Am. J. Bot. Join the BSA
HOME HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ARCHIVE SEARCH TABLE OF CONTENTS
 QUICK SEARCH:   [advanced]


     


This Article
Right arrow Abstract Freely available
Right arrow Full Text (PDF)
Right arrow Submit a response
Right arrow Alert me when this article is cited
Right arrow Alert me when eLetters are posted
Right arrow Alert me if a correction is posted
Services
Right arrow Email this article to a friend
Right arrow Similar articles in this journal
Right arrow Similar articles in ISI Web of Science
Right arrow Alert me to new issues of the journal
Right arrow Download to citation manager
Right arrow reprints & permissions
Citing Articles
Right arrow Citing Articles via HighWire
Right arrow Citing Articles via ISI Web of Science (13)
Right arrow Citing Articles via Google Scholar
Google Scholar
Right arrow Articles by Matas, A. J.
Right arrow Articles by Niklas, K. J.
Right arrow Search for Related Content
PubMed
Right arrow Articles by Matas, A. J.
Right arrow Articles by Niklas, K. J.
Agricola
Right arrow Articles by Matas, A. J.
Right arrow Articles by Niklas, K. J.
(American Journal of Botany. 2004;91:352-360.)
© 2004 Botanical Society of America, Inc.


Structure and Development

Biomechanics and anatomy of Lycopersicon esculentum fruit peels and enzyme-treated samples1

Antonio J. Matas2, Edward D. Cobb3, James A. Bartsch4, Dominick J. Paolillo Jr.5 and Karl J. Niklas5,6

2Department of Horticulture, Estación Experimental La Mayora (CSIC), Algarrobo-Costa 29750, Malaga, Spain; 3Department of Plant Breeding, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853 USA; 4Department of Biological and Environmental Engineering, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853 USA; 5Department of Plant Biology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853 USA

Received for publication August 14, 2003. Accepted for publication October 7, 2003.


    ABSTRACT
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 LITERATURE CITED
 
We report the biomechanics and anatomy of fruit wall peels (before and after cellulase/pectinase treatment) from two Lycopersicon esculentum cultivars (i.e., Inbred 10 and Sweet 100 cherry tomatoes). Samples were tested before and after enzyme treatment in uniaxial tension to determine their rate of creep, plastic and instantaneous elastic strains, breaking stress (strength), and work of fracture. The fruit peels of both cultivars exhibited pronounced viscoelastic and strain-hardening behavior, but differed significantly in their rheological behavior and magnitudes of material properties, e.g., Inbred 10 peels crept less rapidly and accumulated more plastic strains (but less rapidly), were stiffer and stronger, and had a larger work of fracture than Sweet 100 peels. The cuticular membrane (CM) also differed; e.g., Sweet 100 CM strain-softened at forces that caused Inbred 10 to strain-harden. The mechanical behavior of peels and their CM correlated with anatomical differences. The Inbred 10 CM develops in subepidermal cell layers, whereas the Sweet 100 CM is poorly developed below the epidermis. Based on these and other observations, we posit that strain-hardening involves the realignment of CM fibrillar elements and that this phenomenon is less pronounced for Sweet 100 because fewer cell walls contribute to its CM compared to Inbred 10.

Key Words: cellulose microfibrils • epidermis • fruit cracking • plant biomechanics • Solanaceae • strain-hardening • tomato fruit


    INTRODUCTION
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 LITERATURE CITED
 
As traditionally defined, the cuticle is the nonliving covering produced by the epidermis of all primary vascular plant organs (Esau, 1977 ). Following the terminology of Wattendorf and Holloway (1980) , Holloway (1982) , and Jeffree (1996) , it typically consists of an external layer of epicuticular waxes (ECW) overlying a comparatively thin layer of saponifiable lipids (the cuticle proper, CP) that covers an inner layer of waxes and fibrous polysaccharides embedded in a cutin matrix (the cuticular layer, CL). The CP and CL comprise the cuticular membrane (CM), which sensu stricto develops within cell walls (Esau, 1977 ). The structure of the CM and the extent to which it extends beneath the epidermis vary among and sometimes within species (Jeffree, 1996 ). For example, although it is frequently confined to the outer periclinal and anticlinal walls of the epidermis, the CM may develop in subepidermal cell walls (Fig. 1). Significant ultrastructural and chemical differences in the CM also exist across and within species (see Kolattukudy, 1980 , 1996 ; Jeffree, 1996 ; Wiedemann and Neinhuis, 1998 ).



View larger version (43K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 1. Schematic representation of cuticularized epidermis and subepidermal cells. (A) The CM consisting of the cuticle proper (CP) and the cuticular layer (CL) develops the outer periclinal walls of the epidermis (OPE) and to epidermal anticlinal walls (AE). (B) The CM develops in the inner periclinal walls of the epidermis (IPE) and the aniclinal walls of subepidermal cells (AS). Darker areas in the CL represent pectin-rich regions. Epicuticular waxes not shown

 
These differences can significantly affect the physiological performance of the CM, which reduces uncontrolled water loss, the entry of pathogenic organisms and various organic compounds, and the deleterious effects of excessive sunlight (see Esau, 1977 ; Schönherr, 1982 ; Eller, 1985 ; Riederer, 1990 ; Juniper, 1991 ; Riederer and Schreiber, 2001 ). Likewise, chemical and anatomical differences may affect the mechanical function of the CM (see Petracek and Bukovac, 1995 ; Wiedemann and Neinhuis, 1998 ). Nevertheless, because the walls of the epidermis and adjoining cells are placed in tension when primary organs are turgid (Kutschera, 1989 ; Niklas and Paolillo, 1997 , 1998 ), the CM can function as a tensile "skin" depending on its thickness and material properties.

