Melatonin limited ethylene production, softening and reduced physiology disorder in pear ( Pyrus communis L.) fruit during senescence
Autor: | Chen Fang, Yingxiao Zhao, Rui Zhai, Zhigang Wang, Lingfei Xu, Fengwang Ma, Jianlong Liu, Lulu Liu, Xieyu Li, Fengxia Liu, Huibin Wang |
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Rok vydání: | 2018 |
Předmět: |
0106 biological sciences
0301 basic medicine Ethylene Cold storage Horticulture 01 natural sciences Melatonin 03 medical and health sciences chemistry.chemical_compound medicine Browning PEAR biology Chemistry food and beverages Ripening biology.organism_classification body regions 030104 developmental biology Postharvest Agronomy and Crop Science hormones hormone substitutes and hormone antagonists 010606 plant biology & botany Food Science medicine.drug Pyrus communis |
Zdroj: | Postharvest Biology and Technology. 139:38-46 |
ISSN: | 0925-5214 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.postharvbio.2018.01.017 |
Popis: | Some pear (Pyrus communis L.) fruit show a certain resistance to ripening. Thus, postharvest cold storage is commonly used to accelerate their ripening process by promoting ethylene production. However, the enhanced ethylene biosynthesis also accelerates pear fruit senescence. Here, the effects of melatonin on the senescence process in pear fruit was investigated. In a rapidly softening pear ‘Starkrimson’, melatonin delayed the ethylene burst. In ‘Abbe Fetel’ and ‘Red Anjou’, normally softening pears, melatonin inhibited ethylene production during the entire senescence process. The limited ethylene production resulted in a lower loss of firmness in melatonin-treated fruit than in water treated fruit. PcPG, a major cell wall degradation-related gene, was inhibited by melatonin in all three cultivars. The expressions of ethylene biosynthesis genes PcACS1 and PcACO1 are correlated with the senescence process. The former was inhibited by melatonin in ‘Starkrimson’, both were inhibited in ‘Red Anjou’, but neither was inhibited in ‘Abbe Fetel’. Moreover, the antioxidant systems in ‘Starkrimson’ and ‘Abbe Fetel’ were enhanced by melatonin and their fruit did not undergo water soaking or core browning. Thus, melatonin has the potential to retain the commercial value of postharvest pear fruit and delay senescence by limiting ethylene production and the reactive oxygen burst. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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