Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8892768 | Scientia Horticulturae | 2018 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
The effect of exogenous ascorbic acid (AA) application on chilling injury (CI) of banana fruit 'Williams' (Giant Cavendish AAA sub-group) harvested at the mature green stage. The investigation aimed to increase chilling tolerance of banana fruits under cold storage temperature. The experiment was carried throughout growth two seasons 2014 and 2015. Fruits were immersed in 0, 3, 6, and 9â¯mM ascorbic acid (AA) for 15â¯min at cold temperature. Thereafter, fruits were stored at cold temperature (6â¯Â±â¯1â¯Â°C with 90% RH) for 27days. The results pointed out that the immersing banana fruits at 9â¯mM of AA were most effective in reducing chilling injury incidences in fruit peel. Also, the treatment reduced increases in cell membrane dysfunction at to lipid peroxidation (MDA) and protein oxidation (PCG) accumulation consequently, decreases ion leakage. Moreover, immersing in AA at 9â¯mM minimized superoxide anion (O2â) and H2O2 production. Also, it increased significantly antioxidant enzyme activities during cold storage stress of ascorbate peroxidase (APX; CE: 1.11.1.11), peroxidase (POD; EC: 1.11.1.7), catalase (CAT; EC:1.11.1.6), and superoxide dismutase (SOD; EC: 1.15.1.1) so, less chilling injury symptoms on fruit peel which it reflects on fruit appearing compared to control fruit and other AA treatments. These results pointed out that the AA treatments at 9â¯mM might increase chilling tolerance of banana fruit by increasing antioxidant enzyme activities. Consequently, decrease/alleviate O2â and H2O2 generation during cold storage stress. Thus, exogenous AA treatment at 9â¯mM could be a useful application to reduce/delay/alleviate CI in banana fruit during cold storage.
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Agricultural and Biological Sciences
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Authors
A.A. Lo'ay, A.Y. EL-Khateeb,