In this paper, we report the tensile properties and anatomy of peels from the fruits of two Lycopersicon esculentum cultivars, which differ in their susceptibility to cracking, i.e., the crack-resistant Inbred 10 and the crack-prone Sweet 100. We also report the mechanical properties and anatomy of their cellulase/pectinase-isolated CM. Our objective is to determine the extent to which the CM contributes to the ability of fruit walls to resist tensile failure. Because the outer fruit wall is composed of different anatomical constituents, some of which could not be isolated and tested individually (subcuticular cell layers), the volume fractions of various peel constituents were used to determine their relative mechanical contributions.

Based on this study, we propose a simple rheological model for the tomato fruit wall that attributes strain-hardening to the passive realignment of fibrils in the CM and its associated cell walls. This model is discussed in the context of the mechanical and anatomical features of Inbred 10 and Sweet 100 fruits and their susceptibility to cracking when ripe.


    MATERIALS AND METHODS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 LITERATURE CITED
 
Culture and sampling
Four Inbred 10 and eight Sweet 100 cherry tomato plants were grown in pots to maturity (using commercially available seeds and Cornell potting mix) under greenhouse conditions without supplemental lighting. Each plant was irrigated and fertilized on a regular schedule. Flowers were handled daily to facilitate pollination. Each inflorescence was labeled and monitored to evaluate fruit development and ripening. Between 30 and 50 fruits were selected from each cultivar for anatomical and mechanical study when fully ripe in the sequence of their appearance between one and two days after reaching the "breaker" stage, i.e., the transition from green to yellow/orange color. Samples were tested mechanically within 5 h of harvesting.

Sample preparation
Rectangular paradermal segments of the outer fruit wall (aligned either longitudinally or equatorially with respect to the pedicle–style fruit axis) were removed using two parallel razor blades bonded to a metal block to assure uniform segment width (5.25 mm) and depth of cut (230 ± 35 µm). Segment length varied due to differences in fruit size and shape. The outer fruit wall was peeled off by hand, placed in a petri dish subepidermal side downward on filter paper, and hydrated with the liquid and soft pulp of the fruit from which it was removed to reduce desiccation, maintain tissue osmolarity, and prevent direct wetting of the CM. A small portion of the outer fruit wall next to each peel was also removed and preserved in FAA for anatomical study. Microscopic measurements of peel and CM thickness were used to determine the cross sectional areas of samples tested mechanically (see Mechanical tests).

Duplicate peels were removed from each fruit for enzyme treatment following the protocol of Orgell (1955) as modified by Yamada et al. (1964 ; see Petracek and Bukovac, 1995 ). Excised samples were suspended in a fungal origin mixture of cellulase and pectinase (0.2% m/v and 2.0% m/v, respectively; Sigma) and 1 mmol/L NaN3 (to prevent microbial growth) in sodium citrate buffer (50 mmol/L, pH 4.0). Suspensions were aspirated to aid enzyme penetration before incubation at 35°C for 7–10 d (during which suspensions were agitated by hand daily). Samples were then rinsed in citrate buffer and inspected microscopically before testing.

Mechanical tests
Peels and their enzyme-isolated CM were mounted for tests using two small metal rods suspended by stirrups between the cross heads of a model 4502 Instron testing machine (Fig. 2). A dab of fast-drying super glue was spread over the middle of each rod and the external surface of the ends of each sample, which were then folded over each of the two rods before aligning the stirrups parallel to the Instron cross-head axis. Samples were continuously hydrated during each test with the liquid extracted from their corresponding fruits by means of a micropipette applied to their subepidermal surface. A small piece of hydrated tissue paper was placed on this surface to maximize uniform hydration and further reduce desiccation during testing. Unless otherwise noted, a 2.0 mm/s strain rate (i.e., cross-head displacement rate) was used in loading-unloading and uniaxial tension tests. This high rate of extension was used to mimic rapid fruit swelling due to diurnal water influx. In this context, preliminary tests using slower strain rates (e.g., 0.2 mm/s) gave results that were qualitatively indistinguishable from those reported here.



View larger version (44K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 2. Method for mounting peels for mechanical testing. (A) Side view of peel showing the orientation of the outer and inner surfaces, OS and IS, respectively. (B) Ends of the peel are folded over two metal bars so that CM makes contact at each fold. (C) Metal bars holding the peel are placed in stirrups oriented parallel to Instron cross heads. Strains are measured as the extension of the "single ply" (exposed) portion of the sample

 
To determine tensile strains, the total length and the length between the two folds of each sample were measured before extension with a hand-held microcaliper (see Fig. 2B–C). Subsequent measurements during tests indicated that strains were the result of the extension of the length of the "single ply" portion of samples. This extension was used to calculate strain (see Fig. 2C). To determine stresses, the applied tensile force was divided by the mean cross-sectional area of single ply sections for each cultivar. Given the large number of peels tested, it was not convenient to measure the cross-sectional area of each sample. Rather, cross sections were measured for 20 peels from each cultivar; their standard errors were deemed sufficiently small (i.e., ±4.2% for Inbred 10 and ±3.7% for Sweet 100) such that the mean cross section for each cultivar could be used to calculate stresses. The cross-sectional areas of the CM were determined by weighing cut-outs of light micrographs of CM and subepidermal tissues and calculating the percent area of each for 10 peels from each cultivar. The non-cuticularized cell wall of the CM were included as part of the CM cross section. The standard errors for CM measurements were small (±3.8% for Inbred 10 and ±3.0% for Sweet 100; n = 10 each).

Three general types of mechanical tests were performed: (1) transient creep tests to determine the rate of creep and the instantaneous elastic strain upon loading, (2) successive loading-unloading (cyclical) tests to determine the sum of plastic strains resulting from repeated applications of varying tensile forces (strain history) and the affects of repeated load applications on the Young's modulus of a sample (strain-hardening or -softening), and (3) uniaxial tension tests to determine breaking stress, breaking strain, and the work of fracture. Because no sample could be tested each way, the data from all three tests were juxtaposed to determine the mechanical properties of peels and their isolated CM. The protocols for each of the three types of tests were as follows.

