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1.
Cell suspension cultures were initiated from callus derived from xylem tissues of peach [Prunus persica (L.) Batsch]. Cold acclimation was induced (LT50 of-13°C) in cell suspensions at 3°C in the dark for 10 days. Freezing tolerance returned to the level of nonacclimated cells (LT50 of –4.5°C) when cold-acclimated cells were transferred to 24°C (in dark) for 3 days. Addition of 75 M abscisic acid (ABA) to the growth medium failed to induce cold acclimation after cells were cultured for 5 days at 24°C. Microvacuolation, cytoplasmic augmentation and disappearance of starch grains were observed in cells that were cold-acclimated by exposure to low temperature. Similar ultrastructural alterations were not observed in ABA-treated cells. Several qualitative and quantitative changes in proteins were noted during both cold acclimation and ABA treatment. Both the ultrastructural and protein changes observed during cold acclimation were reversed during deacclimation. The relationship of these changes to cold acclimation in peach cell-cultures is discussed.Abbreviations ABA abscisic acid - 2,4-d 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid - IBA indole-3-butyric acid - Ms Murashige & Skoog - PMSF phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride - LT50 or Freezing Tolerance temperature that resulted in 50% decrease in TTC reduction - TTC 2,3,5-triphenyltetrazolium chloride  相似文献   

2.
Freezing injury is a major factor limiting the geographical distribution of plant species and the growth and yield of crop plants. Plants from temperate climates are able to increase their freezing tolerance during exposure to low but non‐freezing temperatures in a process termed cold acclimation. Damage to cellular membranes is the major cause of freezing injury in plants, and membrane lipid composition is strongly modified during cold acclimation. Forward and reverse genetic approaches have been used to probe the role of specific lipid‐modifying enzymes in the freezing tolerance of plants. In the present paper we describe an alternative ecological genomics approach that relies on the natural genetic variation within a species. Arabidopsis thaliana has a wide geographical range throughout the Northern Hemisphere with significant natural variation in freezing tolerance that was used for a comparative analysis of the lipidomes of 15 Arabidopsis accessions using ultra‐performance liquid chromatography coupled to Fourier‐transform mass spectrometry, allowing the detection of 180 lipid species. After 14 days of cold acclimation at 4°C the plants from most accessions had accumulated massive amounts of storage lipids, with most of the changes in long‐chain unsaturated triacylglycerides, while the total amount of membrane lipids was only slightly changed. Nevertheless, major changes in the relative amounts of different membrane lipids were also evident. The relative abundance of several lipid species was highly correlated with the freezing tolerance of the accessions, allowing the identification of possible marker lipids for plant freezing tolerance.  相似文献   

3.
4.
A. Azocar  F. Rada  G. Goldstein 《Oecologia》1988,75(1):156-160
Summary Freezing tolerance as a cold resistance mechanism is described for the first time in a plant growing in the tropical range of the Andean high mountains. Draba chionophila, the plant in which freezing tolerance was found, is the vascular plant which reaches the highest altitudes in the Venezuelan Andes (approximately 4700m). Night cycles of air and leaf temperature were studied in the field to determine the temperature at which leaf freezing began. In the laboratory, thermal analysis and freezing injury determinations were also carried out. From both field and laboratory experiments, it was determined that freezing of the leaf tissue, as well as root and pith tissue, initiated at a temperature of approximately-5.0°C, while freezing injury occurred at approximately-12.0°C for the pith, and below-14.0°C for roots and leaves. This difference in temperature suggests that the plant still survives freezing in the-5.0 to-14.0°C range. Daily cycles of leaf osmotic potential and soluble carbohydrate concentration were also determined in an attempt to explain some of the changes occurring in this species during the nighttime temperature period. A comparison between Andean and African high mountain plants from the point of view of cold resistance mechanisms is made.  相似文献   

