Abstract

The ultrastructural manifestations of storage chilling-injury and concentric ring stipple indicate that the two types of injury are similar in some respects and different in others. The low temperature storage-induced injury involves the epidermal cells and several layers of epicarpal cells below. It is manifested as an increase in lipid material in the cytoplasm and vacuole and in eventual degradation and collapse of the cytoplasm. The field injury, concentric ring stipple, apparently involves primarily the epidermal cells which become extremely electron dense. The epicarp cells of the injured region do not show extensive damage but do exhibit increased lipid accumulation. This accumulation of lipid is a phenomenon common to both types of injury and may be indicative of an altered metabolism due to the low temperatures. The apparent loss of organization and compartmentation in the chilling injury is also suggestive of membrane degradation. The storage chilling-injury occurs after exposure to low temperatures for several weeks, whereas the concentric ring stipple is evidently induced by an exposure in the field for only a few hours. The ultrastructural differences observed in these two injuries, therefore, may be due to the different time- and stress- factors involved.

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