The Effect of Methyl Jasmonate-Doped Nano-Particles and Methyl Jasmonate on the Phenolics and Quality in Monastrell Grapes during the Ripening Period
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Gil Muñoz, Rocío; Parra Torrejón, Belén; Ramírez Rodríguez, Gloria Belén; Delgado López, José ManuelEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Grape Elicitors Nanotechnology Sustainability Maturation Amorphous Crystalline
Date
2023-02-01Referencia bibliográfica
Gil-Muñoz, R... [et al.]. The Effect of Methyl Jasmonate- Doped Nano-Particles and Methyl Jasmonate on the Phenolics and Quality in Monastrell Grapes during the Ripening Period. Appl. Sci. 2023, 13, 1906. [https://doi.org/10.3390/app13031906]
Patrocinador
ERDF, A way of making Europe MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033; European Union (Next Generation EU/PRTR) RTI-2018-095794-B-C21 RTI-2018-095794-A-C22; NanoSmart RYC-2016-21042 PDC2022-133191-100; Junta de Andalucia DOC_01383Résumé
The effect produced by the application of methyl jasmonate (MeJA) in vineyards is clear, but
this is a product that, despite its efficiency, is expensive, volatile and difficult to dissolve. Regarding
increasing the MeJA use efficiency, new forms of application are proposed in this article, such as
the use of calcium phosphate nanoparticles with two different morphologies: amorphous (ACP)
and crystalline (Ap). In addition, few of the studies addressed so far have assessed MeJA’s effect
during the ripening period of the grapes. As a result of this, in this article, we evaluated/studied for
first time the effect of the different MeJA formats on the phenolic composition of the grape during
the ripening period. The results showed small differences between the two morphologies of the
nanoparticles, which promoted a significant a delay in the sugar accumulation and an increase
in the different phenolic compounds compared to the control. Such improvements were not as
significant as those induced by the conventional MeJA treatment. However, it is remarkable that
when the nanoparticles were applied, we used a concentration 10 times lower than when it is used
conventionally. Therefore, these findings revealed that both types of calcium phosphate nanoparticles
are potential MeJA nanocarriers allowing for the increase in the quality of the grapes at the time of
harvest in a more sustainable way, although future studies must be carried out in order to optimise
the concentration with which these nanoparticles are doped.