Secondary (transient) rates of creep and instantaneous elastic strains were determined by sustaining samples in uniaxial tension under a constant load for ≥20 min during which the longitudinal extension of each sample was recorded every 2 s. The rate of creep was determined from the slope of the log-log linear regression curve of strain vs. time for the secondary phase of creep (Fig. 3A). The instantaneous elastic strain was taken as the strain recorded 4 s after the application of each tensile load. Each peel was tested repeatedly using either an ascending sequence of sustained tensile forces (from 0.10 N to 0.65 N in 0.05 N load increments) or a descending sequence (from 0.65 N to 0.10 N with 0.10 N load increments between 0.60 N and 0.10 N).



View larger version (25K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 3. Representative data from a transient creep test of a Sweet 100 peel held in tension with 0.1 N (A) and in a successive loading-unloading test (B–C). (A) Log-log plot of strain {varepsilon} vs. time t with three phases: instantaneous elastic strain (recorded after 4 s, datum shown by open circle); primary (1°) creep (log-log nonlinear region); and secondary (2°) creep (log-log linear region). The slope of 2° creep is the rate of creep ({Delta}{varepsilon}/{Delta}s). (B) Tensile force vs. strain for successive cycles of extension and relaxation using tensile forces 0.1–to 0.65 N, in 0.05 N increments. (C) Strain vs. time. Flat lines between strain peaks denote time intervals between successive loading cycles; horizontal lines drawn to ordinate mark plastic strains for the first six loading cycles (0.1–0.35 N)

 
Noting that equivalent tensile forces do not generate equivalent stresses in peels and their enzyme-treated counterparts (because the CM contributes only a fraction f of the total cross sectional area of a peel), the f occupied by the CM was used to compute the tensile forces required to produce equivalent stresses in CM samples, i.e., equivalent stress forces Pe = f PP, where Pe is the equivalent stress force, PP is the force used to test a peel, and f is the CM decimal fraction. For convenience, data from creep tests (and loading-unloading tests; see below) of enzyme-treated samples are plotted as a function of Pe.

Successive loading-unloading (cyclical) tests were used to determine the effects of prior mechanical loadings on sample stiffness and the sum of plastic strains. Each peel was increasingly extended (using an increasing sequence of forces from 0.10 N to 0.65 N in 0.05 N increments) and allowed to relax before reloading (Fig. 3B–C). Equivalent stress forces Pe exerted on peels were used for loading-unloading tests of corresponding enzyme-treated samples. Stresses and strains were continuously monitored during each loading cycle every 0.5 s. Plastic deformations were recorded at the end of each loading cycle; sample stiffness (Young's modulus E) was determined from the slope of the linear portion of the stress {sigma} vs. strain {varepsilon} plot after compensating for the plastic strains in each previous loading cycle, i.e., E = {Delta}{sigma}/{Delta}{varepsilon}.

Uniaxial tensile tests to failure were performed using the aforementioned protocol. The maximum stress {sigma}b and strain {varepsilon}b were recorded as the breaking stress and the breaking strain, respectively. These tests were also used to determine the work of fracture W (the energy per unit cross section required to propagate a crack) by making a small cut of specified length {ell} on one edge of a sample before testing. The Young's modulus E and the breaking stress of each sample were then used to compute W using the formula W = {pi}{ell}{sigma}2b/2E (see Kraemer and Chapman, 1991 ; Niklas, 1992a ; Anderson, 1995 ). The dimension of {ell} was established for each cultivar from preliminary notch-sensitivity analyses (data not shown).

Anatomical protocols
Materials were washed in 50% ethanol, rehydrated, and sectioned at a thickness of 10 µm, frozen in water, and using a cryostat. The sections were observed unstained or stained in zinc-chlor-iodine for detection of cellulosic walls (Peacock, 1966 ). Unstained sections were also observed between crossed polarizers, with and without the insertion of a rose plate, which develops a color image that allows for the determination of the net orientation of unstained cellulose wall microfibrils (Bennett, 1950 ). Stained sections were also examined using a single polarizing filter beneath the specimen and a rotating stage to detect dichroism, which allows the determination of the net orientation of stained cellulose wall fibrils (Roelofsen, 1959 ). Photographs were obtained using an image capture program under the control of a microcomputer.

Statistical analyses
All analyses were performed using the JMP software package (SAS Institute, Cary, North Carolina, USA). The mean values for reported mechanical properties are based on 10 samples (one from 10 different fruits) from a minimum of four different plants (n = 10 peels or CM; n ≥ 4 plants). With the exception of the data from tensile tests to failure (see below), ordinary least squares regression and correlation analyses were performed based on 12 means (one for each tensile force used in either a creep or a loading-unloading test). Statistical differences in the slopes of regression curves were determined on the basis of the 95% confidence intervals of slopes; regression curve fits were rejected if P > 0.0001. All pair-wise comparisons (Tukey-Kramer HSD; {alpha} = 0.05) among means of E, {sigma}b, or W were used to determine whether these properties differed between the cultivars (n = 4 means, one mean for the fruits produced by each of four plants).


    RESULTS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 LITERATURE CITED
 
All pair-wise comparisons between the mechanical properties measured for longitudinally and equatorially oriented peels or their CM indicated that these materials are isotropic, i.e., mechanical behavior is indifferent to the direction of applied tensile forces. Therefore, for convenience, the results from longitudinally excised samples are reported.

Mechanical properties of peels
The rate of creep decreased when peels were tested with progressively larger tensile forces (Fig. 4A). With a 0.1-N force, the rate of creep for Sweet 100 peels was, on average, 40% faster than that of Inbred 10 (i.e., 0.106 s–1 and 0.076 s–1, respectively). However, with progressively larger forces, all pair-wise comparisons of mean values (n = 4) indicated that the difference in the rate of creep between the peels from the two cultivars deceased and became statistically indistinguishable for forces ≥0.20 N. Likewise, when peels were initially loaded with 0.60 N, the rate of creep for the two cultivars differed significantly (based on all pair-wise comparisons of means), decreased sharply for 0.60 N, and remained approximately unchanged for progressively smaller tensile forces (Fig. 4B).



