Abstract
To elucidate the role of ethylene in nonclimacteric fruit development and ripening, quantitative (cDNA-amplified fragment length polymorphism) cDNA-AFLP was used to visualize differential gene expression in four stages of ripening of strawberries (Fragaria xananassa Duch. 'Elsanta') treated with 1-methylcyclopropene (1-MCP), a competitive inhibitor of ethylene action. The proportion of clones affected by 1-MCP treatment was much higher in green than in white, pink, and red receptacle tissue. Three major cell-wall-related genes were affected by 1-MCP and, thus, are putatively ethylene dependent: a ripening-repressed beta-galactosidase (Faβgal3), up-regulated by 1-MCP; a putative endo-1,3-1,4-beta-D-glucanase (EGase), up-regulated in green and down-regulated in red fruit by 1-MCP; and a pectate lyase B (plB), expressed only in the red stage and significantly down-regulated by 1-MCP. Furthermore, we have identified genes encoding an alcohol dehydrogenase, a protein kinase-related protein, and a putative glutathione S-transferase, all ripening-induced and down-regulated by 1-MCP, suggesting that their regulation is at least partly ethylene dependent.
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Balogh, A., Koncz, T., Tisza, V., Kiss, E., & Heszky, L. (2005). The effect of 1-MCP on the expression of several ripening-related genes in strawberries. HortScience, 40(7), 2088–2090. https://doi.org/10.21273/hortsci.40.7.2088
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