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Action of the Non-ripening (nor) Mutant on Fruit Ripening of Tomato1

49

Citations

14

References

1977

Year

Abstract

Abstract Changes in respiration, ethylene production, firmness, pectolytic enzyme activity and carotenoid accumulation during ripening were monitored in fruit of a segregating population of the non-ripening ( nor ) mutant of tomato ( Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.). In fruit from mutant ( nor/nor ) plants, no respiratory or ethylene climacteric was observed, firmness declined very slowly with only trace levels of polygalacturonase present in mature fruit and phytoene, β-carotene and neurosporene were the major carotenes. In very old fruit (120 days’ post-anthesis), lycopene and β-carotene were the predominant carotenoids, however lycopene content was less than 10% of normal. Ripening of fruit from heterozygous ( nor + /nor ) plants was delayed and occurred more slowly than for normal ( nor + /nor + ) fruit. The respiratory climacteric was partially suppressed, peak ethylene production was one-sixth of normal, fruit softening was retarded, and polygalacturonase activity was lower at comparable maturity stages. Fruit from heterozygous ( nor + nor ) plants accumulated lycopene, gamma-carotene, phytofluene, and phytoene at a slower rate, but β-carotene accumulation was similar to normal. A mechanism for action of nor in control of ripening is proposed.

References

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