Understanding quality differences between kiwifruit varieties during softening

[Display omitted] •Fast-softening ‘Cuixiang’ kiwifruit showed higher polygalacturonase activities during softening.•Five metabolic modules mainly contribute to the quality differences of two cultivars.•30 metabolites were indicative for ripening quality in both cultivars.•d-glucose, d-maltose, 2-hyd...

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Veröffentlicht in:Food chemistry 2024-01, Vol.430, p.136983-136983, Article 136983
Hauptverfasser: Yang, Fan, Zhao, Renkai, Suo, Jiangtao, Ding, Yuduan, Tan, Jiawei, Zhu, Qinggang, Ma, Yanping
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •Fast-softening ‘Cuixiang’ kiwifruit showed higher polygalacturonase activities during softening.•Five metabolic modules mainly contribute to the quality differences of two cultivars.•30 metabolites were indicative for ripening quality in both cultivars.•d-glucose, d-maltose, 2-hydroxybutyric acid, phenyllactate, and vitamin B2 were taken as key markers of kiwifruit quality. Research into variations between kiwifruit varieties particularly their softening quality during storage is important in improving kiwifruit quality. The potential reasons for ripening quality differences between ‘Cuixiang’ (CX) and ‘Hayward’ (HWD) kiwifruit were analyzed by physiology and metabolomic data combined with the random forests learning algorithm. The results showed that the storability difference between the two varieties mainly resulted from differences in polygalacturonase (PG) and β-galactosidase activities. The 1 °C slowed the fruit softening process of both varieties by decreasing their PG activities. A total of 368 metabolites were identified and amino acid, carbohydrate, cofactors and vitamins, as well as nucleotide metabolism are key metabolic modules that affect the ripening differences of CX and HWD kiwifruit. A total of 30 metabolites showed remarkable ability in distinguish the ripening quality of CX and HWD kiwifruit, in which d-glucose, d-maltose, 2-hydroxybutyric acid, phenyllactate, and vitamin B2 were noteworthy for their potential application on the evaluation of kiwifruit taste and nutritional value. These findings provide positive insights into the underlying mechanism of ripening quality differences between CX and HWD kiwifruit and new ideas for identifying key metabolic markers in kiwifruit.
ISSN:0308-8146
1873-7072
DOI:10.1016/j.foodchem.2023.136983