An intact skin is essential in high-quality apples. Ongoing deposition of cuticular material during fruit development may decrease microcracking. Our objective was to establish a system for quantifying cutin and wax deposition in developing apple fruit. Oleic acid (C and C labelled) and palmitic acid (C labelled) were fed to developing apples and the amounts incorporated in the cutin and wax fractions were quantified. The incorporation of C oleic acid (C18) was significantly higher than that of C palmitic acid (C16) and the incorporation in the cutin fraction exceeded that in the wax fraction. The amount of precursor incorporated in the cutin increased asymptotically with time, but the amount in the wax fraction remained about constant. Increasing the concentration of the precursor applied generally increased incorporation. Incorporation in the cutin fraction was high during early development (43 days after full bloom) and decreased towards maturity. Incorporation was higher from a dilute donor solution (infinite dose feeding) than from a donor solution subjected to drying (finite dose feeding) or from perfusion of the precursor by injection. Feeding the skin of a developing apple with oleic acid resulted in significant incorporation in the cutin fraction under both laboratory and field conditions.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8000455 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants10030497 | DOI Listing |
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