View larger version (19K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 4. Comparisons between the rates of creep {varepsilon}t of Sweet 100 and Inbred 10 peels and isolated cuticular membranes CM. (A) Rates of creep vs. ascending sequence of tensile forces (0.1–0.65 N, in 0.05 N increments). The rate of creep declines in a log-log linear manner as shown by the curvilinear regression curves (r2 = 0.947 and 0.894 for Sweet 100 and Inbred 10, respectively). (B) Rates of creep vs. descending sequence of tensile forces (0.65–0.1 N, in 0.1 N increments between 0.1 and 0.6 N). No statistically significant differences exist for {varepsilon}t after a load of 0.65 N. (C) Rates of creep {varepsilon}t of Sweet 100 and Inbred 10 CM vs. equivalent tensile forces Pe

 
Although no statistically distinguishable difference was observed for the instantaneous elastic strain measured with progressively larger forces (Fig. 5A), the rate at which plastic strains accumulated (indicated by the slope of the sum of plastic strains vs. tensile forces) was faster for Sweet 100 compared to Inbred 10 peels. The magnitude of plastic strains was greater for Inbred 10 peels compared to Sweet 100 peels (Fig. 5B). These results were interpreted to indicate that peels are viscoelastic and strain-hardening bio-composites and that those of Inbred 10 plastically deform more than those of Sweet 100.



View larger version (31K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 5. Instantaneous elastic strains {varepsilon}i and the sum (accumulation) of plastic strains {Sigma}{varepsilon}p for Sweet 100 and Inbred 10 peels (A–B) and isolated cuticular membranes CM (C–D) tested in creep with ascending tensile forces (0.1–0.65 N, in 0.05 N increments). (A) Instantaneous elastic strains of peels vs. tensile forces. Solid lines are linear regression curves for untransformed data; r2 = 0.995 and 0.937 for Sweet 100 and Inbred 10, respectively. (B) Sum of plastic strains of peels vs. increasing tensile forces. Solid lines denote log-log regression curves; r2 = 0.995 and 0.937 for Sweet 100 and Inbred 10, respectively. (C) Instantaneous elastic strains of CM vs. equivalent loads Pe. Solid lines denote linear regression curves for untransformed data; r2 = 0.989 and 0.978 for Sweet 100 and Inbred 10, respectively. (D) Sum of plastic strains of CM vs. increasing equivalent loads Pe. Solid lines denote log-log regression curves; r2 = 0.988 and 0.964 for Sweet 100 and Inbred 10, respectively

 
The results from successive loading-unloading (cyclical) tests were consistent with this interpretation. Peels strain-hardened when successively stretched, i.e., the Young's modulus E increased with progressively larger forces (Fig. 6A). However, the two cultivars differed in the magnitudes of E and the rate of strain-hardening (given by the slope of E vs. P). The E of Inbred 10 peels was significantly higher (P < 0.0001) than that of Sweet 100 for each of the tensile forces used and increased more rapidly than that of Sweet 100. For example, the average E measured for Inbred 10 and Sweet 100 peels extended with 0.10 N were 5.89 ± 0.77 MPa and 2.61 ± 0.87 MPa, respectively, whereas the E measured after the last extension with 0.65 N was 21.8 ± 3.2 MPa and 10.8 ± 1.5 MPa, respectively (Fig. 6C).



View larger version (34K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 6. Comparisons among the mechanical properties of Sweet 100 and Inbred 10 peels and cuticular membranes CM tested in successive loading-unloading cycles (A–B) and uniaxial tensile tests to determine their Young's modulus (stiffness) E, breaking stresses (strength) {sigma}b, and work of fracture W (C–D). (A) Young's modulus of peels vs. tensile force used in each cycle. Solid lines denote log-log linear regression curves (r2 = 0.929 and 0.899 for Sweet 100 and Inbred 10, respectively). Strain-hardening indicated by the increase in E. (B) Young's modulus of CM vs. equivalent tensile forces Pe used in each cycle. Solid lines denote log-log linear regression curves (r2 = 0.929 and 0.899 for Sweet 100 and Inbred 10 data, respectively). Strain-softening indicated by a decrease in E. (C) Comparisons of E, {sigma}b, and W of peels tested in uniaxial tension to failure. Differences in the values for E and {sigma}b for the two cultivars are statistically significantly different (P < 0.001); values for W are not statistically differerent. (D) Comparisons of E, {sigma}b, and W of CM tested in uniaxial tension to failure. Differences in the values for E and {sigma}b for the two cultivar CM are statistically significantly different (P < 0.001); values for W are not statistically different

 
The peels of the two cultivars also differed significantly with respect to average E, {sigma}b, and W (Fig. 6C). The E of Inbred 10 was, on average, 20% larger than that of Sweet 100 peels (i.e., 43.5 ± 4.83 MPa and 27.1 ± 1.93 MPa, respectively), whereas the {sigma}b of Inbred 10 peels was, on average, 15% greater than that of Sweet 100 (i.e., 1.16 ± 0.105 MPa and 0.97 ± 0.052 MPa, respectively). The average W for Inbred 10 and Sweet 100 peels was 154.7 ± 12.7 J/m2 and 127.8 ± 16.6 J/m2, respectively. The average {sigma}b of Inbred 10 was significantly larger than that of Sweet 100 (i.e., 0.17 ± 0.02 and 0.10 ± 0.02, respectively). Therefore, before failing in tension, Inbred 10 peels sustained, on average, significantly larger tensile forces and deformed more compared to Sweet 100. Inbred 10 peels also required, on average, almost 65% more energy per unit area to tear than Sweet 100 walls.

Mechanical properties of isolated CM
With increasing equivalent tensile forces Pe, the rate of creep decreased log-log linearly for both cultivars (Fig. 4C). The rate of creep of Inbred 10 CM was significantly slower than that of Sweet 100 CM. All pair-wise comparisons between the rates of creep observed for peels and their corresponding CM indicated no significant statistical differences. Creep tests using descending equivalent tensile forces indicated that the CM of both cultivars strain-hardened (data not shown), which was corroborated by sequential loading-unloading tests.

