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Identification of a phenylalanine ammonia-Iyase inactivating factor in harvested head lettuce (Lactuca sativa)
Authors:Mark A Ritenour  Mikal E Saltveit
Institution:M, A. Ritenour and M. E Saltveit (corresponding author, e-mail ), Dept of Vegetable Crops, Mann Lab., Univ. of California. Davis. CA 95616-8631. USA;.
Abstract:Exposing head lettuce ( Lactuca sativa L., crisphead or Iceberg type) leaf tissue to hormonal levels of ethylene (10 μl l?1) at 5°C promotes the de novo synthesis of phenylalanine ammonia-lyase (PAL, EC 4.3.1.5) and an increase in its activity. It also promotes the appearance of the postharvest physiological disorder called russet spotting (RS). Discontinuing ethylene exposure after 4 days resulted in a rapid decline in PAL activity which was delayed by treating excised midrib leaf tissue with actinornycin D or cycloheximide at 5°C. Only cycloheximide delayed the loss of PAL activity in tissue that was transferred from 5 to 15°C. Activity of PAL from Rhodolorula glutinis was. slowly lost during incubation in buffer alone, but there was a logarithmic decline in its activity over time when it was incubated with aliquots of the resuspended 10000 g pellet from homogenized, lettuce tissue affected with RS. The in vitro loss in PAL activity was 9–fold higher in extracts from lettuce showing RS symptoms than from control lettuce, boiled samples or the buffer control. The PAL-inactivating factor isolated from lettuce affected with RS had a pH optimum around 8.0. It appears that the rapid loss in PAL activity after the discontinuation of exposure to ethylene is dependent on the de novo synthesis of a PAL-inactivating factor.
Keywords:Actinoinycin D  cycloheximide              Lactuca sativa            lettuce  PAL  PAL-inactivating system  postharvest disorders  secondary metabolism
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