Oxidizing enzymes and vitamin C in tomatoes
- 1 July 1943
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Portland Press Ltd. in Biochemical Journal
- Vol. 37 (2) , 259-265
- https://doi.org/10.1042/bj0370259
Abstract
Oxidising enzymes occur in highest concentration in the skin, ripe or unripe. The flesh and seeds contain less and the juice practically none. The pH of the ripe and unripe skin is 8.0-9.6, of the juice 3.9-5.0 and of the flesh 8.4-9.0 when unripe and 4.6-5.5 when ripe. When oxidase is set free by disruption of the tissues it destroys vit. C most rapidly in the skin (67% in 1 rain.), less rapidly in the flesh and slowest in the juice. The conc. of vit. C is 2 or 3 times as high in the skin as in the flesh or juice, and about 10 times as high as in the seeds. Because of the higher proportion of skin, very small tomatoes may contain higher concs. of vit. C, but the differences observed were not large enough to discredit the findings of Sansome and Zilva on polyploidy. Exposure to sunshine during ripening increases the vit. C content, but this is also affected by the oxidase, which may destroy much of the vit. under certain conditions.This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Ascorbic acid oxidase and the state of ascorbic acid in vegetable tissuesBiochemical Journal, 1937
- The oxidation of l-ascorbic acid by plant enzymesBiochemical Journal, 1937
- Some relations between ascorbic acid and glutathioneBiochemical Journal, 1936
- Distribution of vitamin C in different parts of common Indian foodstuffsBiochemical Journal, 1936
- Observations on the estimation of ascorbic acid by titrationBiochemical Journal, 1935
- Observations on the chemical method for the estimation of vitamin CBiochemical Journal, 1935
- The ascorbic acid content of certain citrous fruits and some manufactured citrous productsBiochemical Journal, 1934
- The reversible enzymic oxidation of vitamin CBiochemical Journal, 1934
- Polyploidy and vitamin CBiochemical Journal, 1933
- Vitamins and other Constituents of Grape-fruit RindBiochemical Journal, 1926