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1.
Seasonal alterations in the ultrastructure of the plasma membrane produced by slow freezing were examined in cortical parenchyma cells of mulberry twigs (Morus bombyciz Koidz. cv. Goroji) grown in northern Japan. In freezing-sensitive summer, freezing produced distinct aparticulate domains with accompanying inverted hexagonalII (HII) phase transitions in the plasma membrane. In autumn and spring, during cold acclimation and deacclimation, freezing produced aparticulate domains in the plasma membrane without accompanying Hii phase transitions. In winter, when the twigs were freezing-tolerant, freezing did not produce ultrastructural alterations in the plasma membrane. A significant relationship was recognized between the percentages of cells with aparticulate domains in the plasma membrane, regardless of the presence or absence of HII phase transitions, and the occurrence of freezing injury throughout all seasons and at all freezing temperatures tested in each season. The aparticulate domains in the plasma membranes were shown to be produced by the close apposition of membranes due to freezing-induced dehydration and deformation of cells. Although the precise mechanisms that cause injury as a result of the formation of aparticulate domains in the plasma membrane remain unclear, our results indicate that the development of cold acclimation paralleled the process whereby cells developed the ability to reduce and finally to prevent the formation of aparticulate domains in the plasma membrane that would otherwise result from freezing-induced cellular dehydration and deformation that brings membranes into close proximity with one another.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Thickness, relative water content (RWC), osmotic pressure, water potential isotherms, and mucopolysaccharide content were measured for the photosynthetic chlorenchyma and the water-storage parenchyma of the winter hardy cactus, Opuntia humifusa, after shifting from day/night air temperatures of 25° C/15° C to 5° C/–5° C. After 14 d at 5° C/–5° C, the average fraction of water contained in the symplast decreased from 0.92 to 0.78, the water potential of saturated (fully hydrated) tissue was essentially unchanged, but the osmotic pressure of saturated tissue decreased (by 0.15 MPa for the chlorenchyma and 0.12 MPa for the water-storage parenchyma). After 7 weeks at 5° C/–5° C, tissue thickness was reduced by 61% for the chlorenchyma and 65% for the water-storage parenchyma, and the RWC decreased by 42% and 68%, respectively; these changes contributed to an osmotic pressure increase of 0.55 MPa for the chlorenchyma and 0.34 MPa for the water-storage parenchyma. During the 7 week acclimation to low temperature, mucopolysaccharide increased by 114% for the chlorenchyma and by 89% for the water-storage parenchyma. The water potential of the extracted mucopolysaccharide was relatively constant for an RWC between 1.00 and 0.30, decreasing abruptly below 0.30. Changes in water relations parameters and in mucopolysaccharide content during low-temperature acclimation may reduce water efflux from the cells, and thus reduce damage due to rapid dehydration during extracellular freezing.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Seedlings of Triticum aestivum L. cv. Lennox were grown in different environments to obtain different hardiness. Pieces of laminae and leaf bases were slowly cooled to sub-zero temperatures and the damage caused was assessed by an ion-leakage method. Comparable pieces of tissue were slowly cooled to temperatures between 2° and-14°C and were then freeze-fixed and freeze-etched. Membranes generally retained their lamellar structures indicated by the abundance of typical membrane fracture faces in all treatments, and some membrane fracture faces had patches which lacked the usual scattering of intramembranous particles (IMP). These IMP-free areas were present in the plasma membrane of tissues given a damaging freezing treatment, but were absent from the plasma membrane of room-temperature controls, of supercooled tissues, and of tissues given a non-damaging freezing treatment. The frequency of IMP-free areas and the proportion of the plasma membrane affected increased with increasing damage. In the most damaged tissue (79% damage; leaf bases exposed to-8°C), 20% of the plasma membrane was IMP-free. The frequencies of IMP at a distance from the IMP-free areas were unaffected by freezing treatments. There was a patchy distribution of IMP in other membranes (nuclear envelope, tonoplast, thylakoids, chloroplast envelope), but only in the nuclear envelope did it appear possible that their occurrence coincided with damage. The IMP-free areas of several membranes were sometimes associated together in stacks. Such membranes lay both to the outside and inside of the plasma membrane, indicating that at least some of the adjacent membrane fragments arose as a result of membrane reorganization induced by the damaging treatment. Occasional views of folded IMP-free plasma membrane tended to confirm this conclusion. The following hypothesis is advanced to explain the damage induced by extracellular freezing. Areas of plasma membrane become free of IMP, probably as a result of the freezing-induced cellular dehydration. The lipids in these IMP-free patches may be in the fluid rather than the gel phase. The formation of these IMP-free patches, especially in the plasma membrane, initiates or involves proliferation and possibly fusion of membranes, and during or following this process, the cells become leaky.Abbreviations EF exoplasmatic fracture face - IMP intramembranous particles - PF protoplasmatic fracture face  相似文献   

