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1.
Boese SR  Huner NP 《Plant physiology》1990,94(4):1830-1836
The growth kinetics of spinach plants (Spinacia oleracea L. cv Savoy) grown at 5°C or 16°C were determined to allow us to compare leaf tissues of the same developmental stage rather than chronological age. The second leaf pairs reached full expansion at a plant age of 32 and 92 days for the 16°C and 5°C plants, respectively. Growth at 5°C resulted in an increased leaf area, dry weight, dry weight per area, and leaf thickness. Despite these changes, pigment content and composition, room temperature in vivo fluorescence, and apparent quantum yield and light-saturated rates of CO2 exchange or O2 evolution were not affected by the growth temperature. Furthermore, 5°C expanded leaves were found to be more resistant to photoinhibition at 5°C than were 16°C expanded leaves. Thus, it is concluded that spinach grown at low temperature is not stressed. However, shifting spinach leaves from 5°C to 16°C or from 16°C to 5°C for 12 days after full leaf expansion had occurred resulted in a 20 to 25% reduction in apparent quantum yields and 50 to 60% reduction in light saturated rates of both CO2 exchange and O2 evolution. This was not accompanied by a change in the pigment content or composition or in the room temperature in vivo fluorescence. It appears that leaf aging during the temperature shift period can account for the reduction in photosynthesis. Comparison of cold-hardened and non-hardened winter rye (Secale cereale L. cv Muskateer) with spinach by in vivo fluorescence indicated that rye is more sensitive to both short term and longer duration temperature shifts than is spinach. Thus, susceptibility to an abrupt temperature shift appears to be species dependent.  相似文献   

2.
Boese SR  Huner NP 《Plant physiology》1992,99(3):1141-1145
Room temperature chlorophyll a fluorescence was used to determine the effects of developmental history, developmental stage, and leaf age on susceptibility of spinach to in vivo low temperature (5°C) induced photoinhibition. Spinach (Spinacia oleracea cv Savoy) leaves expanded at cold hardening temperatures (5°C day/night), an irradiance of 250 micromoles per square meter per second of photosynthetic proton flux density, and a photoperiod of 16 hours were less sensitive than leaves expanded at nonhardening temperatures (16 or 25°C day/night) and the same irradiance and photoperiod. This differential sensitivity to low-temperature photoinhibition was observed at high (1200) but not lower (500 or 800 micromoles per square meter per second) irradiance treatment. In spite of a differential sensitivity to photoinhibition, both cold-hardened and nonhardened spinach exhibited similar recovery kinetics at either 20 or 5°C. Shifting plants grown at 16°C (day/night) to 5°C (day/night) for 12 days after full leaf expansion did not alter the sensitivity to photoinhibition at 5°C. Conversely, shifting plants grown at 5°C (day/night) to 16°C (day/night) for 12 days produced a sensitivity to photoinhibition at 5°C similar to control plants grown at 16°C. Thus, any resistance to low-temperature photoinhibition acquired during growth at 5°C was lost in 12 days at 16°C. We conclude that leaf developmental history, developmental stage, and leaf age contribute significantly to the in vivo photoinhibitory response of spinach. Thus, these characteristics must be defined clearly in studies of plant susceptibility to photoinhibition.  相似文献   

3.
Net photosynthetic assimilation rate (A), extractable activities of three photosynthetic enzymes, and the concentrations of six metabolites were determined for wheat (Tricum aestivum L.) leaves as leaf temperature was varied under photorespiring (350 microliters per liter CO2 and 21% O2) and under nonphotorespiring conditions (800 microliters per liter CO2 and 2% O2). The extractable activity of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (Rubisco) and fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase declined with increasing leaf temperature from 15 to 45°C. Leaf concentrations of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) declined slightly between 15 and 25°C but increased to a level which is 4 to 5 times the binding site concentration of Rubisco at leaf temperatures of 35 and 45°C. Leaf concentrations of 3-phosphoglycerate, fructose-6-phosphate, and glucose-6-phosphate all declined with increasing leaf temperature. Outside of the limitations imposed by photorespiration, it is proposed that under high light and at suboptimal temperatures, A is limited by rate of utilization of triose phosphate; at optimal temperatures, by the availability of substrate (CO2 and RuBP) under photorespiring conditions or utilization of triose phosphate under nonphotorespiring conditions; and at supraoptimal temperatures, by the activation state of Rubisco.  相似文献   

