Sodium carbonate and bicarbonate treatments induce resistance to postharvest green mould on citrus fruit

Publication Overview
TitleSodium carbonate and bicarbonate treatments induce resistance to postharvest green mould on citrus fruit
AuthorsYoussef K, Sanzani SM, Ligorio A, Ippolito A, Terry LA
TypeJournal Article
Journal NamePostharvest biology and technology
Year2014
Page(s)61-69
CitationYoussef K, Sanzani SM, Ligorio A, Ippolito A, Terry LA. Sodium carbonate and bicarbonate treatments induce resistance to postharvest green mould on citrus fruit. Postharvest biology and technology. 2014; 61-69.

Abstract

The aim of this study was to investigate the ability of two salts, sodium carbonate and bicarbonate, to activate defence mechanisms in citrus fruit against postharvest green mould caused by Penicillium digitatum. In particular, once there was confirmed salt antifungal activity in the absence of direct contact with the pathogen, changes in enzyme activity and expression levels of chitinase, β-1,3-glucanase, peroxidase and phenylalanine ammonia lyase (PAL), and phytoalexin (scoparone, scopoletin, umbelliferone) and sugar (glucose, fructose, sucrose) contents in treated oranges were analyzed. Overall, sodium carbonate and bicarbonate increases the activity of β-1,3-glucanase, peroxidase, and PAL enzymes in orange tissues. Gene expression analyses confirmed PAL up-regulation particularly 12h after treatment application. HPLC analyses of peel extracts showed increased amounts of the sugars and phytoalexins, compared to control tissues, with sucrose and scoparone being the most represented. The results suggest that, although salts exert a direct antifungal effect on P. digitatum, they are also able to induce citrus fruit defence mechanisms to postharvest decay. The defence response seems correlated with the up-regulation of the phenylpropanoid pathway, which has a role in the adaptation to various stresses. This response could result in natural reaction to wounding and pathogen attack in citrus, enhancing its protective effect. As a consequence, the fruit might have a better chance of successful defence against the decay.
Features
This publication contains information about 2,717 features:
Feature NameUniquenameType
GFAY01000034GFAY01000034.1region
GFAY01000035GFAY01000035.1region
GFAY01000036GFAY01000036.1region
GFAY01000037GFAY01000037.1region
GFAY01000038GFAY01000038.1region
GFAY01000039GFAY01000039.1region
GFAY01000040GFAY01000040.1region
GFAY01000041GFAY01000041.1region
GFAY01000042GFAY01000042.1region
GFAY01000043GFAY01000043.1region
GFAY01000044GFAY01000044.1region
GFAY01000045GFAY01000045.1region
GFAY01000046GFAY01000046.1region
GFAY01000047GFAY01000047.1region
GFAY01000048GFAY01000048.1region
GFAY01000049GFAY01000049.1region
GFAY01000050GFAY01000050.1region
GFAY01000051GFAY01000051.1region
GFAY01000052GFAY01000052.1region
GFAY01000053GFAY01000053.1region
GFAY01000054GFAY01000054.1region
GFAY01000055GFAY01000055.1region
GFAY01000056GFAY01000056.1region
GFAY01000057GFAY01000057.1region
GFAY01000058GFAY01000058.1region

Pages

Stocks
This publication contains information about 1 stocks:
Stock NameUniquenameType
ValenciaValenciaaccession
Properties
Additional details for this publication include:
Property NameValue
Publication TypeJournal Article
Publication Date2014
Published Location|||
Language Abbreng
Publication Model[electronic resource].
URLhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.postharvbio.2013.08.006
KeywordsCitrus, Penicillium digitatum, antifungal properties, defense mechanisms, direct contact, enzyme activity, fructose, fruit peels, gene expression, glucose, high performance liquid chromatography, oranges, pathogens, peroxidase, phenylalanine ammonia-lyase, postharvest diseases, protective effect, scopoletin, sodium carbonate, sucrose