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Fruit cuticle lipid composition and water loss in a diverse collection of pepper (Capsicum)
Authors:Eugene P. Parsons  Sigal Popopvsky  Gregory T. Lohrey  Sharon Alkalai‐Tuvia  Yaacov Perzelan  Paul Bosland  Penelope J. Bebeli  Ilan Paran  Elazar Fallik  Matthew A. Jenks
Affiliation:1. Department of Horticulture, Purdue University, , West Lafayette, IN, 47907 USA;2. Department of Postharvest Science, Volcani Center, , Bet Dagan, 50250 Israel;3. Department of Vegetable Research, Volcani Center, , Bet Dagan, 50250 Israel;4. Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences, New Mexico State University, , Las Cruces, NM, 88003 USA;5. Department of Plant Breeding and Biometry, Agricultural University of Athens, , Athens, 11855 Greece;6. United States Department of Agriculture, Agriculture Research Service, US Arid Land Agricultural Research Center, , Maricopa, AZ, 85138 USA
Abstract:Pepper (Capsicum spp.) fruits are covered by a relatively thick coating of cuticle that limits fruit water loss, a trait previously associated with maintenance of postharvest fruit quality during commercial marketing. To shed light on the chemical‐compositional diversity of cuticles in pepper, the fruit cuticles from 50 diverse pepper genotypes from a world collection were screened for both wax and cutin monomer amount and composition. These same genotypes were also screened for fruit water loss rate and this was tested for associations with cuticle composition. Our results revealed an unexpectedly large amount of variation for the fruit cuticle lipids, with a more than 14‐fold range for total wax amounts and a more than 16‐fold range for cutin monomer amounts between the most extreme accessions. Within the major wax constituents fatty acids varied from 1 to 46%, primary alcohols from 2 to 19%, n‐alkanes from 13 to 74% and triterpenoids and sterols from 10 to 77%. Within the cutin monomers, total hexadecanoic acids ranged from 54 to 87%, total octadecanoic acids ranged from 10 to 38% and coumaric acids ranged from 0.2 to 8% of the total. We also observed considerable differences in water loss among the accessions, and unique correlations between water loss and cuticle constituents. The resources described here will be valuable for future studies of the physiological function of fruit cuticle, for the identification of genes and QTLs associated with fruit cuticle synthesis in pepper fruit, and as a starting point for breeding improved fruit quality in pepper.
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