A strong linear relationship was observed between the magnitudes of instantaneous elastic strains and applied equivalent tensile forces; these strains increased more rapidly for Inbred 10 CM compared to Sweet 100 CM (Fig. 5C). Plastic strains accumulated less rapidly for Inbred 10 CM than for Sweet 100 (Fig. 5D), i.e., the total strains and the plastic (permanent) component of these strains observed for Sweet 100 CM exceeded those of Inbred 10.

Sequential loading-unloading tests indicated that the CM of both cultivars strain-hardens initially. The average E of Inbred 10 CM exceeded that of Sweet 100 CM for each loading-unloading cycle and the difference between the two increased with each successive cycle. Visual inspection and regression analyses of mean E vs. Pe indicated that the degree of strain-softening was more pronounced for Sweet 100 CM compared to Inbred 10 CM (Fig. 6B).

Tensile tests to failure showed that Inbred 10 CM is stiffer and has a higher work of fracture (but an equivalent breaking stress) compared to Sweet 100 CM (Fig. 6D). Specifically, the E of Inbred 10 and Sweet 100 CM was 70.3 ± 2.95 MPa and 51.3 ± 4.83 MPa, respectively; the W of Inbred 10 and Sweet 100 CM was 95.4 ± 10.4 J/m2 and 70.9 ± 7.09 J/m2, respectively. Thus, the CM stiffens the fruit walls of both cultivars, subepidermal cells increase the work of fracture, and Inbred 10 CM is substantially stiffer and more energy "absorbent" than Sweet 100 CM.

Peel and CM anatomy
The peels of both Inbred 10 and Sweet 100 consisted of a cuticularized surface layer underlain by collenchyma. Figures 7 and 8 represent peels from the two cultivars at the same magnification, showing a marked difference between cultivars in peel thickness and in thickness of the cuticularized outer periclinal epidermal wall. In addition, the cuticularized anticlinal walls of the Sweet 100 epidermis appeared in sectional view as "pegs" that were only tenuously attached to relatively thin, cuticularized inner periclinal epidermal walls (Fig. 8). In Inbred 10, the cuticle extended 2–3 cell layers into the interior (Fig. 7), thereby involving hypodermal cell walls. (A similar arrangement is illustrated by Petracek and Bukovac [1995] for tomato variety Pik Red, and for certain other tomato varieties by Chu and Thompson [1972] .) The interior cuticularized periclinal walls of Inbred 10 cuticle were all thicker than the cuticularized inner periclinal epidermal walls found in Sweet 100. The cuticularized anticlinal walls of the epidermis in Inbred 10 had broad attachments to the inner cuticularized periclinal walls of the epidermis and even into the hypodermal cell layers (Fig. 7).



View larger version (118K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Figs. 7–11. Sections of peels and isolated cuticles of Inbred 10 and Sweet 100. 7. Peel of Inbred 10. Cuticle extends 2–3 cell layers into the interior, interfacing with collenchyma. Unstained. 570x. 8. Peel of Sweet 100. Cuticle extends into inner periclinal walls of the epidermis, to the interface with collenchyma. In the epidermal cell at the right, the cellulosic wall is grey to transparent (white). In the second cell from the right, the protoplast is more withdrawn from the cellulose wall, making the surface of the latter easier to see. The next cell to the left shows the anticlinal wall of the cell in tangential view. Part of the protoplast appears in the image of this cell, confirming that the connections between the cuticularized anticlinal walls and the cuticularized inner periclinal epidermal walls are tenuous. Unstained. 570x. 9. Peel of Sweet 100, stained with chlor-zinc-iodine. The cellulosic walls are dark grey and swollen. 920x. 10. Isolated cuticle from Inbred 10, stained with chlor-zinc-iodine. Cellulose walls are stained dark grey. 560x. 11. A, B. Isolated cuticle from Sweet 100, unstained, as seen between crossed polarizers (A), and with the addition of a rose plate (B). The obliquely oriented cellulose walls show optical activity in A, and opposite color shifts in B, showing that the net orientation of wall fibrils follows the oblique orientations of the walls. 1150x

 
Cellulose walls occurred within the cuticularized region in both Inbred 10 and Sweet 100. Cellulose walls were difficult to detect in unstained sections without the use of crossed-polarizers, especially in Inbred 10 (Fig. 7). In Sweet 100, the cellulosic epidermal walls of the epidermis appeared as transparent to gray areas along the anticlinal and outer periclinal walls (Fig. 8). Cellulosic walls swelled when stained with chlor-zinc-iodine (Figs. 9, 10), persisted in the isolated cuticles (Figs. 10, 11) from both varieties, and were more uniform in thickness in Inbred 10 than in the cuticle of Sweet 100. In the later cultivar, the thickness of cellulose walls confined by cuticularized walls was greatest along the anticlinal facets of the cells and least along the inner periclinal wall (Figs. 8, 9). Dichroism of stained walls and the use of the rose plate with unstained walls (Fig. 11A–B) indicated that the net orientation of wall microfibrils followed the contour of the walls, giving a preponderance of cellulose fibrils in the periclinal orientation in Inbred 10 (Fig. 10), but not in Sweet 100 (Figs. 9, 11). There was no qualitative difference in the staining of peels vs. isolated CM by chlor-zinc-iodine, but we did not evaluate our materials for possible quantitative differences.


    DISCUSSION
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 LITERATURE CITED
 
Our enzyme-treated CM samples have cellulosic walls despite digestion with cellulase. From a rheological perspective these walls must contribute to the mechanical behavior of peels and isolated CM. Therefore, the presence of these walls during mechanical tests is biologically justified, especially since the cuticular membrane CM sensu stricto is an integral part of the cell wall infrastructure (Esau, 1977 ).

