Abstract
The potato tuber pink eye (PE) syndrome is a costly physiological disorder that results in corruption of the native periderm, susceptibility to infection, water vapor loss and associated shrinkage, roughened and cracked tuber surfaces, and various related blemishes and defects. PE results in aberrant internal suberin deposition without overt induction by a wound, yet little is known of the effect of PE on wound healing. Herein, we determined the effect of the PE syndrome on basic wound-healing processes: reduction of water vapor loss, suberization and induction of the wound-related hormones abscisic acid (ABA) and jasmonic acid (JA). There was no significant difference in reduction of water vapor loss, rate of accumulation of suberin biopolymers or induction of ABA and JA biosynthesis during wound healing in PE vs. control tubers. These results are important because they indicate that the PE syndrome does not induce a systemic effect that adversely impacts these crucial wound-related processes throughout the tuber, including those areas of the tuber that have no detectable PE symptoms.
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