4.
Accumulation of heat shock proteins in field-grown cotton   总被引:13,自引:8,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
Cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) plants grown under field water deficits exhibited an 80 to 85% reduction in leaf area index, plant height, and dry matter accumulation compared with irrigated controls. Midday photosynthetic rates of dryland plants decreased 2-fold, and canopy temperatures increased to 40°C at 80 days after planting compared with canopy temperatures of 30°C for irrigated plants. Leaves from dryland plants which had exhibited canopy temperatures of 40°C for several weeks accumulated stainable levels of polypeptides with apparent molecular weights of 100, 94, 89, 75, 60, 58, 37, and 21 kilodaltons. These polypeptides did not accumulate in leaves from irrigated plants.

Addition of [35S]methionine to leaves of growth chamber-grown cotton plants and subsequent incubation at 40°C for 3 hours radiolabeled polypeptides with molecular weights similar to those that accumulate in dryland cotton leaves. These data suggest that the proteins which accumulate in water-stressed cotton leaves at elevated temperatures (40°C) are heat shock proteins and that these proteins can accumulate to substantial levels in field-stressed plants.

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5.
Low root temperature effects on vegetative growth of soybean (Harosoy 63 × Rhizobium japonicum USDA 16) were examined in 35 day old plants exposed to temperatures of 15°C (shoots at 25°C) for an 11 day period. Duing this period various aspects of C and N assimilation and partitioning were monitored including shoot night and nodulated root respiration, C and N partitioning to six plant parts, C2H2 reduction, H2 evolution, leaf area, transpiration, net photosynthesis, and N2 fixation. The low temperature treatment resulted in a decrease in the net rate of N2 fixation but nitrogenase relative efficiency increased. In response, the plant retained N in the tissues of the nodulated root and decreased N partitioning to young shoot tissues, thereby inducing the remobilization of N from older leaves, and reducing leaf area development. The leaf area specific rate of net photosynthesis was not affected over the study period; however, shoot and nodulated root respiration declined. Consequently, C accumulated in mature leaves and stems, partly in the form of increased starch reserves. Three possibilities were considered for increasing low temperature tolerance in nodulated soybeans: (a) decrease in temperature optima for nitrogenase, (b) increased development of nodules and N2 fixation capacity at low temperature, and (c) alterations in the pattern of C and N partitioning in response to low temperature conditions.  相似文献   

6.
Thermal stability of antioxidant defense enzymes was investigated in leaf and inflorescence of heat adaptive weed Chenopodium album. Leaf samples were taken at early and late seedling stage in December (LD, 20 °C/4 °C) and March (LM, 31 °C/14 °C). Young inflorescence (INF) was sampled at flowering in April (40 °C/21 °C). LD, LM and INF crude protein extracts were subjected to elevated temperatures (5 to 100 °C) for 30′. Superoxide dismutase (SOD) was the most heat stable enzyme followed by Ascorbate peroxidase (APX). Two heat stable SOD isozymes were visible on native-PAGE at 100 °C in both leaf and INF. Some heat stable APX isozymes were more abundant in INF than leaf. Thermostability of catalase (CAT) increased with age and increasing ambient temperatures in leaves. CAT activity was observed up to 60 °C in leaves and INF while peroxidase (POX) retained activity up to 100 °C in INF due to one thermostable isozyme. Glutathione reductase (GR), dehydroascorbate reductase (DHAR, EC 1.8.5.1) and monodehydroascorbate reductase (MDHAR) showed activity up to 70 °C in both leaves and INF. DHAR activity was stable up to 60 °C while GR and MDHAR declined sharply after 40 °C. Constitutive heat stable isozymes of SOD and APX in leaves and INF may contribute towards heat tolerance in C. album.  相似文献   

