Hossein Meighani; Mohammad Sadat-Hosseini
Abstract
Indian jujubes are perishable fruits with a short storage life after harvest. In this study, Indian jujube fruits were stored at 5 °C and 90% RH for 30 days after treating the fruits with 1% chitosan (CHS), 1 mM putrescine (PUT), and a combination of 1% CHS and 1 mM PUT (CHS+ PUT). Physicochemical ...
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Indian jujubes are perishable fruits with a short storage life after harvest. In this study, Indian jujube fruits were stored at 5 °C and 90% RH for 30 days after treating the fruits with 1% chitosan (CHS), 1 mM putrescine (PUT), and a combination of 1% CHS and 1 mM PUT (CHS+ PUT). Physicochemical characteristics and cell wall degrading enzymes were measured at 10-day intervals. The results indicated that the efficiency of the CHS+PUT was better than CHS or PUT as individual treatments. The CHS+PUT treatment substantially decreased weight loss, decay incidence, and malondialdehyde content in Indian jujube fruits. The CHS+PUT treatment minimized losses of bioactive compounds (ascorbic acid and phenols), total antioxidant activity, and titratable acidity. In addition, CHS+PUT treatment delayed fruit softening by suppressing polygalacturonase activity and pectin methylesterase enzymes. Soluble solids content significantly increased through storage time, but applying CHS and PUT individually or in combination inhibited this increase. These results confirmed that the 1% CHS and 1 mM PUT treatments maintained the postharvest quality of Indian jujube fruits in cold storage.
Hossein Meighani; Mahmood Ghasemnezhad; Davood Bakshi
Abstract
Aril browning threatens production, consumption, and exports of pomegranates, because affected fruit cannot be externally distinguished from healthy fruit. This study compared the mineral, biochemical composition, and related enzyme activities in affected brown arils with healthy ones in ‘Malase ...
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Aril browning threatens production, consumption, and exports of pomegranates, because affected fruit cannot be externally distinguished from healthy fruit. This study compared the mineral, biochemical composition, and related enzyme activities in affected brown arils with healthy ones in ‘Malase Saveh’ pomegranates. The results indicated that concentrations of Cu in the aril and K, Mg, and Mn in the peel were higher in the healthy fruit than in the affected fruit. The total soluble solids, titratable acidity, total phenolics, total flavonoids, total anthocyanins, antioxidant activity, and color parameters (L*, a*, b*, hue, and chroma) decreased in the browned arils of pomegranates, whereas fruit respiration rate and acidity, peroxidase (POD), and polyphenol oxidase (PPO) enzyme activity were higher in the browned arils. No difference was found for phenylalanine ammonia lyase (PAL) activity. There were positive correlations between total anthocyanins and both color values and total phenols, and a negative correlation between PPO and POD activities was observed. Overall, the nutritional and functional value of the affected fruit is anticipated to be far less than that of the healthy fruit.