Abstract

The knowledge of the mechanisms affecting the process of berry fruit ripening is important, not only to correctly determine the appropriate date of harvest, at which the fruit is most palatable and characterized by adequate shelf-life stability, but also, to develop new strategies of regulating the ripening process before harvesting. It is recognized that berry fruit quality and its post-harvest shelf-life depend on the cellular redox homeostasis. We, therefore, decided to conduct a comprehensive analysis of the level of oxidative stress status in the raspberry fruit proper at different stages of fruit ripening, from green to overripe fruit. We assessed both the level of typical oxidative stress markers, i.e. ROS production, expression of antioxidant enzymes, degree of cell damage, as well as the expression of selected proteins involved in the energy, glutathione, and polyphenols metabolism. We found two stage-related peaks of ROS production. The first - in green fruit, which corresponded to the maximum expression of antioxidant enzymes (MnSOD, CAT), PARP-1, as well as proteins related to glutathione biosynthesis (GS, γ-GC), autophagy (ATG-8) and ubiquitination (UBQ-11). The second one, in the overripe fruit, was responsible for the intensification of oxidative modifications of cell components, i.e. lipids, proteins, and DNA, as well as the loss of low molecular-weight antioxidants. The fruit ripening process, in turn, was manifested by a strong increase in the expression of proteins involved in the biosynthesis of polyphenols (PAL, CHS), cellular respiration (ACO-1, Cyt-C-ox, ATPase), ethylene biosynthesis and signaling (SAMs, EIN-2) and increasing amounts of ABA.

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