4.7 Article

Fungicides Cuprozin Progress and SWITCH Modulate Primary and Specialized Metabolites of Strawberry Fruits

Journal

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.2c06584

Keywords

amino acids; aroma volatile metabolites; organic acids; pesticide treatment; phenolics; sugars

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Numerous pesticides are applied to crop plants annually, including fungicides, which may affect plant metabolism and crop quality. This study investigated the effects of two fungicides on the metabolism of strawberry cultivars and wild strawberries, specifically focusing on primary and specialized metabolites that contribute to fruit flavor. The fungicide treatment significantly impacted several metabolites, indicating potential changes in taste and quality of strawberries when treated with fungicides.
Numerous pesticides, including fungicides, are applied every year to crop plants. However, such application may affect the plant metabolism and thus crop quality. Strawberry is an economically important crop, but the fruits are highly susceptible, especially to fungal diseases. In the present study, the effects of two fungicides, Cuprozin progress and SWITCH, on the metabolism of two cultivars and the wild strawberry were tested, focusing on primary (amino acids, (in)organic acids, sugars, total phenolics) and specialized metabolites (aroma volatiles), which determine the fruit flavor. The fungicide treatment significantly affected 11 out of 57 metabolites, while 20 of those differed between strawberry types and 27 were affected by the interaction of both factors. Given these modifications in metabolites in response to the treatments, the taste and quality of the strawberries may pronouncedly change when plants are treated with fungicides.

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