Abstract

Tomato fruit quality depends on its metabolite content, which in turn is determined by numerous metabolic changes occurring during fruit development and ripening. The aim of this work was to investigate whether flooding affects the nutritional quality of tomato fruit, focusing on compounds essential to human health: carotenoids and ascorbate. To this end, tomato plants ( Solanum lycopersicum L. cv Micro-Tom) were submitted to prolonged root hypoxia (1–2% O 2) at first flower anthesis. Fruits were harvested at five stages of the ripening process and analysed for their carotenoid and ascorbate contents. Our results showed that the ripening of fruits that developed on hypoxia treated plants was not inhibited. However, root hypoxia significantly limits carotenoid and ascorbate accumulation in pericarp during fruit ripening, the strongest effects being observed at late stages of ripening. Limitation of both carotenoids and ascorbate accumulation seems to be primarily mediated by the reduced level of expression of genes of the corresponding metabolic pathway.

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