7.
Guy CL  Haskell D 《Plant physiology》1987,84(3):872-878
Spinach (Spinacia oleracea L. cv Bloomsdale) seedlings cultured in vitro were used to study changes in protein synthesis during cold acclimation. Seedlings grown for 3 weeks postsowing on an inorganic-nutrient-agar medium were able to increase their freezing tolerance when grown at 5°C. During cold acclimation at 5°C and deacclimation at 25°C, the kinetics of freezing tolerance induction and loss were similar to that of soil-grown plants. Freezing tolerance increased after 1 day of cold acclimation and reached a maximum within 7 days. Upon deacclimation at 25°C, freezing tolerance declined within 1 day and was largely lost by the 7th day. Leaf proteins of intact plants grown at 5 and 25°C were in vivo radiolabeled, without wounding or injury, to high specific activities with [35S]methionine. Leaf proteins were radiolabeled at 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, and 14 days of cold acclimation and at 1, 3, and 7 days of deacclimation. Up to 500 labeled proteins were separated by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and visualized by fluorography. A rapid and stable change in the protein synthesis pattern was observed when seedlings were transferred to the low temperature environment. Cold-acclimated leaves contained 22 polypeptides not found in nonacclimated leaves. Exposure to 5°C induced the synthesis of three high molecular weight cold acclimation proteins (CAPs) (Mr of about 160,000, 117,000, and 85,000) and greatly increased the synthesis of a fourth high molecular weight protein (Mr 79,000). These proteins were synthesized during day 1 and throughout the 14 day exposure to 5°C. During deacclimation, the synthesis of CAPs 160, 117, and 85 was greatly reduced by the first day of exposure to 25°C. However, CAP 79 was synthesized throughout the 7 day deacclimation treatment. Thus, the induction at low temperature and termination at warm temperature of the synthesis of CAPs 160, 117, and 85 was highly correlated with the induction and loss of freezing tolerance. Cold acclimation did not result in a general posttranslational modification of leaf proteins. Most of the observed changes in the two-dimensional gel patterns could be attributed to the de novo synthesis of proteins induced by low temperature. In spinach leaf tissue, heat shock altered the pattern of protein synthesis and induced the synthesis of several heat shock proteins (HSPs). One polypeptide synthesized in cold-acclimated leaves had a molecular weight and net charge (Mr 79,000, pI 4.8) similar to that of a HSP (Mr 83,000, pI 4.8). However, heat shock did not increase the freezing tolerance, and cold acclimation did not increase heat tolerance over that of nonacclimated plants, but heat-shocked leaf tissue was more tolerant to high temperatures than nonacclimated or cold-acclimated leaf tissue. When protein extracts from heat-shocked and cold-acclimated leaves were mixed and separated in the same two-dimensional gel, the CAP and HSP were shown to be two separate polypeptides with slightly different isoelectric points and molecular weights.  相似文献   

8.
Bacterial ice nucleation: a factor in frost injury to plants   总被引:23,自引:4,他引:19       下载免费PDF全文
Lindow SE  Arny DC  Upper CD 《Plant physiology》1982,70(4):1084-1089
Heterogeneous ice nuclei are necessary, and the common epiphytic ice nucleation active (INA) bacteria Pseudomonas syringae van Hall and Erwinia herbicola (Löhnis) Dye are sufficient to incite frost injury to sensitive plants at −5°C. The ice nucleation activity of the bacteria occurs at the same temperatures at which frost injury to sensitive plants occurs in nature. Bacterial ice nucleation on leaves can be detected at about −2°C, whereas the leaves themselves, i.e. without INA bacteria, contain nuclei active only at much lower temperatures. The temperature at which injury to plants occurs is predictable on the basis of the ice nucleation activity of leaf discs, which in turn depends on the number and ice nucleation activity of their resident bacteria. Bacterial isolates which are able to incite injury to corn at −5°C are always active as ice nuclei at −5°C. INA bacteria incited frost injury to all of the species of sensitive plants tested.  相似文献   

