Abstract
The biochemical mechanism of cold injury occurring in sweet potatoes stored at 0°C was studied. Oxygen uptake and RC ratio of mitochondria from sweet potatoes kept at 0°C for about 15 days declined when succinate or malate was used as substrate. As sweet potatoes suffered slight cold injury, a decrease in the respiratory rate of state 3 of mitochondria was observed. This decrease could be restored approximately to the level of that of healthy sweet potato mitochondria by the addition of cytochrome c when succinate was used as substrate. When sweet potatoes suffered severe damage, only partial recovery was observed with cytochrome c. While it was found that the respiratory rate in state 3 of mitochondria from chilled sweet potatoes was less inhibited by cyanide than that of healthy sweet potato mitochondria, the inhibition could be restored to that of healthy sweet potato mitochondria by the addition of cytochrome When malate was used as substrate, no effect of cytochrome c and NADH2 was observed. There was no difference between chilled and healthy sweet potato mitochondria in enzyme activities of the electron transport system except for malate dehydrogenase.
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