelyat each stage. This suggestedthat the extensive fruit enlargementdid not require an increasein polysaccharide content, and wasrather accompanied by thepartial breakdown or partial interconversionof polysaccharidecomponents already present.
  3. The loss of arabinose and galactosein acid soluble hemicellulosewas prominant in fruit softeningoccurring in the ripening stage.The cellulose component decreasedwith overripening. Water solublepectin increased parallel tothe increase in total pectin withripening. On the other hand,xylose and non-cellulosic glucoseresidues did not alter withripening or overripening. Non-cellulosicglucose continued toaccumulate during cell enlargement.
1 This paper is Contribution A-88, Fruit Tree Research Station. (Received August 4, 1978; )  相似文献   

11.
Non-cellulosic neutral sugar composition of cell walls from seventeen fruit types were analysed during ripening. Galactose was the major non-cellulosic neutral sugar in cell walls of cucurbit and solanaceous fruit, xylose was the predominant non-cellulosic neutral component of berries, and arabinose was the major non-cellulosic component of pome fruits. The major non-cellulosic neutral sugar residue in cell walls of stone fruits varied. In nectarine and peach, plum, and apricot, the major sugar was arabinose, galactose, and xylose, respectively. In 15 of the 17 types of fruit, a net loss of non-cellulosic neutral sugar residues occurred during ripening. No net loss occurred in plums and cucumbers. A net loss of cell wall galactose and/or arabinose occurred in 14 of the types of fruit. Xylose was the major neutral sugar residue lost from walls of apricot during ripening. In general, berry cell walls were comparatively low in galactose and arabinose content.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Cell wall disassembly in ripening fruit is highly complex, involving the dismantling of multiple polysaccharide networks by diverse families of wall-modifying proteins. While it has been reported in several species that multiple members of each such family are expressed in the same fruit tissue, it is not clear whether this reflects functional redundancy, with protein isozymes from a single enzyme class performing similar roles and contributing equally to wall degradation, or whether they have discrete functions, with some isoforms playing a predominant role. Experiments reported here sought to distinguish between cell wall-related processes in ripening melon that were softening-associated and softening-independent. Cell wall polysaccharide depolymerization and the expression of wall metabolism-related genes were examined in transgenic melon (Cucumis melo var. cantalupensis Naud.) fruit with suppressed expression of the 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylate oxidase (ACO) gene and fruits treated with ethylene and 1-methylcyclopropene (1-MCP). Softening was completely inhibited in the transgenic fruit but was restored by treatment with exogenous ethylene. Moreover, post-harvest application of 1-MCP after the onset of ripening completely halted subsequent softening, suggesting that melon fruit softening is ethylene-dependent. Size exclusion chromatography of cell wall polysaccharides, from the transgenic fruits, with or without exogenous ethylene, indicated that the depolymerization of both pectins and xyloglucans was also ethylene dependent. However, northern analyses of a diverse range of cell wall-related genes, including those for polygalacturonases, xyloglucan endotransglucosylase/hydrolases, expansin, and beta-galactosidases, identified specific genes within single families that could be categorized as ethylene-dependent, ethylene-independent, or partially ethylene-dependent. These results support the hypothesis that while individual cell wall-modifying proteins from each family contribute to cell wall disassembly that accompanies fruit softening, other closely related family members are regulated in an ethylene-independent manner and apparently do not directly participate in fruit softening.  相似文献   

14.
Pectins from persimmon ( Diospyros kaki L.) fruit pericarp were sequentially extracted with 0. 05 M trans -1,2-diaminocyclohexane-N,N, N', N'-tetraacetic acid (CDTA), 0. 05 M Na2CO3 (1°C) and Na2CO3 (20°C) and the carbohydrate composition and metabolism during development determined. Young persimmon fruits contained a large proportion of pectins, 46% by dry weight, that decreased to 20% with ripening. This decrease occurred in the CDTA and Na2CO3 (1°C) fractions, mainly composed of uronic acids, and represents a net loss of uronic acids, arabinose and galactose. The amount of non-cellulosic neutral sugars was especially high in the Na2CO3 (20°C) fraction. The loss of pectins was also accompanied by a depolymerisation of the polysaccharides extracted in the three pectic fractions. However, none of these changes can be attributed to the action of polygalacturonase activity. Proteins were extracted from the pericarp tissue, but endopolygalacturonase (EC 3. 2. 1. 15) activity, determined as a decrease in viscosity of polygalacturonic acid, was not observed in the extract. Determination of exopolygalacturonase (EC 3. 2. 1. 67) activity by measuring the release of reducing groups from polygalacturonic acid was also negative. The results presented indicate that polygalacturonase is not responsible for the metabolism of pectins during persimmon fruit ripening.  相似文献   