9.
Single clover plants were grown in the vegetative state, at 20 ± 1°, 85 ± 5% relative humidity, 320 ± 10 ppm CO2, 12-hour day, with Hoagland nutrient in Perlite, and 100 w · m−2 of photosynthetically active radiation (0.4-0.7 μ) from mercury-fluorescent lamps. Each plant was confined within a circle 18 cm in diameter by means of a wire framework. The CO2 exchange rate of the whole plant was measured every second day for 3 months. There was no optimum leaf area index for the net photosynthesis rate. The respiration rate was determined mainly by the gross photosynthesis rate and only partly by the amount of non-photosynthetic or heavily shaded tissue. At the maximum leaf area index, when leaves were dying as fast as they were being produced, both photosynthesis and respiration remained at or near their maximum rates. At the end of 3 months, the whole plant was harvested and the dry weight and carbon content determined. The measured dry weight was close to that calculated from the total CO2 uptake and a constant ratio of carbon content to dry weight of 39%. Optimum leaf area indices observed in field experiments are attributed to the failure to include the material which dies between harvests, and to decreases in the gross photosynthesis rate caused by climate changes or lack of nutrient, for example. The difference between production rate and growth rate or yield is emphasized.  相似文献   

10.
The temperature dependence of the rate and magnitude of the reappearance of photosystem II (PSII) variable fluorescence following illumination has been used to determine plant temperature optima. The present study was designed to determine the effect of a plant's environmental history on the thermal dependency of the reappearance of PSII variable fluorescence. In addition, this study further evaluated the usefulness of this fluorescence technique in identifying plant temperature optima. Laboratory and greenhouse grown potato (Solanum tuberosum L. cv “Norgold M”) plants had a thermal kinetic window between 15 and 25°C. The minimum apparent Km of NADH hydroxypyruvate reductase for NADH occurred at 20°C. This temperature was also the temperature providing maximal reappearance of variable fluorescence. Soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merrill cv “Wayne”) plants had a thermal kinetic window between 15 and 30°C with a minimum apparent Km at 25°C. Maximal reappearance of variable fluorescence was seen between 20 and 30°C. To determine if increasing environmental temperatures increased the temperature optimum provided from the fluorescence response curves, potato and soybean leaves from irrigated and dryland field grown plants were evaluated. Although the absolute levels of PSII variable fluorescence declined with increasing thermal stress, the temperature optimum of the dryland plants did not increase with increased exposure to elevated temperatures. Because of variability in the daily period of high temperature stress in the field, studies were initiated with tobacco plants grown in controlled environment chambers. The reappearance of PSII variable fluorescence in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv “Wisconsin 38”) leaves that had experienced continuous leaf temperatures of 35°C for 8 days had the same 20°C optima as leaves from plants grown at room temperature. The results of this study suggest that the temperature optimum for the reappearance of variable fluorescence following illumination is not altered by the plant's previous exposure to variable environmental temperatures. These findings support the usefulness of this procedure for the rapid identification of a plant's temperature optimum.  相似文献   

11.
Jurik TW  Weber JA  Gates DM 《Plant physiology》1984,75(4):1022-1026
The short term effects of increased levels of CO2 on gas exchange of leaves of bigtooth aspen (Populus grandidentata Michx.) were studied at the University of Michigan Biological Station, Pellston, MI. Leaf gas exchange was measured in situ in the upper half of the canopy, 12 to 14 meters above ground. In 1900 microliters per liter CO2, maximum CO2 exchange rate (CER) in saturating light was increased by 151% relative to CER in 320 microliters per liter CO2. The temperature optimum for CER shifted from 25°C in 320 microliters per liter CO2 to 37°C in 1900 microliters per liter CO2. In saturating light, increasing CO2 level over the range 60 to 1900 microliters per liter increased CER, decreased stomatal conductance, and increased leaf water use efficiency. The initial slope of the CO2 response curve of CER was not significantly different at 20 and 30°C leaf temperatures, although the slope did decline significantly during leaf senescence. In 1900 microliters per liter CO2, CER increased with increasing light. The light saturation point and maximum CER were higher in 30°C than in 20°C, although there was little effect of temperature in low light. The experimental results are consistent with patterns seen in laboratory studies of other C3 species and define the parameters required by some models of aspen CER in the field.  相似文献   