5.
A striking degradation of phosphatidylcholine into phosphatidic acid was observed in the cortical tissues of less hardy poplar (Poplus euramericani cv. gelrica), when the tissues were frozen below a lethal temperature. No change in phospholipids was detected during freezing or even after thawing in the cortical tissues of hardy poplar which survived slow freezing to −30 C or even immersion in liquid N2 after prefreezing to −50 C. The degradation of phosphatidylcholine during freezing appears to be intimately associated with freezing injury.  相似文献   

6.
Cortical parenchyma cells of mulberry (Morus bombycis Koidz.) trees acquire extremely high freezing tolerance in winter as a result of seasonal cold acclimation. The amount of total proteins in endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-enriched fractions isolated from these cells increased in parallel with the process of cold acclimation. Protein compositions in the ER-enriched fraction also changed seasonally, with a prominent accumulation of 20-kD (WAP20) and 27-kD (WAP27) proteins in winter. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of WAP20 exhibited homology to ER-localized small heat-shock proteins (smHSPs), whereas that of WAP27 did not exhibit homology to any known proteins. Like other smHSPs, WAP20 formed a complex of high molecular mass in native-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Furthermore, not only WAP20 but also 21-kD proteins reacted with antibodies against WAP20. Fractionation of the crude microsomes by isopycnic sucrose-gradient centrifugation revealed that both WAP27 and WAP20 were distributed on a density corresponding to the fractions with higher activity of ER marker enzyme, suggesting localization of these proteins in the ER. When ER-enriched fractions were treated with trypsin in the absence of detergent, WAP20 and WAP27 were undigested, suggesting localization of these proteins inside the ER vesicle. The accumulation of a large quantity of smHSPs in the ER in winter as a result of seasonal cold acclimation indicates that these proteins may play a significant role in the acquisition of freezing tolerance in cortical parenchyma cells of mulberry trees.  相似文献   

7.
Nagao M  Arakawa K  Takezawa D  Fujikawa S 《Planta》2008,227(2):477-489
In nature, intact plant cells are subjected to freezing and can remain frozen for prolonged periods. We assayed the survival of Arabidopsis thaliana leaf cells following freezing and found that short- and long-term exposures produced different types of cellular injury. To identify the cause of these injuries, we examined the ultrastructure of the cell plasma membranes. Our results demonstrate that ultrastructural changes in the plasma membrane due to short-term freezing are associated with interbilayer events, including close apposition of the membranes. In both acclimated and non-acclimated leaf cells, these interbilayer events resulted in “fracture-jump lesions” in the plasma membrane. On the other hand, long-term freezing was associated with the development of extensive protein-free areas caused by the aggregation of intramembrane proteins with consequent vesiculation of the affected membrane regions; this effect was clearly different from the ultrastructural changes induced by interbilayer events. We also found that prolonged exposure of non-acclimated leaf cells to a concentrated electrolyte solution produced effects that were similar to those caused by long-term freezing, suggesting that the ultrastructural changes observed in the plasma membrane following long-term freezing are produced by exposure of the leaf cells to a concentrated electrolyte solution. This study illustrates multiple causes of freezing-induced injury in plant cells and may provide useful information regarding the functional role of the diverse changes that occur during cold acclimation.  相似文献   

8.
Earthworm cocoons are mostly found in the uppermost soil layers and are therefore often exposed to low temperatures during winter. In the present study, cocoons of five taxa of earthworms were investigated for their tolerance to freezing, melting points of cocoon fluids and dehydration of cocoons when exposed to a frozen environment. Embryos of the taxa investigated were freeze intolerant. The melting points of fully hydrated cocoon fluids were high (above –0.3°C) and thermal hysteresis factors were absent. Exposure to a frozen environment caused the cocoons to dehydrate drastically and dehydrated cocoons showed significantly lower super-cooling points than fully hydrated cocoons, reducing the risk of freezing for dehydrated cocoons. It is proposed therefore that the cold-hardiness strategy of the earthworm cocoons is based on dehydration upon exposure to subzero temperatures in the frozen environment. Cocoons of three surface-dwelling taxa, Dendrobaena octaedra, Dendrodrilus rubidus tenuis and Dendrodrilus rubidus norvegicus had lower supercooling points and survived frost exposure better than cocoons of two deeper-dwelling taxa, Aporrectodea caliginosa and Allolobophora chlorotica. One of the investigated taxa, D. r. norvegicus, was collected from a cold alpine habitat. However, it was not more cold hardy than the closely related D. r. tenuis collected from a lowland temperate habitat. D. octaedra was the most cold hardy taxon, its cocoons being able to withstand –8°C for 3 months and –13.5°C for 2 weeks in frozen soil.Abbreviations dw dry weight - fw fresh weight - SCP supercooling point  相似文献   

