Phytoalexin scoparone (6,7-dimethoxycoumarin) generally was not detected in noninoculated lemon fruit (Citrus limon [L.] Burm., cv Eureka) but accumulated in fruit after inoculation with Penicillium digitatum Sacc. A much greater increase in the amount of scoparone was found in fruit exhibiting an incompatible response to Penicillium after heat treatment at 360C for 3 days. Heat treatment prevented development of decay in the inoculated fruit. The concentration of the compound after inoculation continued to increase during and after the heat treatment period, reaching 178 micrograms per gram fresh weight of the flavedo 6 days after the heat treatment. Changes in scoparone concentration in fruit were closely correlated with the changes in the antifungal activity of the fruit extract. A low concentration of the phytoalexin was detected in fruit injured mechanically. Scoparone also accumulated in the fruit following ultraviolet illumination; the concentration of the compound was dose-dependent. Median effective dose values of the inhibition of germ tube elongation and spore germination of P. digitatum were 29 and 46 micrograms per milliliter, respectively. Our findings suggest that the rapid increase in scoparone concentration plays an important role in the increased resistance of heat-treated lemon fruit to infection by P. digitatum.
The effects of acetaldehyde, benzaldehyde, cinnamaldehyde, ethanol, benzyl alcohol, nerolidol, 2-nonanone, beta-ionone, and ethyl formate vapors on the growth of Rhizopus stolonifer, Penicillium digitatum, Colletotrichum musae, Erwinia carotovora, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa on agar medium were evaluated. The aldehydes were found to be the strongest growth inhibitors and the most lethal to the fungal spores and mycelia and bacterial cells. The average minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) of aldehydes that were germicidal to decay microorganisms were 0.28, 0.49, and 0.88 mmol per Petri dish, for cinnamaldehyde, benzaldehyde, and acetaldehyde, respectively. Ethanol also inhibited growth completely, but the MIC, which was 14.6 mmol per Petri dish, was significantly higher than those of the aldehydes. Ethanol can be considered germistatic because the alcohol does not inhibit germination of spores completely; it completely controlled only mycelial growth. The ketones tended to be effective only on P. digitatum and C. musae, whereas ethyl formate was not effective except on P. digitatum. The concentration of a volatile compound in the headspace of the Petri dish and its diffusion into the medium largely determined its efficacy against decay microorganisms.
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