Abstract

The inevitable temperature fluctuation during cold chain transport accelerates the colour change and softening of postharvest sweet cherry, leading to further deterioration of quality and decline of the marketable value of cherries. The influences of temperature fluctuation on the contents of total anthocyanin, phenolic, malondialdehyde, and sodium carbonate-soluble pectin (SSP), as well as the activities of polyphenoloxidase (PPO) and peroxidase (POD) in sweet cherry, were assessed. In addition, the effects of temperature fluctuation on the activities of polygalacturonase (PG), pectin methyl esterase (PME), and beta-galactosidase (β-Gal) activities, and the paPG, paPME, and paPME genes expression were studied. The evolution of SSP nano-morphology was measured by atomic force microscopy. The results showed that the temperature fluctuation promoted anthocyanin synthesis, phenolic metabolism, and malondialdehyde accumulation, which immediately affected the brightness (6.2% lower than that of the cherry stored at 5 °C) of sweet cherry. Temperature fluctuation also led to a significant increase in POD and PPO activities during subsequent isothermal storage, accelerating the colour change (24.8% more than that of the cherry stored at 5 °C), which almost reached the level observed during constant 10 °C storage. In addition, temperature fluctuation not only affected the firmness (13.7% lower than that of the cherry stored at a constant temperature of 5 °C) of fruit immediately, but also, during subsequent isothermal storage, accelerated the deterioration of firmness (19.6% lower than that of the cherry stored at a constant temperature of 5 °C). This could be explained by temperature fluctuation inducing the upregulation of paPG1-3, paPME3, and paPME4 expression, which led to a 3.5 and 1.5-fold increase in PG and PME activity, respectively. This led to degradation of the aggregated SSP to its nanostructural basic units. Furthermore, temperature fluctuation resulted in upregulated expression of paβ-Gal1 and paβ-Gal3 and enhanced β-Gal activity during subsequent isothermal storage. The results provide theoretical guidance for the transportation, storage, and preservation of postharvest sweet cherry.

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