15.
Papaya fruit softening, endoxylanase gene expression, protein and activity   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Papaya ( Carica papaya L.) cell wall matrix polysaccharides are modified as the fruit starts to soften during ripening and an endoxylanase is expressed that may play a role in the softening process. Endoxylanase gene expression, protein amount and activity were determined in papaya cultivars that differ in softening pattern and in one cultivar where softening was modified by the ethylene receptor inhibitor 1-methylcyclopropene (1-MCP). Antibodies to the endoxylanase catalytic domain were used to determine protein accumulation. The three papaya varieties used in the study, 'Line 8', 'Sunset', and 'Line 4-16', differed in softening pattern, respiration rate, ethylene production and showed similar parallel relationships during ripening and softening in endoxylanase expression, protein level and activity. When fruit of the three papaya varieties showed the respiratory climacteric and started to soften, the level of endoxylanase gene expression increased and this increase was related to the amount of endoxylanase protein at 32 kDa and its activity. Fruit when treated at less than 10% skin yellow stage with 1-MCP showed a significant delay in the respiratory climacteric and softening, and reduced ethylene production, and when ripe was firmer and had a 'rubbery' texture. The 1-MCP-treated fruit that had the 'rubbery' texture showed suppressed endoxylanase gene expression, protein and enzymatic activity. Little or no delay occurred between endoxylanase gene expression and the appearance of activity during posttranslational processing from 65 to 32 kDa. The close relationship between endoxylanase gene expression, protein accumulation and activity in different varieties and the failure of the 1-MCP-treated fruit to fully soften, supported de novo synthesis of endoxylanase, rapid posttranslation processing and a role in papaya fruit softening.  相似文献   

16.
Softening characteristics were investigated in three types of pear fruit, namely, European pear 'La France', Chinese pear 'Yali', and Japanese pear 'Nijisseiki'. 'La France' fruit softened dramatically and developed a melting texture during ripening, while 'Yali' fruit with and without propylene treatment showed no change in flesh firmness and texture during ripening. Non-treated 'Nijisseiki' did not show a detectable decrease in flesh firmness, whereas continuous propylene treatment caused a gradual decrease in firmness resulting in a mealy texture. In 'La France', the analysis of cell wall polysaccharides revealed distinct solubilization and depolymerization of pectin and hemicellulose during fruit softening. In 'Nijisseiki', propylene treatment led to the solubilization and depolymerization of pectic polysaccharides to a limited extent, but not of hemicellulose. In 'Yali', hemicellulose polysaccharides were depolymerized during ripening, but there was hardly any change in pectic polysaccharides except in the water-soluble fraction. PC-PG1 and PC-PG2, two polygalacturonase (PG) genes, were expressed in 'La France' fruit during ripening, while only PC-PG2 was expressed in 'Nijisseiki' and neither PC-PG1 or PC-PG2 was expressed in 'Yali'. The expression pattern of PC-XET1 was constitutive during ripening in all three pear types. PG activity measured by the reducing sugar assay increased in all three pears during ripening. However, viscometric measurements showed that the levels of endo-PG activity were high in 'La France', low in 'Nijisseiki', and undetectable in 'Yali' fruits. These results suggest that, in pears, cell wall degradation is correlated with a decrease in firmness during ripening and the modification of both pectin and hemicellulose are essential for the development of a melting texture. Furthermore, the data suggest that different softening behaviours during ripening among the three pear fruits may be caused by different endo-PG activity and different expression of PG genes.  相似文献   

