Abstract

In the zucchini squash, Cucurbita pepo, a well coordinated abscission of the female flower during fruit set is essential to obtain a fruit of commercial value. In Spain zucchini is mainly produced in greenhouses in Almeria, where high temperatures during the spring-summer period provoke a cultivar-dependent defect in fruits known as the “sticky flower” syndrome. This disorder is characterised by an arrest in growth and maturation of floral organs, and a lack of female floral abscission, thus diminishing fruit shelf-life, commercial quality and value. The aim of the present work was to improve knowledge of the abscission process in C. pepo to better understand the fundamental causes of this disorder. The anatomical analysis of abscission shows a well defined male floral abscission zone (AZ), few hours after anthesis, which differs from the female zone which is not differentiated from the adjacent tissue until the abscission process has begun, and which occurs as a consequence of AZ cell enlargement and the dissolution of their cell walls. To evaluate the role of ethylene and auxins in the regulation of floral abscission in zucchini we performed several treatments, with: ethylene, added as 0.25% ethrel solution; AVG, the inhibitor of ethylene synthesis, at 100 μM; indol-3-acetic acid, 100 μM; and TIBA, the inhibitor of auxin polar transport, at 10 mM. These treatments show that ethylene is an accelerator of zucchini floral abscission, and also promotes abscission in isolated AZs of sticky flowers. On the other hand, IAA delays abscission of the female flowers, whilst the inhibitor of auxin polar transport promotes it. The activity of the cell wall hydrolytic enzymes, polygalacturonase and cellulase, sharply increased just before the shedding of zucchini floral organs (72 h after anthesis). Moreover, both enzyme activities were induced by ethylene, which partly explains the ethylene promoting effect.

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