Colletotrichum acutatum, a fungal pathogen that causes soft rot in fruit, produced polygalacturonases (PGS) when grown on pectin or apple wall polysaccharides, as revealed by a clear zone around the well filled with C. acutatum medium in a radial diffusion assay. A PG-inhibiting protein (PGIP) was also extracted from healthy stored 'Cripps Pink' apple and its activity was tested in vitro and in vivo against an endo-PG (EC 3.2.1.15) of C. acutatum. In vitro trails the inhibition determined by radial diffusion assay was over 62% after 24 h while in inoculated fruit the inhibition ranged from 33.9% to 54.4% after 4 days at 20 degrees C. The PG inhibitor extracted from healthy skin apples was a heat-denaturable protein since the halo produced by protein extracted from C. acutatum and added to boiled protein extracted from healthy skin apple tissue was 246 mm(2), significantly higher than the halo required to better understand the nature of the substance responsible for C. acutatum inhibition in apple and to evaluate the possibility of manipulating the PGIP levels in fruit to reduce soft rot caused by C. acutatum. (C) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.