Abstract

In addition to the ethylene formed at the onset of tomato fruit ripening, three peaks of ethylene are produced during earlier periods of in vitro development of tomato flower to fruit. This is the first report characterizing ethylene production during early development of tomato fruit. Previous reports from this laboratory showed that VFNT Cherry tomato calyces are transformed into fruit tissue when cultured in vitro at lower temperatures (16–23 °C). Early ethylene production was also measured in these ripening calyces, as well as in fruit and calyces of other tomato cultivars cultured in vitro. Calyces from Ailsa Craig and rin tomato flowers, which are not transformed into fruit tissue at these lower temperatures, also form ethylene during early periods of in vitro culture, but to a much smaller extent. Unlike ethylene formed at the onset of fruit ripening, the earlier peaks are resistant to the inhibitors, aminovinylglycine (AVG) and CoCl 2. The data suggest that ethylene produced during earlier periods of tomato fruit development is formed by an alternative biosynthetic pathway.

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