Increasing maturity reduces wound response and lignification processes against Penicillium expansum (pathogen) and P. digitatum (non-host pathogen) infection in apples

Author

Vilanova, Laura

Viñas Almenar, Inmaculada

Torres Sanchis, Rosario

Usall i Rodié, Josep

Burón Moles, Gemma

Teixidó i Espasa, Neus

Publication date

2015-06-02T15:04:15Z

2025-01-01

2014

2015-06-02T15:04:15Z



Abstract

Penicillium expansum is the main postharvest pathogen of pome fruit and is a necrotrophic fungus that requires wounds to infect the fruit. Therefore, injuries caused during harvest and postharvest handling provide an optimal locus for infection. In this study, the effect of wound response in apples harvested at three different maturity stages and stored at two different temperatures (20 and 0 ◦C) infected with P. expansum (pathogen) and Penicillium digitatum (non-host pathogen) was evaluated. The effect of wounding and pathogen inoculation on lignin content was also quantified. At 20 ◦C, less decay incidence and severity were observed when time between wounding and inoculation increased, and these d ifferences were more important in fruit from immature and commercial harvests. However, at 0 ◦C, wound response was too slow to prevent P. expansum infection. Lignin content was highest in fruit from the immature harvest. Our results indicated that maturity and storage temperature play an important role in apple wound response. This is the first report demonstrating that P. digitatum, a non-host pathogen, was able to develop rots in over-mature apples.

Document Type

Article
Published version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Blue mold; Green mold; Maturity stage; Wound response; Lignin; Magranes; Penicil·lina; Pomes; Temperatura atmosfèrica; Fongs; Emmagatzematge d'aliments; Frigorífics; Pomegranate (Fruit); Penicillin; Apples; Atmospheric temperature; Fungi; Food storage; Cold-storage lockers

Publisher

Elsevier

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.postharvbio.2013.09.009

Postharvest Biology and Technology, 2014, núm. 88, p. 54-60

Rights

(c) Elsevier, 2014

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