To the best of our knowledge, no prior study of the tomato fruit has examined the mechanical and anatomical relationships between the isolated CM and intact samples of the outer fruit wall, nor has any other study employed the spectrum of mechanical tests used here to quantify the mechanical behavior of these structures. Our tests indicate that the outer fruit wall and the CM of Inbred 10 and Sweet 100 cherry tomatoes are isotropic, viscoelastic, and, to different degrees, strain-hardening structures. The rheological behavior of the outer fruit walls of both cultivars mirrors that of their CM, which serves as a "tensile skin" whose mechanical properties and behavior are highly correlated with thickness.

The rheological behavior of the CM and the magnitudes of its mechanical properties we report are consistent with previous studies. For example, Wiedemann and Neinhuis (1998 : table 1) show that the Young's modulus and breaking stress of hydrated tomato CM are on the order of 60 MPa and ≥2 MPa, respectively. Likewise, the viscoelasticity of the CM has been observed previously, whereas inspection of the data graphed by Thompson (2001 : e.g., fig. 3) from sequential loading-unloading cycle tests indicates that the CM rate of creep decreases with successive cycles, which is consistent with strain-hardening. Finally, Petracek and Bukovac (1995) , who also show that the CM is viscoelastic, report as we do that elastic strains typically exceed plastic strains when the hydrated CM is modestly extended. Thus, a general mechanical phenomenology can be adduced for the tomato CM, although significant variation exists regarding the manifestation of this phenomenology and the absolute magnitudes of material properties (see Fig. 6).

That the mechanical properties of the CM mirror in large part those of the fruit wall peels is not surprising. The average CM work of fracture for both cultivars is comparable to that of polyesters and some epoxy resins (i.e., W ~ 100 J/m2; see Gordon, 1978 ). Because the peripheral cells of a hydrostatically inflated organ sustain the largest tensile stresses (see Kutschera, 1989 ; Niklas and Paolillo, 1997 , 1998 ), the CM is ideally positioned to cope with mechanical stresses. However, our data indicate that the mechanical role of subepidermal tissues cannot be neglected, principally because a material's work of fracture is inversely proportional to its Young's modulus. Thus, if the fruit subepidermal cells have a lower E than the CM, they are capable of "absorbing" strain energy such that significantly more energy is required to propagate a crack through the fruit wall than through its isolated CM. The effect of the tomato fruit subepidermis is evident from comparisons of the W between the isolated CM and peels.

Unfortunately, the subepidermis E of tomato fruits can only be inferred, because we were unable to enzymatically isolate this tissue for mechanical tests. However, a Voigt-model (see Niklas, 1992b ) indicates that this tissue has an E on the order of 24 MPa, which is significantly less than that of the CM of either cultivar. This model assumes that the Young's modulus of the outer fruit wall EOFW equals the CM Young's modulus ECM (times the decimal volume fraction fCM of the CM) plus the Young's modulus of the subepidermis ESC (times its decimal fraction fSC contribution), i.e., EOFW = ECMfCM + ESCfSC. For Sweet 100 peels, on average, EOFW = 27.1 MPa, ECM = 51.3 MPa, and fCM = 0.20 such that fSC = 0.80 for which the Voigt model gives ESC = 21.5 MPa. For Inbred 10, on average, EOFW = 43.5 MPa, ECM = 70.3 MPa, and fCM = 0.25 such that fSC = 0.75 and ESC = 25.9 MPa. The range of values predicted by this model (i.e., 21 MPa and 26 MPa) is numerically consistent with the E reported for collenchyma from Apium graveolens and Levisticum officinale leaves, i.e., 22 MPa (data from Esau [1936] and Ambronn [1881] , respectively; see Niklas, 1992a ).

The physical attachment of the CM to collenchyma suggests that strain incompatibility may occur when peels are extended beyond the CM breaking strain, i.e., the bilaminate structure of the outer fruit wall may debond. This phenomenon was observed during some of our tensile tests to failure. Micro-cracks developed on the CM surface and the collenchymatous subepidermis increasingly supported the applied mechanical loads. This strain incompatibility, which was far more pronounced for Sweet 100 than for Inbred 10 peels, is likely biologically important. If a fruit imbibes water and expands rapidly, its CM may experience tensile forces that exceed its capacity to extend elastically, producing micro-failures that expose underlying cells to dehydration.

This scenario may explain why the fruits of Sweet 100 crack when attached to plants, whereas those of Inbred 10 do not. Nevertheless, equally plausible (and nonexclusive) scenarios for cracking exist. For example, the CM of Sweet 100 ultimately strain-softens when extended and relaxed repeatedly (see Fig. 6C). Mechanical "fatigue" may cause a fruit wall to rupture during repeated diurnal cycles of fruit expansion-contraction. In contrast, the CM of Inbred 10 continues to strain-harden during equivalent loading-unloading cycles, thereby increasing its capacity to sustain larger tensile forces. Likewise, the large plastic strains exhibited by Sweet 100 CM may result in rapid dehydration of the underlying subepidermis due to the thinning of the CM. If the inner fruit volume is conserved, the outer portions of the fruit will shrink and crack.

We believe that strain-hardening and strain-softening reflects the response of microfibrils in the CM to tensile forces. Prior work indicates that fibrillar components in cell walls can progressively align in the direction of applied tensile forces such that the effective Young's modulus increases (see Köhler and Spatz, 2002 ). However, when excessively extended, the fibrils may slip past one another (as their matrix deforms) and the Young's modulus decreases. Although speculative, this phenomenology suggests a simple rheological model for the behavior of the tomato CM—one that accounts for the relative abundance of CM fibrils as well as the anatomical differences between Inbred 10 and Sweet 100 fruit (Fig. 12).