5.
Summary Exogenously applied abscisic acid (ABA) induced frost hardening of Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. The freezing tolerance of A. thaliana plantlets treated with ABA (15 mg/l) at a non-acclimating temperature (20 °C) appeared to increase even more rapidly than following a low temperature (4 °C) acclimation. Analysis of in vivo-labelled soluble proteins by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis revealed several low temperature — or ABA — induced proteins, which where not produced in non-acclimated plants. A subset of these proteins was induced by both low temperature and ABA treatments, suggesting that they might be directly involved in the frost hardening process in A. thaliana.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract Chill‐susceptible insects are able to improve their survival of acute cold exposure over both the short term (i.e. hardening at a relatively severe temperature) and longer term (i.e. acclimation responses at milder temperatures over a longer time frame). However, the mechanistic overlap of these responses is not clear. Four larval stages of four different strains of Drosophila melanogaster are used to test whether low temperature acclimation (10 °C for 48 h) improves the acute cold tolerance (LT90, ~2 h) of larvae, and whether acclimated larvae still show hardening responses after brief exposures to nonlethal cold or heat, or a combination of the two. Acclimation results in increased cold tolerance in three of four strains, with variation among instars. However, if acclimation is followed by hardening pre‐treatments, there is no improvement in acute cold survival. It is concluded that short‐term thermal responses (e.g. hardening) may be of more ecological relevance to short‐lived life stages such as larvae, and that the mechanisms of low temperature hardening and acclimation in D. melanogaster may be antagonistic, rather than complementary.  相似文献   

7.
The freezing tolerance of Arabidopsis thaliana is enhanced by cold acclimation, resulting in changes in the compositions and function of the plasma membrane. Here, we show that a dynamin‐related protein 1E (DRP1E), which is thought to function in the vesicle trafficking pathway in cells, is related to an increase in freezing tolerance during cold acclimation. DRP1E accumulated in sphingolipid and sterol‐enriched plasma membrane domains after cold acclimation. Analysis of drp1e mutants clearly showed that DRP1E is required for full development of freezing tolerance after cold acclimation. DRP1E fused with green fluorescent protein was visible as small foci that overlapped with fluorescent dye‐labelled plasma membrane, providing evidence that DRP1E localizes non‐uniformly in specific areas of the plasma membrane. These results suggest that DRP1E accumulates in sphingolipid and sterol‐enriched plasma membrane domains and plays a role in freezing tolerance development during cold acclimation.  相似文献   

8.
The sycamore lace bug, Corythucha ciliata is a new, invasive pest of Platanus trees in China. Although C. ciliata is often subjected to acute low temperatures in early winter and spring in northern and eastern China, the cold tolerance of C. ciliata has not been well studied. The objectives of this study were to determine whether adults of C. ciliata are capable of rapid cold hardening (RCH), and to compare the benefits of RCH vs. cold acclimation (ACC) in the laboratory. When the adult females incubated at 26 °C were transferred directly to the discriminating temperature (−12 °C) for 2 h, survival was only 22%. However, exposure to 0 °C for 4 h before transfer to −12 °C for 2 h induced RCH, i.e., increased survival to 68%. RCH could also be induced by gradual cooling of the insects at rates between 0.1 and 0.25 °C min−1. The protection against cold shock obtained through RCH at 0 °C for 4 h was lost within 1 h if the adults were returned to 26 °C before exposure to −12 °C. Survival at both −12 and −5 °C was greater for RCH-treated than for ACC-treated adults (for ACC, adults were kept at 15 °C for 5 days), and the lethal temperature (2 h exposure) was lower for RCH-treated than for ACC-treated adults. The results suggest that RCH may help C. ciliata survive the acute low temperatures that often occur in early winter and early spring in northern and eastern China.  相似文献   

