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Plant Physiology 50:759-764 (1972)
© 1972 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Articles

Ethylene: Role in Fruit Abscission and Dehiscence Processes 1,2

John A. Lipe3 and Page W. Morgan

a Department of Plant Sciences, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77843

Two peaks of ethylene production occur during the development of cotton fruitz (Gossypium hirsutum L.). These periods precede the occurrence of young fruit shedding and mature fruit dehiscence, both of which are abscission phenomena and the latter is generally assumed to be part of the total ripening process. Detailed study of the dehiscence process revealed that ethylene production of individual, attached cotton fruits goes through a rising, cyclic pattern which reaches a maximum prior to dehiscence. With detached pecan fruits (Carya illinoensis [Wang.] K. Koch), ethylene production measured on alternate days rose above 1 microliter per kilogram fresh weight per hour before dehiscence began and reached a peak several days prior to complete dehiscence. Ethylene production by cotton and pecan fruits was measured just prior to dehiscence and then the internal concentration of the gas near the center of the fruit was determined. From these data a ratio of production rate to internal concentration was determined which allowed calculation of the approximate ethylene concentration in the intact fruit prior to dehiscence and selection of appropriate levels to apply to fruits. Ethylene at 10 microliters per liter of air appears to saturate dehiscence of cotton, pecan, and okra (Hibiscus esculentus L.) fruits and the process is completed in 3 to 4 days. In all cases some hastening of dehiscence was observed with as little as 0.1 microliter of exogenous ethylene per liter of air. The time required for response to different levels of ethylene was determined and compared to the time course of ethylene production and dehiscence. We concluded that internal levels of ethylene rose to dehiscence-stimulating levels a sufficience time before dehiscence for the gas to have initiated the process. Since our data and calculations indicate that enough ethylene is made a sufficient time before dehiscence, to account for the process, we propose that ethylene is one of the regulators of natural fruit dehiscence, an important component of ripening in some fruits. Our data also suggest a possible involvement of ethylene in young fruit abscission.


3 Present address: Texas A&M University Research and Extension Center at Overton, Drawer E, Overton, Tex. 75684.

1 This research was supported in part by Cotton Incorporated. A contribution of the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station.

2 Preliminary progress reports of this study have appeared in: 1970 Proceedings of the Beltwide Cotton Production Research Conference. p. 47; 1970 Bulletin Southeastern Biologists. 17: 52-53; 1971 Proceedings Association Southern Agricultural Workers 68: 197-198; 1971 Plant Physiol. 47: S14.




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Regulation of fruit dehiscence in Arabidopsis
J. Exp. Bot., October 1, 2002; 53(377): 2031 - 2038.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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Copyright © 1972 by the American Society of Plant Biologists