บทคัดย่องานวิจัย

Delay of tomato fruit ripening in response to 1-methylcyclopropene is influenced by internal ethylene levels

Zhengke Zhang, Donald J. Huber , Brandon M. Hurr and Jingping Rao

Postharvest Biology and Technology, Volume 54, Issue 1, October 2009, Pages 1-8

2009

บทคัดย่อ

Delay of tomato fruit ripening in response to 1-methylcyclopropene is influenced by internal ethylene levels

 

Using tomato fruit as a model system, this study tested the idea that internal ethylene levels can modulate the efficacy of 1-MCP at suppressing ripening in climacteric fruits. In the first experiment, breaker-turning stage tomato (cv. Sebring) fruit were treated with gaseous 1-MCP (SmartFreshSM Quality System) under conditions (21.7 μmol m3, 516 nL L1) affording maximum inhibition of ripening, followed by subsequent exposure to 4.07 mmol m3(100 μL L1) ethylene for 3 or 6 h. Fruit softening and hue angle decline in 1-MCP-treated fruit were minimally affected in response to ethylene, consistent with strong binding of 1-MCP for ethylene receptors. In contrast to sequential 1-MCP and ethylene treatments, simultaneous treatment of breaker-turning ‘Sebring’ tomato fruit with 100 μL L1ethylene and gaseous 1-MCP completely negated the capacity of 1-MCP to inhibit fruit softening and hue angle decline. When breaker-turning fruit were treated with 100 μL L1ethylene for 6 h followed by exposure to aqueous 1-MCP (3.70 mmol m3, 200 μg L1) at levels eliciting maximum inhibition of tomato ripening, sensitivity to 1-MCP was significantly reduced in the short-term (0–1 h) and recovered within 6 h to patterns characteristic of fruit receiving 3.70 mmol m3aqueous 1-MCP without prior exposure to ethylene. Re-sensitization was reflected in patterns of softening, climacteric ethylene and respiratory responses, hue angle decline, lycopene content and titratable acidity changes. The time required for re-sensitization to 1-MCP paralleled the time required for return of internal ethylene levels to concentrations present prior to ethylene treatment. We propose that internal ethylene levels may contribute to the divergent sensitivities of some climacteric fruits to 1-MCP applied after initiation of ripening.