4.7 Article

Eggplant grafting on a cold-tolerant rootstock reduces fruit chilling susceptibility and improves antioxidant stability during storage

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE SCIENCE OF FOOD AND AGRICULTURE
Volume 102, Issue 8, Pages 3350-3358

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jsfa.11682

Keywords

postharvest; vegetable; chilling injury; aubergine; phenolics; quality

Funding

  1. Agencia Nacional de Promocion Cientifica y Tecnologica [PICT 2018-3679, PICT 2018-3898]
  2. Universidad Nacional de La Plata

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Grafting purple eggplant (cv. Monarca) onto cold-tolerant hybrid Solanum rootstock ('Java') enhances plant vigor, improves fruit growth rate, and reduces time to harvest. Grafted eggplants have thinner shape, lighter pulp color, lower respiration, dry matter, and phenolic compounds contents, as well as higher chilling injury tolerance during postharvest storage compared to non-grafted plants. Grafting can be an effective strategy to enhance vegetable postharvest performance by inducing desirable phenotypic traits.
BACKGROUND: Vegetable grafting has been increasingly evaluated to improve preharvest tolerance to biotic and abiotic stresses. However, very few studies have identified rootstock-scion combinations able to improve fruit shelf life and reduce the susceptibility to postharvest disorders. Herein, a purple eggplant scion (cv. Monarca) was grafted onto a cold-tolerant hybrid Solanum rootstock ('Java') and the changes in growth, quality, postharvest chilling tolerance, and antioxidant stability were evaluated. RESULTS: Eggplant grafting enhanced plant vigor and fruit growth rate, decreasing the time from set to harvest by 10-15%. Grafted eggplants had a thinner shape and lighter pulp color than the control. The rootstock-scion combination tested showed lower respiration (similar to 60%), dry matter (similar to 15-20%), and phenolic compounds contents (similar to 15-20%) than eggplants from non-grafted plants. Grafting markedly improved fruit performance during postharvest storage. Remarkably, grafted eggplants showed much higher tolerance to chilling injury than the control did, evidenced by a reduction of surface scalds along with decreased softening and pulp browning. The trend in antioxidants found at harvest time was reversed after cold storage due to enhanced stability (20% and 100% for pulp and peel respectively) in fruit from grafted plants. CONCLUSION: Purple eggplant (cv. Monarca) grafting onto 'Java' hybrid rootstock modulated fruit growth, quality at harvest, and increased fruit chilling injury tolerance during storage. Grafting may be a bona fide strategy to induce phenotypic traits able to improve vegetable postharvest performance. (C) 2021 Society of Chemical Industry.

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