12.
Temperature is one of the main environmental factors involved in global warming and has been found to have a direct effect on plants. However, few studies have investigated the effect of higher temperature on tropical crops. We therefore performed an experiment with a tropical crop of Habanero pepper (Capsicum Chinense Jacq.). Three growth chambers were used, each with 30 Habanero pepper plants. Chambers were maintained at a diurnal maximum air temperature (DMT) of 30 (chamber 1), 35 (chamber 2) and 40°C (chamber 3). Each contained plants from seedling to fruiting stage. Physiological response to variation in DMT was evaluated for each stage over the course of five months. The results showed that both leaf area and dry mass of Habanero pepper plants did not exhibit significant differences in juvenile and flowering phenophases. However, in the fruiting stage, the leaf area and dry mass of plants grown at 40°C DMT were 51 and 58% lower than plants at 30°C DMT respectively. Meanwhile, an increase in diurnal air temperature raised both stomatal conductance and transpiration rate, causing an increase in temperature deficit (air temperature – leaf temperature). Thus, leaf temperature decreased by 5°C, allowing a higher CO2 assimilation rate in plants at diurnal maximum air temperature (40°C). However, in CO2 measurements when leaf temperature was set at 40°C, physiological parameters decreased due to an increase in stomatal limitation. We conclude that the thermal optimum range in a tropical crop such as Habanero pepper is between 30 and 35°C (leaf temperature, not air temperature). In this range, gas exchange through stomata is probably optimal. Also, the air temperature–leaf temperature relationship helps to explain how temperature keeps the major physiological processes of Habanero pepper healthy under experimental conditions.  相似文献   

13.
Induction of Freezing Tolerance in Spinach during Cold Acclimation   总被引:8,自引:2,他引:6       下载免费PDF全文
Spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) seedlings, grown in soil or on an agar medium in vitro, became cold acclimated when exposed to a constant 5°C. Plants subjected to cold acclimation, beginning 1 week postgermination, attained freezing tolerance levels similar to that achieved by seedlings that were cold acclimated beginning 3 weeks after sowing. Seedlings at 1 week of age had only cotyledonary leaves, while 3-week-old seedlings had developed true leaves. Plants grown in vitro were able to increase in freezing tolerance, but were slightly less hardy than soil-grown plants. These results suggest that spinach, a cool-season crop that begins growth in early spring when subzero temperatures are likely, can undergo cold acclimation at the earliest stages of development following germination. Axenic seedlings, grown in vitro, were used to develop a noninjurious radiolabeling technique. Leaf proteins were radiolabeled to specific activities of 105 counts per minute per microgram at 25°C or 5 × 104 counts per minute per microgram at 5°C over a 24 hour period. The ability to radiolabel leaf proteins of in vitro grown plants to high specific activities at low temperature, without injury or microbial contamination, will facilitate studies of cold acclimation.  相似文献   