View larger version (61K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 12. Schematic of the strain-hardening behavior of the cuticular membrane CM (viewed on edge) of Inbred 10 (A–B) and Sweet 100 (C–D) in the native state (A and C) and extended by a force P (direction of application indicated by arrows in B and D). The CM has randomly oriented fibrillar components (depicted by dots and lines); the noncuticularized cell wall (CW) surrounding the cell lumen (CL) has oriented fibrillar components (uniformly spaced lines) for clarity of comparison with the CM. The application of the force P results in the alignment of fibrillar components parallel to the direction of the force application (B and D), which strain-hardens the CM and CW. Excessive extension by P will cause the CM matrix (shaded areas) to deform and fibrillar components to slip past one another, resulting in strain-softening (not shown). See Discussion for details

 
According to this model, a tensile force causes cell wall fibrils to increasingly align parallel to the direction of the applied force, thereby increasing the CM Young's modulus (strain-hardening). When excessively extended, fibrils begin to slip past one another decreasing the CM Young's modulus (strain-softening). The magnitude of the "critical" force will depend on the original net orientation and abundance of CM fibrils, which will correlate to some degree with the thickness of the CM. Because the CM of Sweet 100 develops in subepidermal cell walls to a lesser degree than that of Inbred 10, this model predicts that the CM of Sweet 100 will experience strain-softening at smaller tensile forces than the CM of Inbred 10.

Importantly, the epidermis of a hydrostatically inflated spherical fruit wall experiences equivalent orthogonal biaxial tensile forces (see Henry and Allen, 1974 ; Haman and Burgess, 1986 ) such that strain-hardening is unlikely to occur if fibrils are randomly oriented. However, basic engineering theory indicates that any departure from a spherical geometry or any bias in the net orientation of CM fibrillar components will produce some degree of strain-hardening. For example, an internally pressurized prolate geometry will experience circumferential tensile stresses that are larger than their corresponding longitudinal stresses (see Gordon, 1978 ; Niklas, 1992a ). Even if the fibrils in its outer "tensile skin" are randomly oriented, such a geometry is predicted to rupture longitudinally when excessively pressurized from within. In this regard, Sweet 100 fruits are prolate and they invariably crack longitudinally.

In summary, our data indicate that a strong positive relationship exists between the anatomy of the tomato outer fruit wall (particularly CM thickness) and its mechanical properties (e.g., stiffness and work of fracture). But it is premature to suggest that any particular suite of anatomical features provides a reliably consistent qualitative diagnostic for the rheology of the tomato fruit wall because the fruit wall and its CM have a complex cellular and subcellular infrastructure (and chemistry) that cannot be canonically characterized across all species or even across the cultivars of a single species (see Hankinson and Rao, 1979 ; Jeffree, 1996 ; Kolattukudy, 1996 ; Wiedemann and Neinhuis, 1998). It is nevertheless clear that the mechanical behavior of the CM is intimately linked to anatomy and that the CM is a biologically important component of the primary plant body for mechanical as well as physiological reasons.


    FOOTNOTES
 
1 The authors thank Prof. Hanns-Christof Spatz (Institut für Biologie III, Universität Freiburg) who as an Associate Editor of the American Journal of Botany supervised the review process and served as the acting Editor-in-Chief for this manuscript, and two anonymous reviewers whose comments improved this paper. Funding (to K. J. N.) from the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Cornell University, and from the Spanish Ministry of Education and Cajamar (to A. J. M.) is gratefully acknowledged. Back

6 kjn2{at}cornell.edu ; Phone: 607-255-8727; FAX: 607-255-5407 Back


    LITERATURE CITED
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 LITERATURE CITED
 
Ambronn H. 1881 Über die Entwickelungsgeschichte und die mechanischen Gewebesystems. Jahrbuch der Wissenschaften Botanische 12: 473-541

Anderson T. L. 1995 Fracture mechanics—fundamentals and applications. CRC Press, Boca Raton, Florida, USA

Bennett H. S. 1950 The microscopical investigation of biological materials with polarized light. In M. R. McClung Jones [ed.], McClung's handbook of microscopical technique, 591–677. Paul B. Hoeber, New York, New York, USA

Chu M. C.-Y. A. E. Thompson 1972 Comparative anatomy of pericarps of four tomato mutants. Journal of the American Society of Horticultural Science 97: 478-481

Eller B. M. 1985 Epidermis und spektrale Eigenschaften pflanzlicher Obenflächen. Berichte der Deutschen Botanischen Gesellschaft 98: 465-475

Esau K. 1936 Ontogeny and structure of collenchyma and of vascular tissues in celery petioles. Hilgardia 10: 431-476

Esau K. 1977 Anatomy of seed plants, 2nd ed. John Wiley and Sons, New York, New York, USA

Gordon J. E. 1978 Structures. Plenum, New York, New York, USA

Haman D. Z. G. J. Burgess 1986 Theoretical development for measuring the elastic properties of spherical cuticular membranes. Transactions of the American Society of Agricultural Engineers 29: 1470-1476

Hankinson B. V. N. M. Rao 1979 Histological and physical behavior of tomato skins susceptible to cracking. Transactions of the American Society of Agricultural Engineers 104: 577-581

Henry Z. A. W. H. Allen 1974 Use of hydrostatic pressure in development of stress strain information for tomato skins. Transactions of the American Society of Agricultural Engineers 99: 787-792

Holloway P. J. 1982 Structure and histochemistry of plant cuticular membranes: an overview. In D. F. Cutler, K. L. Alvin, and C. E. Price [eds.], The plant cuticle, 1–32. Academic Press, London, UK

Jeffree C. E. 1996 Structure and ontogeny of plant cuticles. In G. Kerstiens [ed.], Plant cuticles: an integrated functional approach, 33–82. BIOS Scientific Publishers, Oxford, UK

Juniper B. E. 1991 The leaf from the inside and the outside: a microbe's perspective. In J. H. Andrews and S. S. Hirano [eds.], Microbial ecology of leaves, 22–42. Springer Verlag, New York, New York, USA

Köhler L. H.-C. Spatz 2002 Micromechanics of plant tissues beyond the linear-elastic range. Planta 215: 33-40[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]

Kolattukudy P. E. 1980 Cutin, suberin, and waxes. In P. K. Stumpf [ed.], Lipids: structure and function, 571–646. Academic Press, New York, New York, USA

