Fruit cuticle composition of a melting and a nonmelting peach cultivar

Author

Belge, Burcu

Llovera i Arcas, Montserrat

Comabella, Eva

Graell i Sarle, Jordi

Lara Ayala, Isabel

Publication date

2014-07-17T08:44:19Z

2025-01-01

2014-03-28

2014-07-17T08:44:19Z



Abstract

Although postharvest quality of fruit is greatly affected by cuticle composition, structure, and properties, very few published studies have analyzed fruit cuticle composition from a postharvest perspective. In this work, the chemical composition of waxes and cutin, major cuticular components, was analyzed in fruit cuticle samples isolated from a melting ("October Sun") and a nonmelting ("Jesca") peach (Prunus persica L. Batsch.) cultivar at harvest and after a simulated shelf-life period of 5 days at 20 °C. Cutin composition was dominated by 18-hydroxyoleic acid, whereas the triterpenoid ursolic and oleanoic acids and the alkanes n-tricosane and n-pentacosane were quantitatively prominent among the wax compounds identified. Some quantitative differences were found between both cultivars for particular compound families and in their postharvest modifications. To the best of the authors" knowledge, this is the first study characterizing the composition of the cuticle of peach fruit and describing the changes therein after harvest.

Document Type

Article
Published version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Cuticle; Cutin; Fruit; Prunus persica; Cuticular waxes; Préssecs; Conreu; Peaches; Crops

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1021/jf5003528

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 2014, vol. 62, num. 15, p. 3488-3495

Rights

(c) American Chemical Society, 2014

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