Banana: Ethylene — The Ripening Hormone

Category: nutritional-chemical Updated: 2026-02-25 Topic: banana

Ethylene (C₂H₄) triggers banana ripening via the ACC synthase → ACC oxidase pathway. Commercial ripening rooms expose green bananas to 100–150 ppm exogenous ethylene at 16–18°C for 24–48 hours to initiate the climacteric ripening response.

Ethylene is a two-carbon gas — the simplest alkene — and the master regulator of banana ripening. 🍌 Without it, Cavendish bananas harvested green would sit indefinitely in a state of suspended development. With it, an irreversible cascade of biochemical changes transforms starchy, astringent fruit into the sweet, aromatic, bright yellow product sold in supermarkets worldwide.

Biosynthesis: The Yang Cycle

Ethylene biosynthesis follows the methionine (Yang) cycle, named after biochemist Shang Fa Yang who characterized it in the 1970s. The pathway in banana tissue:

StepSubstrateProductEnzyme
1MethionineS-Adenosylmethionine (SAM)SAM synthetase
2SAM1-Aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC)ACC synthase (ACS)
3ACCEthylene (C₂H₄) + CO₂ + HCNACC oxidase (ACO)

ACC synthase is the rate-limiting enzyme and primary regulatory point. In preclimacteric green bananas, ACS expression is suppressed. Ethylene signaling — either internally generated or from exogenous sources — triggers a positive feedback loop: ethylene induces ACS gene expression, generating more ACC, producing more ethylene. This autocatalytic system drives the climacteric ripening surge.

Climacteric vs Non-Climacteric Fruit

Banana is a climacteric fruit — it undergoes a defined surge in respiration rate and ethylene production that can be triggered independently of the plant and continues after harvest. This is commercially essential: bananas are harvested green and hard, shipped at 13–14°C (below the chilling injury threshold of ~12°C), and only ripened at destination.

Climacteric FruitsNon-Climacteric Fruits
Banana, apple, pear, mangoGrape, citrus, strawberry, cherry
Can ripen post-harvestMust ripen on the plant
Respond to exogenous ethyleneNo climacteric burst
Ethylene autocatalytic (System II)Ethylene non-autocatalytic (System I)

Non-climacteric fruits do not benefit from ethylene treatment — grapes ripened with ethylene gas simply deteriorate rather than sweeten.

Ethylene Concentration at Each Ripening Stage

Internal tissue ethylene levels (measured by headspace gas chromatography):

StageInternal Ethylene (µL/L)Respiration Rate (CO₂ mL/kg/hr)
1 (green)< 0.115–20
2–30.1–0.520–40
4 (climacteric onset)0.5–2.040–80
5 (climacteric peak)2.0–10.080–150
61.0–5.060–100
7< 1.030–50

The climacteric CO₂ peak at stage 4–5 corresponds precisely to the most rapid starch-to-sugar conversion period documented in sugar profile data.

Commercial Ripening Room Protocol

The global banana supply chain depends on controlled ethylene ripening rooms at destination markets. Standard FAO/industry protocol:

  1. Incoming temperature: Fruit arrives at 13–14°C from refrigerated shipping
  2. Warming: Temperature raised to 16–18°C over 12–24 hours
  3. Ethylene injection: 100–150 ppm ethylene gas introduced for 24–48 hours in sealed room
  4. Ventilation: Ethylene purged after initiation; CO₂ vented to prevent suppression of ACO
  5. Ripening duration: 4–7 days to reach stage 4–5 for retail display

Higher ethylene concentrations (> 150 ppm) do not accelerate ripening proportionally and can cause uneven coloring. Temperature is critical: below 13°C, ripening stalls; above 22°C, ripening accelerates but produces poor flavor development and shortened shelf life.

Ethylene Inhibition: 1-MCP and Commercial Delay

🍌 1-Methylcyclopropene (1-MCP), sold commercially as SmartFresh, is the primary ethylene inhibitor used in commercial banana storage. It works by irreversibly binding to ethylene receptors (ETR1, ERS1 family) in plant tissue, blocking signal transduction even in the presence of ethylene.

A single 1-MCP treatment (typical dose: 0.625–1.0 µL/L for 12–24 hours at 20°C) can extend pre-climacteric shelf life by 7–14 days, enabling longer transit and reduced waste in export supply chains.

Home Ripening and Storage Hacks

These are ethylene-grounded, not folklore:

MethodMechanismEffect
Paper bag enclosureConcentrates emitted ethylene around fruitAccelerates ripening 1–2 days
Apple or pear proximityApples emit 5–10x more ethylene than bananasCross-accelerates ripening
Wrap stems in plasticStems are primary emission siteReduces ethylene loss, slows ripening
Refrigerate ripe bananasCold suppresses ACO enzyme activityHalts ripening (peel blackens, flesh fine)
Separate from other fruitRemoves ethylene exposure from high-emittersSlows ripening by 1–3 days

The interaction between ethylene-driven ripening and the resulting pH changes in banana flesh is examined on the pH levels page.

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