14.
Constructs containing the cDNAs encoding the primary leaf catalase in Nicotiana or subunit 1 of cottonseed (Gossypium hirsutum) catalase were introduced in the sense and antisense orientation into the Nicotiana tabacum genome. The N. tabacum leaf cDNA specifically overexpressed CAT-1, the high catalytic form, activity. Antisense constructs reduced leaf catalase specific activities from 0.20 to 0.75 times those of wild type (WT), and overexpression constructs increased catalase specific activities from 1.25 to more than 2.0 times those of WT. The NADH-hydroxypyruvate reductase specific activity in transgenic plants was similar to that in WT. The effect of antisense constructs on photorespiration was studied in transgenic plants by measuring the CO2 compensation point (Γ) at a leaf temperature of 38°C. A significant linear increase was observed in Γ with decreasing catalase (at 50% lower catalase activity Γ increased 39%). There was a significant temperature-dependent linear decrease in Γ in transgenic leaves with elevated catalase compared with WT leaves (at 50% higher catalase Γ decreased 17%). At 29°C, Γ also decreased with increasing catalase in transgenic leaves compared with WT leaves, but the trend was not statistically significant. Rates of dark respiration were the same in WT and transgenic leaves. Thus, photorespiratory losses of CO2 were significantly reduced with increasing catalase activities at 38°C, indicating that the stoichiometry of photorespiratory CO2 formation per glycolate oxidized normally increases at higher temperatures because of enhanced peroxidation.  相似文献   

15.
Gent MP 《Plant physiology》1986,81(4):1075-1079
The growth response of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum L.) to temperature and irradiance may be related to carbohydrate concentration. Plants in the exponential phase of vegetative growth were grown under temperatures ranging from 9 to 36°C and under low or high irradiances of approximately 110 or 370 microeinsteins per square meter per second photosynthetically active radiation for a 12 hour photoperiod. The relative growth rate, leaf area ratio, net assimilation rate and whole plant carbohydrate levels were measured. At high irradiance, relative growth rate was 43% faster and total nonstructural carbohydrate concentration was 41% greater than at low irradiance. The change in carbohydrate with irradiance could explain the growth response. Plant growth was fastest at 25°C and decreased parabolically at lower and higher temperatures with a half-maximal rate at 13 and 36°C. Total nonstructural carbohydrate decreased between 13 and 23°C and remained constant at higher temperatures. Soluble sugar concentrations varied little with temperature above 13°C except for sucrose, whose level rose above 30°C. The change in carbohydrate with temperature could not explain the growth response. Above 23°C tomato plants appeared to regulate growth rate to maintain a relatively constant nonstructural carbohydrate concentration.  相似文献   

16.
Freezing injury and root development in winter cereals   总被引:7,自引:5,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Upon exposure to 2°C, the leaves and crowns of rye (Secale cereale L. cv `Puma') and wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv `Norstar' and `Cappelle') increased in cold hardiness, whereas little change in root cold hardiness was observed. Both root and shoot growth were severely reduced in cold-hardened Norstar wheat plants frozen to −11°C or lower and transplanted to soil. In contrast, shoot growth of plants grown in a nutrient agar medium and subjected to the same hardening and freezing conditions was not affected by freezing temperatures of −20°C while root growth was reduced at −15°C. Thus, it was apparent that lack of root development limited the ability of plants to survive freezing under natural conditions.

Generally, the temperatures at which 50% of the plants were killed as determined by the conductivity method were lower than those obtained by regrowth. A simple explanation for this difference is that the majority of cells in the crown are still alive while a small portion of the cells which are critical for regrowth are injured or killed.

Suspension cultures of Norstar wheat grown in B-5 liquid medium supplemented with 3 milligrams per liter of 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid could be cold hardened to the same levels as soil growth plants. These cultures produce roots when transferred to the same growth medium supplemented with a low rate of 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (<1 milligram per liter). When frozen to −15°C regrowth of cultures was 50% of the control, whereas the percentage of calli with root development was reduced 50% in cultures frozen to −11°C. These results suggest that freezing affects root morphogenesis rather than just killing the cells responsible for root regeneration.