9.
This study was carried out to determine upper (CTMax) and lower (CTMin) thermal tolerance, acclimation response ratio (ARR) and thermal tolerance polygon of the European sea bass inhabiting the Iskenderun Bay, the most southeasterly part of the Mediterranean Sea, at three acclimation temperatures (15, 20, 25 °C). Acclimation temperature significantly affected the CTMin and CTMax values of the fish. At 0.3 °C min−1 cooling or heating rate, CTMin ranged from 4.10 to 6.77 °C and CTMax ranged from 33.23 to 35.95 °C in three acclimation temperatures from 15 to 25 °C. Thermal tolerance polygon for the juveniles at the tested acclimation temperatures was calculated to be 296.14 °C2. In general, the current data show that our sea bass population possesses acclimation response ratio (ARR) values (0.25-0.27) similar to some tropical species. The cold tolerance values attained for this species ranged from 4.10 to 6.77 °C, suggesting that cold winter temperatures may not pose danger during the culture of European sea bass in deep ponds or high water exchange rate systems. Upper thermal tolerance is more of a problem in the southern part of the Mediterranean as maximum water temperature in ponds may sometimes exceed 33-34 °C, during which underground cool-water should be used to lower ambient water temperature in the mid-summer. For successful culture of sea bass in ponds, temperature should be maintained around 25 °C throughout the year and this can be managed under greenhousing systems using underground well-waters, commonly available in the region.  相似文献   

10.
The cold tolerance abilities of only a few nematode species have been determined. This study shows that the oatmeal nematode, Panagrellus redivivus, has modest cold tolerance with a 50% survival temperature (S 50) of −2.5°C after cooling at 0.5°C min−1 and freezing for 1 h. It can survive low temperatures by freezing tolerance and cryoprotective dehydration; although freezing tolerance appears to be the dominant strategy. Freezing survival is enhanced by low temperature acclimation (7 days at 5°C), with the S 50 being lowered by a small but significant amount (0.42°C). There is no cold shock or rapid cold hardening response under the conditions tested. Cryoprotective dehydration enhances the ability to survive freezing (the S 50 is lowered by 0.55°C, compared to the control, after 4 h freezing at −1°C) and this effect is in addition to that produced by acclimation. Breeding from survivors of a freezing stress did not enhance the ability to survive freezing. The cold tolerance abilities of this nematode are modest, but sufficient to enable it to survive in the cold temperate environments it inhabits.  相似文献   

11.
Summary The interacting effects of pH and temperature on membrane fluidity were studied in plasma membranes isolated from liver of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) acclimated to 5 and 20°C. Fluidity was determined as a function of temperature under conditions of both constant (in potassium phosphate buffer) and variable pH (in imidazole buffer, consistent with imidazole alphastat regulation) from the fluorescence anisotropy of two probes: 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene, which intercalates into the bilayer interior, and 1-(4-trimethylammoniumphenyl)-6-phenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene which is anchored at the membrane/water interface. The temperature dependence of the anisotropy parameter for 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene in plasma membranes of 20°C-acclimated trout was greater when determined in phosphate (AP per °C=-0.047) than in imidazole buffer (AP per °C=-0.022); similar, but less significant, trends were noted with 1-(4-trimethylammoniumphenyl)-6-phenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene. In contrast, the temperature dependence of fluidity (AP/°C in the range-0.0222 to-0.027) did not vary with buffer composition in membranes of 5°C-acclimated trout. In phosphate buffer, anisotropy parameter values for 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene were significantly lower in 5°C-than 20°C-acclimated trout, indicating a less restricted probe environment following cold acclimation and nearly perfect compensation (91%) of fluidity. Temperature-dependent patterns of acid-base regulation were estimated to account for 11–40% of the fluidization evident in membranes of 5°C-trout, but a period of cold acclimation was required for complete fluidity compensation. In contrast, no homeoviscous adaptation was evident in imidazole buffer, indicating that membrane fluidity is sensitive to buffer composition. Accordingly, vesicles of bovine brain phosphatidylcholine, suspensions of triolein, and plasma membranes of 5°C-acclimated trout were consistently more fluid in imidazole than phosphate buffer. Membranes of 5°C-acclimated trout were enriched in molecular species of phosphatidylcholine containing 22:6n3 (at the expense of species containing 18:1n9 and 18:2n6) compared to membranes of 20°C-trout; consequently, the unsaturation index was significantly higher (3.29 versus 2.73) in trout maintained at 5 as opposed to 20°C. It is concluded that: 1) the chemical composition of the internal milieu can significantly influence the physical properties of membrane lipids; 2) temperature-dependent patterns of intracellular pH regulation may partially offset the ordering effect of low temperature on membrane fluidity in 20°C-acclimated trout transferred to 5°C, but not in 5°C-acclimated trout transferred to warmer temperatures; 3) the majority of the thermal compensation of plasma membrane fluidity resulting from a period of temperature acclimation most likely reflects differences in membrane composition between acclimation groups; 4) imidazole apparently interacts with trout hepatocyte plasma membranes in a unique way.Abbreviations im netcharge stateofproteins - AP anisotropyparameter - bw body weight - DPH 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene - HEPES N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N-2-ethanesulphonicacid - PC phosphatidylcholine - pHe pHofarterial blood - pHi intracellular pH - TMA-DPH 1-(4-trimethylammoniumphenyl)-6-phenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene - TRIS tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane  相似文献   

