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Department of Horticulture, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR 97331
Studies on regulation of production of phenolics in strawberry
(Fragaria X ananassa Duch,) fruit were initiated by monitoring
phenylalanine ammonia-lyase (PAL) activity and levels of anthocyanins,
flavonoids, tannins, and other soluble phenols throughout fruit ontogeny in
`Tillikum'. PAL catalyzes the first step in the biosynthesis of
phenylpropanoids, which are further modified into a wide variety of phenolic
compounds. Peak in PAL activity (1 mol· s-1 = 1 kat) of 90
pkat· mg-1 protein was detected at 5 and 27 days after
anthesis (DAA), when fruit was green and nearly ripe, respectively. PAL
activity was only
10% of peak values in the white berry stage, when. fruit
growth was most rapid. The second peak in PAL activity was followed by a rapid
drop, to nearly zero in red-ripe fruit at 30 DAA. Total soluble phenols
reached a maximum level soon after anthesis, just before the first peak in PAL
activity, then declined to a low constant value well in advance of fruit
ripening. Similar changes were observed in levels of tannins and flavonoids
that, at anthesis, accounted for 44% and 51% of the soluble phenols,
respectively. The concentration of anthocyanin was very low throughout most of
fruit development, but beginning at 23 DAA it increased from <0.03 to
>0.53 mg·g-1 fresh weight in 3 days. This accumulation
paralleled the second rise in PAL activity. Accordingly, strawberry fruit have
a developmental-dependent expression of PAL activity and accumulation of
phenolic substances derived from the phenylpropanoid pathway.
Key Words: Fragaria x ananassa tannins flavonoids chlorophyll
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