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17.
When leaves of a mangrove, Rhizophora mangle, were exposed to an excess of light at chilling temperatures, synthesis of zeaxanthin through violaxanthin de-epoxidation as well as nonphotochemical fluorescence quenching were markedly reduced. The results suggest a protective role of energy dissipation against the adverse effects of high light and chilling temperatures: leaves of R. mangle that had been preilluminated in 2% O2, 0% CO2 at low photon flux density and showed a high level of zeaxanthin, and leaves that had been kept in the dark and contained no zeaxanthin, were both exposed to high light and chilling temperatures (5°C leaf temperature) in air and then held under control conditions in low light in air at 25°C. Measurements of chlorophyll a fluorescence at room temperature showed that the photochemical efficiency of PSII and the yield of maximum fluorescence of the preilluminated leaf recovered completely within 1 to 3 hours under the control conditions. In contrast, the fluorescence responses of the predarkened leaf in high light at 5°C did not recover at all. During a dark/light transient in 2% O2, 0% CO2 in low light at 5°C, nonphotochemical fluorescence quenching increased linearly with an increase in the zeaxanthin content in leaves of R. mangle. In soybean (Glycine max) leaves, which contained a background level of zeaxanthin in the dark, a similar treatment with excess light induced a level of nonphotochemical fluorescence quenching that was not paralleled by an increase in the zeaxanthin content.  相似文献   

18.
Root temperature strongly affects shoot growth, possibly via “nonhydraulic messengers” from root to shoot. In short-term studies with barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) and sorghum (Sorghum bicolor L.) seedlings, the optimum root temperatures for leaf expansion were 25° and 35°C, respectively. Hydraulic conductance (Lp) of both intact plants and detached exuding roots of barley increased with increasing root temperature to a high value at 25°C, remaining high with further warming. In sorghum, the Lp of intact plants and of detached roots peaked at 35°C. In both species, root temperature did not affect water potentials of the expanded leaf blade or the growing region despite marked changes in Lp. Extreme temperatures greatly decreased ion flux, particularly K+ and NO3, to the xylem of detached roots of both species. Removing external K+ did not alter short-term K+ flux to the xylem in sorghum but strongly inhibited flux at high temperature in barley, indicating differences in the sites of temperature effects. Leaf growth responses to root temperature, although apparently “uncoupled” from water transport properties, were correlated with ion fluxes. Studies of putative root messengers must take into account the possible role of ions.  相似文献   

19.
The effects of increased sink-source ratios, induced by elevating night temperatures, on remobilization of 14C-assimilates and N within field-grown soybeans (Glycine max [L.] Merr.) was investigated from preflowering to maturity. Raising the mean minimum night temperature for the entire growing season from 10 (check, uncontrolled) to 16°C increased seed growth without appreciable effect on final leaf area. Increasing this temperature to 24°C increased seed growth and reduced final leaf area. Leaves, stems, petioles, and pods acted as intermediate storage sites for 14C assimilates. Only plants with higher night temperatures remobilized some of the stored assimilates during the period of rapid seed growth. Even the seeds in the 24°C plants with the largest sink-source ratios did not utilize all the C-assimilates potentially available for remobilization. Nitrogen was readily remobilized from petioles, stems, and pods of all treatments as early as the beginning of seed development, but from the leaves only during late seed-filling. However, only plants with elevated night temperatures tended to remobilize all of the available N from vegetative tissues and pods. We concluded that a larger portion of stored assimilates may be remobilized to the seed if a strong seed sink can be sustained. It also appeared that with increasing sink-source ratios, N shortage might limit seed yield before a lack of C-assimilates would. A proposed model for soybean assimilate demand, distribution, partitioning, and remobilization is presented.  相似文献   

20.
Young Gossypium hirsutum L. seedlings chilled at 5° showed a continual decrease in ATP concentration with time of chilling. Chilled plants returned to optimum conditions were able to restore the initial ATP concentration when chilled only 1 day, but not when chilled 2 days. The decrease in ATP with chilling was prevented by hardening the seedlings at 15° for 2 days (14-hr-day-length) immediately before chilling. The ATP level of hardened plants was higher than of unhardened plants. When hardened plants were chilled at 5°, the ATP level increased in the leaves but decreased in the roots.  相似文献   

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