Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5515546 | Plant Physiology and Biochemistry | 2017 | 10 Pages |
â¢An increase of ethylene production during growth is parallel to colour changes and softening.â¢The ripening-related physiological events differed among varieties with contrasting cracking tolerance.â¢Higher cracking susceptibility was related to higher net CO2 and ethylene production.â¢Cracking susceptible cultivars showed an enhanced accumulation of oxidative stress markers.
The aim of this study was to investigate the biochemical and metabolic changes, related to oxidative stress, ethylene and respiration, cell wall modification and primary metabolism, between a high ('Prime Giant') and a low ('Cristalina') cracking susceptible sweet cherry cultivar during growth and ripening. While cherries are referred as a non-climacteric fruit, our results show that an increase of endogenous ethylene production at earlier fruit developmental stages is parallel to colour development and softening during growth. Higher cracking susceptibility was clearly associated to a higher fruit growth rate and accompanied by an increase net CO2 and ethylene production, on a cherry basis, leading to an enhanced accumulation of oxidative stress markers (i.e. H2O2 and MDA). As observed in other fruit species (i.e. tomatoes) higher cracking susceptibility was also related to enhanced activity of cell wall-modifying enzymes which in turn occurred in parallel to the ethylene rise. Overall, these results suggest that cracking development may be a more complex phenomenon than a mere consequence of altered fruit water absorption or turgor and point out the importance of ethylene on sweet cherry ripening and cracking development.