Kolattukudy P. E. 1996 Biosynthetic pathways of cutin and waxes, and their sensitivity to environmental stresses. In G. Kerstiens [ed.], Plant cuticles: an integrated functional approach, 83–108. BIOS Scientific Publishers, Oxford, UK

Kraemer G. P. D. J. Chapman 1991 Biomechanics and alginic acid composition during hydrodynamic adaptation by Egregia menziesii (Phaeophyta) juveniles. Journal of Phycology 27: 47-53[CrossRef][ISI]

Kutschera U. 1989 Tissue stresses in growing plant organs. Physiologia Plantarum 77: 157-163[CrossRef]

Niklas K. J. 1992a Plant biomechanics. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, Illinois, USA

Niklas K. J. 1992b Voigt and Reuss models for predicting changes in Young's modulus of dehydrating plant organs. Annals of Botany 70: 347-355[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Niklas K. J. D. J. Paolillo Jr 1997 The role of the epidermis as a stiffening agent in Tulipa (Liliaceae) stems. American Journal of Botany 84: 735-744[Abstract]

Niklas K. J. D. J. Paolillo Jr 1998 Preferential states of longitudinal tension in the outer tissues of Taraxacum officinale (Asteraceae) peduncles. American Journal of Botany 85: 1068-1081[Abstract]

Orgell W. H. 1955 The isolation of plant cuticle with pectic enzymes. Plant Physiology 30: 78-80[Free Full Text]

Peacock H. A. 1966 Elementary microtechnique. E. Arnold, London, UK

Petracek P. D. M. J. Bukovac 1995 Rheological properties of enzymatically isolated tomato fruit cuticle. Plant Physiology 109: 675-679[Abstract]

Riederer M. 1990 Estimating partitioning and transport of organic chemicals in the foliage/atmosphere system: discussion of a fugacity- based model. Environmental Science and Technology 24: 829-837[CrossRef]

Riederer M. L. Schreiber 2001 Protecting against water loss: analysis of the barrier properties of plant cuticles. Journal of Experimental Botany 52: 2023-2032[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Roelofsen P. A. 1959 The plant cell wall. Gebrüder Borntraeger, Berlin, Germany

Thompson D. S. 2001 Extensiometric determination of the rheological properties of the epidermis of growing tomato fruit. Journal of Experimental Botany 52: 1291-1301[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Schönherr J. 1982 Resistance of plant surfaces to water loss: transport properties of cutin, suberin and associated lipids. In O. L. Lange, P. S. Nobel, C. B. Osmond, and H. Ziegler [eds.], Encyclopedia of plant physiology, 153–179. Springer Verlag, Berlin, Germany

Sekse L. 1995 Fruit cracking in sweet cherries (Prunus avium L.). Some physiological aspects—a mini review. Scientia Horticulture 63: 135-141[CrossRef]

Wattendorf J. P. J. Holloway 1980 Studies on the ultrastructure and histochemistry of plant cuticles: the cuticular membrane of Agave americana L. in situ. Annals of Botany 46: 13-28[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Wiedemann P. C. Neinhuis 1998 Biomechanics of isolated plant cuticles. Botanica Acta 111: 28-34[ISI]

Yamada Y. S. H. Wittwer M. J. Bukovac 1964 Penetration of ions through isolated cuticles. Plant Physiology 39: 28-32[Free Full Text]




This article has been cited by other articles:


Home page
J Exp BotHome page
F. Guillon, S. Philippe, B. Bouchet, M.-F. Devaux, P. Frasse, B. Jones, M. Bouzayen, and M. Lahaye
Down-regulation of an Auxin Response Factor in the tomato induces modification of fine pectin structure and tissue architecture
J. Exp. Bot., February 10, 2008; (2008) erm323v1.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
J Exp BotHome page
G. Lopez-Casado, A. J. Matas, E. Dominguez, J. Cuartero, and A. Heredia
Biomechanics of isolated tomato (Solanum lycopersicum L.) fruit cuticles: the role of the cutin matrix and polysaccharides
J. Exp. Bot., November 1, 2007; (2007) erm233v1.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
Plant Physiol.Home page
M. Saladie, A. J. Matas, T. Isaacson, M. A. Jenks, S. M. Goodwin, K. J. Niklas, R. Xiaolin, J. M. Labavitch, K. A. Shackel, A. R. Fernie, et al.
A Reevaluation of the Key Factors That Influence Tomato Fruit Softening and Integrity
Plant Physiology, June 1, 2007; 144(2): 1012 - 1028.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
Am. J. Bot.Home page
A. J. Matas, G. Lopez-Casado, J. Cuartero, and A. Heredia
Relative humidity and temperature modify the mechanical properties of isolated tomato fruit cuticles
Am. J. Botany, March 1, 2005; 92(3): 462 - 468.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
J Exp BotHome page
H. Bargel and C. Neinhuis
Tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) fruit growth and ripening as related to the biomechanical properties of fruit skin and isolated cuticle
J. Exp. Bot., March 1, 2005; 56(413): 1049 - 1060.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


This Article
Right arrow Abstract Freely available
Right arrow Full Text (PDF)
Right arrow Submit a response
Right arrow Alert me when this article is cited
Right arrow Alert me when eLetters are posted
Right arrow Alert me if a correction is posted
Services
Right arrow Email this article to a friend
Right arrow Similar articles in this journal
Right arrow Similar articles in ISI Web of Science
Right arrow Alert me to new issues of the journal
Right arrow Download to citation manager
Right arrow reprints & permissions
Citing Articles
Right arrow Citing Articles via HighWire
Right arrow Citing Articles via ISI Web of Science (13)
Right arrow Citing Articles via Google Scholar
Google Scholar
Right arrow Articles by Matas, A. J.
Right arrow Articles by Niklas, K. J.
Right arrow Search for Related Content
PubMed
Right arrow Articles by Matas, A. J.
Right arrow Articles by Niklas, K. J.
Agricola
Right arrow Articles by Matas, A. J.
Right arrow Articles by Niklas, K. J.


HOME HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ARCHIVE SEARCH TABLE OF CONTENTS