2006
DOI: 10.1002/pmic.200600128
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Proteomic analysis of tomato fruits from two ecotypes during ripening

Abstract: Ripening of climacteric fruits is a complex physiological phenomenon, which makes berries attractive/palatable and also determines their nutritional characteristics. We report here a comparative proteomic investigation on tomato fruits from a regional and commercial elite ecotype during maturation. Several hundreds of protein components were resolved on 2-DE gels (pH range 4-7) stained with colloidal Coomassie; almost 57% presented overlapping gel coordinates between the two compared varieties. Specific protei… Show more

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Cited by 150 publications
(156 citation statements)
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“…The mechanisms governing the differentiation of plastids such as the conversion of proplastids to chloroplasts or chloroplasts to chromoplasts have received little attention and are barely mentioned in recent reviews on plastid proteomics (Armbruster et al, 2011;van Wijk and Baginsky, 2011). The pattern of changes in protein abundance reported here is in agreement with proteomic data generated in whole fruit by others (Rocco et al, 2006;Faurobert et al, 2007). The western blots of six proteins representative of several metabolic or regulatory pathways give a pattern of changes that is similar to proteomic analysis.…”
Section: Proteins Involved In Energy Provision and Translocation Actisupporting
confidence: 78%
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“…The mechanisms governing the differentiation of plastids such as the conversion of proplastids to chloroplasts or chloroplasts to chromoplasts have received little attention and are barely mentioned in recent reviews on plastid proteomics (Armbruster et al, 2011;van Wijk and Baginsky, 2011). The pattern of changes in protein abundance reported here is in agreement with proteomic data generated in whole fruit by others (Rocco et al, 2006;Faurobert et al, 2007). The western blots of six proteins representative of several metabolic or regulatory pathways give a pattern of changes that is similar to proteomic analysis.…”
Section: Proteins Involved In Energy Provision and Translocation Actisupporting
confidence: 78%
“…Forty-seven proteins have been identified both in the plastid proteome described in this work and in the whole fruit proteome of Rocco et al (2006) and Faurobert et al (2007). Although the tomato varieties and the quantification methods were very different, the ratios of abundance between the three stages of plastid development (MG, B, and R) were identical or similar, thus confirming the accuracy of the quantification methods.…”
Section: Proteomic Specificities Of the Three Stages Of Plastid Diffementioning
confidence: 49%
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“…Due to its economic importance, as well as many favorable genetic and agricultural features, it has also become a model species for molecular studies aimed at improving fruit quality (Giovannoni, 2004;Rocco et al, 2006) and resistance toward pathogens (Ercolano et al, 2012). Tomato is affected by over 200 diseases induced by viruses, bacteria, fungi or nematodes (Jones et al, 1991), which are the cause of severe annual yield losses worldwide.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%