12.
A rapid cold hardening response was studied in females and males of the olive fruit fly Bactrocera (Dacus) oleae. When laboratory-reared females and males were transferred and maintained from the rearing temperature of 24 °C for 2 h to –6.5 °C approximately 5% survived. However, conditioning of both females and males for 2 h at various temperatures from 0 to 10 °C before their exposure for 2 h to –6.5 °C increased survival to 80 to 92%. A similar rapid cold hardening response in both females and males was also induced through gradual cooling of the flies at a rate of approximately 0.4 °C per min. The rapid increase in cold tolerance after prior conditioning of the flies to low temperatures, was rapidly lost when they returned to a higher temperature of 24 °C. In the field, in late February and early March, females and males were capable of a rapid cold hardening response. After exposure to the critical temperature they suffered a high mortality when tested in the afternoon and low mortality early in the morning on consecutive days, probably because of differences in the prevailing field temperatures a few hours before testing. This plasticity of cold tolerance gained through rapid cold hardening may allow the flies to survive during periods of the year with great fluctuation in circadian temperatures.  相似文献   

13.
K. S. Chung 《Hydrobiologia》2001,462(1-3):253-257
Tropical guppies, Poecilia reticulata, collected from the canal of La Laguna Los Patos were acclimated over a four-week period at local water temperatures of 24–33 °C to determine their critical thermal maxima (CTM) and death points (DP), as criteria of thermal tolerance. In addition, individual thermal tolerance times at a lethal temperature of 38.5 °C were measured over 12 days for upward acclimation from 24 to 30 °C and over 16 days for downward acclimation from 30 to 24 °C to determine acclimation rate just before and after changing the acclimation temperatures. The CTM ranged from 38.95 to 40.61 °C and the average DP varied from 41.22 to 42.86 °C. Positive relationships were apparent between thermal tolerance and acclimation temperatures, and thus heat tolerance criteria (CTM and DP) were significantly different among acclimation temperatures. Individual heat tolerance times increased most rapidly during the first 6 hours of upward acclimation after transfer from 24 to 30 °C, continued to increase another 5 days and fluctuated after initial acclimation was completed. The heat tolerance times of fish transferred from 30 to 24 °C declined steadily over times, reaching a minimum at 14–16 days after transfer.  相似文献   

