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Plant Physiology 60:794-799 (1977)
© 1977 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Articles

Localization of the Ethylene-synthesizing System in Apple Tissue 1

Autar K. Mattoo2 and Morris Lieberman

a Post Harvest Plant Physiology Laboratory, Beltsville Agricultural Research Center (West), United States Department of Agriculture, Beltsville, Maryland 20705

Apple (Malus sp.) slices gradually lost the ability to synthesize ethylene when incubated with a mixture of enzymes that digest cell walls. The released protoplasts did not produce ethylene. The release of protoplasts was faster from climacteric fruit slices than from preclimacteric tissue. In protoplast suspension culture, as new cell wall was deposited (as judged by the intensity of fluorescence of regenerating protoplasts stained with Calcofluor White and the incorporation of labeled myo-inositol into their ethanol-insoluble residue), ethylene synthesis was gradually regained. Restored ethylene synthesis reached a maximum after 80 hours in protoplasts from preclimacteric fruit and in 120 hours in those from climacteric tissue. Addition of methionine (1 mM) to the culture medium was essential for appreciable synthesis of ethylene; and this synthesis was inhibited by the aminoethoxy analogue of rhizobitoxine and by propyl gallate, inhibitors of ethylene synthesis in higher plants. We suggest that the ethylene-synthesizing enzyme system is highly structured in the apple cell and is localized in a cell wall-cell membrane complex.


2 On leave from the Department of Microbiology, M.S. University of Baroda, Baroda 390002, India.

1 A preliminary account of this work was presented at the 61st annual meeting of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology at Chicago, April 1-8, 1977 (see ref. 22).







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