4.7 Article

Amelioration of Chilling Injury by Fucoidan in Cold-Stored Cucumber via Membrane Lipid Metabolism Regulation

Journal

FOODS
Volume 12, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/foods12020301

Keywords

cucumber fruit; chilling injury; fucoidan; membrane lipid metabolism

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This study investigated the effect of fucoidan treatment on cucumber under cold stress. The results showed that fucoidan treatment alleviated chilling injury, delayed weight loss, and lowered electrolyte leakage and respiration rate in cold-stored cucumbers. Fucoidan also maintained the integrity of cell membrane and reduced membrane lipid peroxidation.
Cucumber fruit is very sensitive to chilling injury, which rapidly depreciates their commodity value. Herein, the effect of fucoidan treatment on cucumber under cold stress were investigated. Fucoidan treatment of cold-stored cucumber alleviated the occurrence of chilling injury, delayed weight loss, lowered electrolyte leakage and respiration rate, and retarded malondialdehyde accumulation. Different from the control fruit, fucoidan treated fruit showed a high level of fatty acid unsaturated content, fatty acid unsaturation, and unsaturation index and increased omega-FDAS activity, along with upregulated expression levels of CsSAD and CsFAD genes. Fucoidan reduced the phosphatidic acid content and membrane lipid peroxidation, lowered the phospholipase D (PLD) and lipoxygenase (LOX) activity, and downregulated the expression levels of CsPLD and CsLOX genes. Collectively, fucoidan treatment maintained the integrity of cell membrane in cold-stress cucumbers. The results provide a new prospect for the development of fucoidan as a preservative agent in the low-temperature postharvest storage of cucumbers.

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