14.
Maximum freezing tolerance of Arabidopsis thaliana L. Heyn (Columbia) was attained after 1 week of cold acclimation at 2[deg]C. During this time, there were significant changes in both the lipid composition of the plasma membrane and the freeze-induced lesions that were associated with injury. The proportion of phospholipids increased from 46.8 to 57.1 mol% of the total lipids with little change in the proportions of the phospholipid classes. Although the proportion of di-unsaturated species of phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine increased, mono-unsaturated species were still the preponderant species. The proportion of cerebrosides decreased from 7.3 to 4.3 mol% with only small changes in the proportions of the various molecular species. The proportion of free sterols decreased from 37.7 to 31.2 mol%, but there were only small changes in the proportions of sterylglucosides and acylated sterylglucosides. Freezing tolerance of protoplasts isolated from either nonacclimated or cold-acclimated leaves was similar to that of leaves from which the protoplasts were isolated (-3.5[deg]C for nonacclimated leaves; -10[deg]C for cold-acclimated leaves). In protoplasts isolated from nonacclimated leaves, the incidence of expansion-induced lysis was [less than or equal to]10% at any subzero temperature. Instead, freezing injury was associated with formation of the hexagonal II phase in the plasma membrane and subtending lamellae. In protoplasts isolated from cold-acclimated leaves, neither expansion-induced lysis nor freeze-induced formation of the hexagonal II phase occurred. Instead, injury was associated with the "fracture-jump lesion," which is manifested as localized deviations of the plasma membrane fracture plane to subtending lamellae. The relationship between the freeze-induced lesions and alterations in the lipid composition of the plasma membrane during cold acclimation is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Freezing tolerance is the ability of plants to survive subfreezing temperatures and is a major component of winter survival. In order to study the genetic regulation of freezing tolerance, an F2 population ofBrassica rapa and a doubled haploid population ofBrassica napus were assayedin vitro for relative freezing tolerance of acclimated and nonacclimated plants. Linkage maps developed previously were used to identify putative quantitative trait loci (QTL). Genomic regions with significant effects on freezing tolerance were not found for theB. napus population, but forB. rapa four regions were associated with acclimated freezing tolerance (FTA) and acclimation ability (FTB), and two unliked regions were associated with nonacclimated freezing tolerance (FTN). Acclimation ability was regulated by genes with very small additive effects and both positive and negative dominance effects. The allele from the winter parent at the FTN QTL had positive additive effects, but negative dominance effects. RFLP loci detected by a cold-induced and a stress-related cDNA fromArabidopsis thaliana mapped near two QTL for FTA/FTB. Further tests are needed to determine if alleles at these loci are responsible for the QTL effects we detected.  相似文献   

16.
The relationship between total soluble seminal root proteins induced at cold acclimation and freezing tolerance in tetraploid wild wheat Aegilops L. (Ae. biuncialis, Ae. cylindrica) and cultivated wheat Triticum turgitum L. (Firat-93, Harran-95) was investigated. Cold acclimation was performed at 0 °C for 7 days. Freezing tolerance was determined with survived roots after freezing treatments at −5 and/or −7 °C for 3, 6, 12 and 24 h. At −5°C, all tetraploid genotypes showed over 60% tolerance for 3 h. This effect was also present in wild wheat for 6 h, but was decreased in cultivated wheat to 30–35% tolerance for 6 h. Only Ae. biuncialis was able to show 52% tolerance just for 3 h freezing period at −7 °C. However, all the genotypes were not survived at −7 °C, for 6, 12 and 24 h. Cold acclimation induced greater amounts of new soluble seminal root proteins in tolerant Ae. biuncialis (29–104 kDa, pI 5.4–7.4) than in sensitive Harran-95 (29–66 kDa, pI 6.1–8.3). Synthesis and accumulation of these proteins may be related to degree of freezing tolerance of these genotypes.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Cold acclimation responses of latitudinal ecotypes of Cornus sericea L. (C. stolonifera Michx.) and F1, F2 and BC1 hybrid progenies were measured under natural photoperiod conditions in St. Paul, MN and artificially shortened photoperiods in the glass-house. The 65 °N and 62 °N ecotypes (Alaska and Northwest Territories, respectively) were characterized by a short night length for hardiness induction, the 42 °N ecotype (Utah A and B) by a long night length for hardiness induction, while the F1 was intermediate to the parents. Results from reciprocal crosses indicated there was no significant unilateral maternal influence on cold acclimation. Acclimation responses of the F2 were highly variable but generally ranged between the parental extremes. However, three individuals from the 42 ° × 62 °N crosses exhibited greater cold resistance than the northern parent on two successive freezing test dates. F2 plants were also found with less freezing resistance than the southern parent. Backcrosses to the southern parent produced progeny with acclimation patterns resembling that of the southern parent and were significantly less hardy than the F2 in early freezing tests.Scientific Journal Series Paper No. 12,075 of the Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station  相似文献   

