@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref27140,
author = {Shiri Goldental-Cohen and Carmit Burstein and Iris Biton and Sivan Ben Sasson and Amit Sadeh and Yair Manni and Adi doron-faigenboim and Hanita Zemach and Doron Schneider and Reuben Birger and Shimon Meir and Sonia Philosoph-Hadas and Vered Irihomovitch and Benjamin Avidan and Shimon Lavee and Giora Ben-Ari},
title = {Ethephon induced oxidative stress in the olive leaf abscission zone enables development of a selective abscission compound.},
year = {2017},
keywords = {},
doi = {},
url = {http://},
pmid = {},
journal = {BMC Plant Biology},
volume = {},
number = {},
pages = {},
abstract = {Table olives (Olea europaea L.), despite their widespread production, are still harvested manually. The low efficiency of manual harvesting and the rising costs of labor have reduced the profitability of this crop. A selective abscission treatment, inducing abscission of fruits but not leaves, is crucial for the adoption of mechanical harvesting of table olives. In the present work we studied the anatomical and molecular differences between the three abscission zones (AZs) of olive fruits and leaves. The fruit abscission zone 3 (FAZ3), located between the fruit and the pedicel, was found to be the active AZ in mature fruits, whereas FAZ2, between the pedicel and the rachis, is the flower active AZ as well as functioning as an ethephon induced fruit AZ. We found anatomical differences between the leaf AZ (LAZ) and the two FAZs. Unlike the FAZs, the LAZ is characterized by small cells with less pectin compared to neighboring cells. In an attempt to differentiate between the fruit and leaf AZs, we examined the effect of treating olive-bearing trees with ethephon, an ethylene-releasing compound, with or without antioxidants, on the detachment force (DF) of fruits and leaves five days after the treatment. Ethephon treatment enhanced pectinase activity and reduced DF in all the three olive AZs. A transcriptomic analysis of the three olive AZs after ethephon treatment revealed induction of several genes encoding for hormones (ethylene, auxin and ABA), as well as for several cell wall degrading enzymes. However, up-regulation of cellulase genes was found only in the LAZ. Many genes involved in oxidative stress were induced by the ethephon treatment in the LAZ alone. In addition, we found that reactive oxygen species (ROS) mediated abscission in response to ethephon only in leaves. Thus, adding antioxidants such as ascorbic acid or butyric acid to the ethephon inhibited leaf abscission but enhanced fruit abscission. Our findings suggest that treating olive-bearing trees with a combination of ethephon and antioxidants reduces the detachment force (DF) of fruit without weakening that of the leaves. Hence, this selective abscission treatment may be used in turn to promote mechanized harvest of olives.}
}
Matrix 40916 of Study 20915

Citation title:
"Ethephon induced oxidative stress in the olive leaf abscission zone enables development of a selective abscission compound.".

Study name:
"Ethephon induced oxidative stress in the olive leaf abscission zone enables development of a selective abscission compound.".

This study is part of submission 20915
(Status: Published).
Matrices
Title: Olea europaea Fig. 6a Ethylene
Rows
|
Taxon Label |
Row Segments |
Characters 1?–30 |
| Olea europaea C102015_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C10899_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C10899_c0_seq2 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C39439_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C28797_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C27539_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C51839_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C18101_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C47773_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C9675_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C27894_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C33407_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C31809_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C31809_c0_seq2 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C33667_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C34821_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C34821_c0_seq2 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C67152_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C124138_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C10996_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C37016_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C28467_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C37871_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C9222_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C9222_c0_seq2 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C20915_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C22378_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C22378_c0_seq2 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C28579_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C28579_c0_seq2 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C28452_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C28222_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C25206_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C25166_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C25166_c0_seq2 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C25074_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C19047_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C25520_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C11914_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C39577_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C53213_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C80210_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C67874_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C30042_c1_seq4 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C56841_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C80175_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C42350_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C11378_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
| Olea europaea C19029_c0_seq1 |
(none)
|
(no data) |
Columns
| Column |
Character Description |
|
1
|
FA0
|
|
2
|
FA5
|
|
3
|
FB0
|
|
4
|
FB5
|
|
5
|
L0
|
|
6
|
L5
|