1. A relationship between tomato fruit softening, cuticle properties and water availability.
- Author
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Romero, Paco and Rose, Jocelyn K.C.
- Subjects
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WATER supply , *CUTICLE , *FRUIT , *TOMATOES - Abstract
• A link between water stress, cuticle properties and fruit firmness was investigated. • Water stress increased fruit cuticle load and thickness while reducing permeability. • Fruit transpiration rate and firmness loss are reduced by water limiting conditions. • Water stress affects cuticle properties along fruit growth but not after detachment. While fleshy fruit softening has long been mechanistically linked to cell wall disassembly, the importance of the fruit cuticle in water relations and firmness has been suggested through studies of the long-shelf life delayed fruit deterioration (dfd) tomato genotype. We tested the hypothesis that dynamic cuticle properties and composition affect tomato fruit transpiration and firmness and are influenced by environmental water availability, using dfd and two normally softening fruit cultivars, Ailsa Craig (AC) and M82, grown under control and water stress (WS) conditions. The effect of WS was also assessed following fruit detachment. WS increased fruit firmness, cuticle load, and the expression of cuticle biosynthetic genes, while reducing cuticle permeability and fruit transpiration rate in AC and M82, but not in dfd fruit. This study supports a direct relationship between fruit cuticle properties, transpiration and firmness, and provides insights into the adaptation of tomato genotypes to environments where water can be scarce. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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