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      Ascorbate degradation in tomato leads to accumulation of oxalate, threonate and oxalyl threonate.

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          Abstract

          Ascorbate content in plants is controlled by its synthesis from carbohydrates, recycling of the oxidized forms and degradation. Of these pathways, ascorbate degradation is the least studied and represents a lack of knowledge that could impair improvement of ascorbate content in fruits and vegetables as degradation is non-reversible and leads to a depletion of the ascorbate pool. The present study revealed the nature of degradation products using [(14) C]ascorbate labelling in tomato, a model plant for fleshy fruits; oxalate and threonate are accumulated in leaves, as is oxalyl threonate. Carboxypentonates coming from diketogulonate degradation were detected in relatively insoluble (cell wall-rich) leaf material. No [(14) C]tartaric acid was found in tomato leaves. Ascorbate degradation was stimulated by darkness, and the degradation rate was evaluated at 63% of the ascorbate pool per day, a percentage that was constant and independent of the initial ascorbate or dehydroascorbic acid concentration over periods of 24 h or more. Furthermore, degradation could be partially affected by the ascorbate recycling pathway, as lines under-expressing monodehydroascorbate reductase showed a slight decrease in degradation product accumulation.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Plant J.
          The Plant journal : for cell and molecular biology
          Wiley-Blackwell
          1365-313X
          0960-7412
          Mar 2017
          : 89
          : 5
          Affiliations
          [1 ] INRA, UR-1052, Génétique et Amélioration des Fruits et Légumes, CS60094, 84143, Montfavet, France.
          [2 ] INRA, UR-1115, Plantes et Systèmes de culture Horticoles, CS40509, 84914 Avignon Cedex 9, France.
          [3 ] The Edinburgh Cell Wall Group, Institute of Molecular Plant Sciences, School of Biological Sciences, The University of Edinburgh, Daniel Rutherford Building, The King's Building, Edinburgh, EH9 3BF, UK.
          Article
          10.1111/tpj.13439
          27888536
          ca510caf-e8b5-41aa-9606-248a833cb90a
          History

          tomato,monodehydroascorbate reductase,light environment,high-voltage paper electrophoresis,ascorbate degradation,[14C]ascorbate labelling,Solanum lycopersicum

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