18.
Rhodamine-phalloidin staining of winter oilseed rape suspension cells revealed that the structure of actin cytoskeleton changes with the phase of cell growth. In small, 4-day-old cells, entering the exponential phase of growth, a dense and uniformly distributed cortical microfilament networks was seen. In six-day-old vacuolated cells, which reached the stationary phase of growth, the actin cytoskeleton was composed of thicker microfilament cables in irregular arrangements. In cells acclimated in cold for 7 days a dense, uniformly distributed and cortical microfilament network was still seen. The fine microfilament network was sensitive to extracellular freezing since the structures underwent depolymerization at −3 °C (in the presence of extracellular ice), both in non-acclimated and cold-acclimated cells. The thicker transvacuolar cables in cells of the stationary growth phase resisted freezing to −7 °C. Acclimation of suspensions at 2 °C resulted in slowing down growth of cells and in the increased freezing tolerance of cells as indicated by a decrease of LT50 from −11 °C to −17.5o or to −25 °C when determined 7 or 20 days after the beginning of the cold treatment, respectively. Freezing tolerance of non-acclimated cells decreased from −11 °C to −8 °C during subculture, showing a transient increase to −17 °C on the day 6. Results indicate that the arrangement of actin microfilaments and their sensitivity to freezing-induced depolymerization depends on the phase of cell growth rather than on cell acclimation status. Possible mechanisms involved in the freezing-induced depolymerization of actin microfilaments are discussed. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Abscisic acid (ABA) has been implicated as a regulatory factor in plant cold acclimation. In the present work, the cold-acclimation properties of an ABA-deficient mutant (aba) of Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. were analyzed. The mutant had apparently lost its capability to cold acclimate: the freezing tolerance of the mutant was not increased by low temperature treatment but stayed at the level of the nonacclimated wild type. The mutational defect could be complemented by the addition of exogenous ABA to the growth medium, restoring freezing tolerance close to the wild-type level. This suggests that ABA might have a central regulatory function in the development of freezing tolerance in plants. Cold acclimation has been previously correlated to the induction of a specific set of proteins that have been suggested to have a role in freezing tolerance. However, these proteins were also induced in the aba mutant by low temperature treatment.  相似文献   

20.
The two-spotted spider mite, Tetranychus urticae, is a worldwide pest species that overwinters as diapausing females. Cold hardening is presumed to start during diapause development to ensure the successful overwintering of this species. To address this hypothesis, we compared cold tolerance between non-diapausing and diapausing females. We measured supercooling point (SCP) and survival to acute cold stress by exposing the mites at a range of sub-zero temperatures (from −4 to −28 °C for 2 h). The mean SCPs of non-diapausing and diapausing females were −19.6±0.5 and −24.7±0.3 °C respectively, and freezing killed the mites. Diapausing females were significantly more cold tolerant than non-diapausing ones, with LT50 of −19.7 and −13.3 °C, respectively. Further, we also examined the effects of cold acclimation (10 d at 0 or 5 °C) in non-diapausing and diapausing females. Our findings indicated that diapause decreased SCP significantly, while cold acclimation had no effect on the SCP except for non-diapausing females that were acclimated at 5 °C. Acclimation at 5 °C enhanced survival to acute cold stress in diapausing and non-diapausing females, with LT50 of −22.0 and −17.1 °C, respectively. Altogether, our results indicate that T. urticae is a chill tolerant species, and that diapause and cold acclimation elevate cold hardiness in this species.  相似文献   

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