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Exogenous CaCl2 delays flesh softening by inhibiting the degradation of cell wall in fresh-cut cantaloupe.

Authors :
You, Wanli
Zhang, Jinglin
Ru, Xueyin
Xu, Feng
Wu, Zhengguo
Jin, Peng
Zheng, Yonghua
Cao, Shifeng
Source :
Postharvest Biology & Technology. Jul2024, Vol. 213, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Flesh softening is closely related to the quality of postharvest produces. Although the use of calcium chloride (CaCl 2) has been shown to inhibit fruit softening, the underlying molecular mechanisms have remained unclear. In our present investigation, CaCl 2 treatment resulted in an enhancement of cytosolic free Ca2+ and polysaccharide contents, firmness, and the integrity of the cell wall structure, particularly evident in the denser middle lamella of fresh-cut cantaloupe. CaCl 2 treatment also inhibited the cell wall degrading enzyme activities and gene expressions. Moreover, CmCAMTA2 could identify and bind to the CG-box structure of CmCellulase , Cmα-Gal3 , and Cmβ-Glu12 , thereby suppressing their transcription. In conclusion, current findings illustrated that CaCl 2 treatment triggered CmCAMTA2-mediated transcriptional suppression on cell wall degrading genes, inhibited the polysaccharide component degradation, and maintained better structure integrity of the cell wall, thereby delaying the flesh softening of fresh-cut cantaloupe. • CaCl 2 application delayed flesh softening of fresh-cut cantaloupe. • CaCl 2 maintained the structure integrity of cell wall in fresh-cut cantaloupe. • CaCl 2 lessened the polysaccharide component degradation of fresh-cut cantaloupe. • CaCl 2 treatment stimulated Ca2+ accumulation and the expression of CmCAMTA2. • Cell wall degradation was negatively modulated by Ca2+-CAMTA2 signal pathway. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09255214
Volume :
213
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Postharvest Biology & Technology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177086621
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.postharvbio.2024.112934