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Plant Physiology 83:44-48 (1987) © 1987 American Society of Plant Biologists Effect of Silver Ions on Ethylene Biosynthesis by Tomato Fruit Tissue 1Department of Horticulture, Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt, Department of Vegetable Crops, University of California, Davis California 95616, Glasshouse Crops Research Institute, Littlehampton, West Sussex, United Kingdom
Mature-green tomato fruit (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) were treated asymmetrically with 2 millimolar silver thiosulfate (STS) through a cut portion of the peduncle while still attached to the plant. One-half of the fruit received silver and remained green while the other half ripened normally and was silver-free (less than 0.01 parts per billion). Harvested mature-green fruit were also treated with STS through the cut pedicel. Green tissue from silver-treated fruit had levels of 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC, the immediate ethylene precursor) slightly less or similar to that of turning or red-ripe tissue from the same fruit, and similar to that of mature-green tissue from control fruit. Ethylene production was higher in green tissue from silver-treated fruit than from either red tissue from the same fruit, or mature-green tissue from control fruit. By inhibiting ACC synthesis with aminoethoxyvinyl glycine, and by applying ACC ± silver to excised disks of pericarp tissue from control or silver-treated tomatoes, we showed that short-term silver treatment did not affect the biological conversion of ACC to ethylene, while long-term treatment stimulated both the conversion of ACC to ethylene and the synthesis of ACC.
1 This work is a part of the CALAR program, supported by U.S. AID (Washington), contract number NEB-0170-A-00-2047-00. This article has been cited by other articles:
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