Ethylene production in apple fruit and protoplasts and in leaf tissue was inhibited by spermidine or spermine. These polyamines, as well as putrescine, inhibited auxin-induced ethylene production and the conversion of methionine and 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid to ethylene. Polyamines were more effective as inhibitors of ethylene synthesis at the early, rather than at the late, stages of fruit ripening. Ca(2+) in the incubation medium reduced the inhibitory effect caused by the amines. A possible mode of action by which polyamines inhibit ethylene production is discussed.
CITATION STYLE
Apelbaum, A., Burgoon, A. C., Anderson, J. D., Lieberman, M., Ben-Arie, R., & Mattoo, A. K. (1981). Polyamines Inhibit Biosynthesis of Ethylene in Higher Plant Tissue and Fruit Protoplasts. Plant Physiology, 68(2), 453–456. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.68.2.453
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