Publication | Closed Access
Modification of polyuronides and hemicelluloses during muskmelon fruit softening
113
Citations
25
References
1989
Year
EngineeringBotanyGlycobiologyPlant PathologyPolysaccharideRipeningFood ChemistryPost-harvest PhysiologyFlesh FirmnessMolecular SizeIn Vitro FermentationBiochemistryFruit RipeningBiomolecular EngineeringNatural SciencesPolymer ScienceMuskmelon Fruit SofteningBiotechnologyHemicellulosePlant Physiology
The loss of flesh firmness during muskmelon ( Cucumis melo var. reticulatus L. Naud. cv. Galia) fruit ripening was related temporally to modifications of pectic and hemicellulosic polysaccharides, and a net loss of non‐cellulosic neutral sugars. An increase in solubility and a decrease in molecular size of polyuronides occurred during ripening; however, the decrease in molecular size was apparently not the result of polygalacturonase (EC 3.2.1.15) activity. Molecular size of hemicelluloses shifted from larger to smaller polymers during ripening, and this decrease was accompanied by changes in neutral sugar composition. Galactose, glucose, and xylose were the predominant neutral sugars in the hemicellulosic polymers. On a mol% basis there were decreases in galactose and glucose in large hemicellulosic polymers with ripening. Relative xylose content approximately doubled in the large polymers during ripening; xylose was the predominant neutral sugar in the small polymers and remained fairly constant.
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