17.
Different factors affect the quality of melon fruit and among them long shelf life is critical from the consumer’s point of view. In melon, cultivars showing both climacteric and non-climacteric ripening types are found. In this study we have investigated climacteric ripening and fruit softening using a collection of near-isogenic lines (NILs) derived from the non-climacteric melon parental lines PI 161375 (SC) and “Piel de Sapo” (PS). Surprisingly, we found that QTL eth3.5 in NIL SC3-5b induced a climacteric-ripening phenotype with increased respiration and ethylene levels. Data suggest that the non-climacteric phenotypes from PI 161375 and “Piel de Sapo” may be the result of mutations in different genes. Several QTLs for fruit flesh firmness were also detected. Candidate genes putatively involved in ethylene regulation, biosynthesis and perception and cell wall degradation were mapped and some colocations with QTLs were observed. These results may provide additional data towards understanding of non-climacteric ripening in melon.  相似文献   

18.
Cell wall metabolism during maturation, ripening and senescence of peach fruit   总被引:24,自引:0,他引:24  
Cell wall changes were examined in fruit of a melting flesh peach (Prunus persica L.) allowed to ripen on the tree. Three phases to softening were noted, the first of which began prior to the completion of flesh colour change and an increase in ethylene evolution. Softening in young mature fruit, prior to ripening, was associated with a depolymerization of matrix glycans both loosely and tightly attached to cellulose and a loss of Gal from all cell wall fractions. After the initiation of ripening, but before the melting stage, softening was associated with continuing, progressive depolymerization of matrix glycans. A massive loss of Ara from the loosely bound matrix glycan fraction was observed, probably from side chains of glucuronoarabinoxylan, pectin, or possibly arabinogalactan protein firmly bound into the wall and solubilized in this extract. An increase in the solubilization of polyuronides also occurred during this period, when softening was already well advanced. The extensive softening of the melting period was marked by substantial depolymerization of both loosely and tightly bound matrix glycans, including a loss of Ara from the latter, an increase in matrix glycan extractability, and a dramatic depolymerization of chelator-soluble polyuronides which continued during senescence. Depolymerization of chelator-soluble polyuronides thus occurred substantially after the increase in their solubilization. Ripening-related increases were observed in the activities of exo- and endo-polygalacturonase (EC 3.2.1.67; EC 3.2.1.15), pectin methylesterase (EC 3.1.1.11), endo-1,4-beta-glucanase (EC 3.2.1.4), endo-1,4-beta-mannanase (EC 3.2.1.78), alpha-arabinosidase (EC 3.2.1.55), and beta-galactosidase (EC 3.2.1.23), but the timing and extent of the increases differed between enzymes and was not necessarily related to ethylene evolution. Fruit softening in peach is a continuous process and correlated closely with the depolymerization of matrix glycans, which proceeded throughout development. However, numerous other cell wall changes also took place, such as the deglycosylation of particular polymers and the solubilization and depolymerization of chelator-soluble polyuronides, but these were transient and occurred only at specific phases of the softening process. Fruit softening and other textural changes in peach appear to have a number of stages, each involving a different set of cell wall modifications.  相似文献   

19.
A membrane-associated lipoxygenase from breaker-stage fruit of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) was purified and partially sequenced. Using degenerate oligonucleotides corresponding to portions of this sequence, a cDNA was amplified by PCR and used to screen a breaker fruit cDNA library. Two clones, tomloxA and tomloxB, were isolated and one of these (tomloxA) corresponded to the isolated protein. Genomic clones were isolated and sequence data from these were used to obtain the 5' ends of the cDNAs. The 2.8-kb cDNAs encode proteins that are similar in size and sequence to each other and to other plant lipoxygenases. DNA blot analysis indicated that tomato contains three or more genes that encode lipoxygenase. RNA blot analysis showed that tomloxA is expressed in germinating seeds as well as in ripening fruit, where it reached its peak during breaker stage. tomloxB appears to be fruit specific and is at its highest level in ripe fruit.  相似文献   

20.
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