9.
Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) and cryomicroscopy were used to define the process of cellular injury during freezing in LNCaP prostate tumor cells, at the molecular level. Cell pellets were monitored during cooling at 2 °C/min while the ice nucleation temperature was varied between − 3 and − 10 °C. We show that the cells tend to dehydrate precipitously after nucleation unless intracellular ice formation occurs. The predicted incidence of intracellular ice formation rapidly increases at ice nucleation temperatures below − 4 °C and cell survival exhibits an optimum at a nucleation temperature of − 6 °C. The ice nucleation temperature was found to have a great effect on the membrane phase behavior of the cells. The onset of the liquid crystalline to gel phase transition coincided with the ice nucleation temperature. In addition, nucleation at − 3 °C resulted in a much more co-operative phase transition and a concomitantly lower residual conformational disorder of the membranes in the frozen state compared to samples that nucleated at − 10 °C. These observations were explained by the effect of the nucleation temperature on the extent of cellular dehydration and intracellular ice formation. Amide-III band analysis revealed that proteins are relatively stable during freezing and that heat-induced protein denaturation coincides with an abrupt decrease in α-helical structures and a concomitant increase in β-sheet structures starting at an onset temperature of approximately 48 °C.  相似文献   

10.
Cell survival during freezing applications in biomedicine is highly correlated to the temperature history and its dependent cellular biophysical events of dehydration and intracellular ice formation (IIF). Although cell membranes are known to play a significant role in cell injury, a clear correlation between the membrane state and the surrounding intracellular and extracellular water is still lacking. We previously showed that lipid hydration in LNCaP tumor cells is related to cellular dehydration. The goal of this study is to build upon this work by correlating both the phase state of the membrane and the surrounding water to cellular biophysical events in three different mammalian cell types: human prostate tumor cells (LNCaP), human dermal fibroblasts (HDF), and porcine smooth muscle cells (SMC) using Fourier Transform Infrared spectroscopy (FTIR). Variable cooling rates were achieved by controlling the degree of supercooling prior to ice nucleation (− 3 °C and − 10 °C) while the sample was cooled at a set rate of 2 °C/min. Membranes displayed a highly cooperative phase transition under dehydrating conditions (i.e. NT = − 3 °C), which was not observed under IIF conditions (NT = − 10 °C). Spectral analysis showed a consistently greater amount of ice formation during dehydrating vs. IIF conditions in all cell types. This is hypothesized to be due to the extreme loss of membrane hydration in dehydrating cells that is manifested as excess water available for phase change. Interestingly, changes in residual membrane conformational disorder correlate strongly with cellular volumetric decreases as assessed by cryomicroscopy. A strong correlation was also found between the activation energies for freezing induced lyotropic membrane phase change determined using FTIR and the water transport measured by cryomicroscopy. Reduced lipid hydration under dehydration freezing conditions is suggested as one of the likely causes of what has been termed as “solution effects” injury in cryobiology.  相似文献   

11.
Park S. Nobel 《Oecologia》1981,48(2):194-198
Summary Coryphantha vivipara (Nutt.) Britton & Rose var. deserti (Engelm.) W.T. Marshall (Cactaceae) survived snow and tissue temperatures of-12°C in southern Nevada. However, the freezing point depression of the cell sap was only about 0.9°C. When the nocturnal air temperature in the laboratory was reduced from 10°C to-10°C for one night, the optimum temperature for CO2 uptake shifted from 10°C to 6°C and uptake was reduced 70%, but full recovery to the original values occurred in 4 days. Nocturnal temperatures of-15°C killed 2 out of 5 plants and-20°C killed 5 out of 5, as judged by lack of net CO2 uptake at night over a 2-month observation period. when the stems were cooled at 2° C/h, supercooling to about-6°C occurred followed by an exothermic reaction that presumably represented the freezing of extracellular water. When the subzero temperature was lowered further, no other exothermic reaction was observed and the cells became progressively dehydrated. Freezing-induced tissue death was ascribed to this cellular dehydration, which led to about 94% loss of intracellular water at-15°C. when the tissue temperature was lowered, the ability of chlorenchyma cells to plasmolyze and to take up a stain decreased, both being nearly 70% inhibited at-15°C and completely abolished at-20°C. Some cold-bardening occurred, since lowering the air temperature from 30° to-10°C in 10°C increments at weekly intervals caused the subzero temperature for 50% inhibition of staining to decrease from-10°C to-17°C. Extension of the range of C. vivipara to regions with wintertime freezing apparently reflects the tolerance of considerable freeze dehydration by its protoplasts.  相似文献   

12.
Seasonal evaluation of total soluble protein fractions extracted from cortical parenchyma cells of mulberry (Morus bombycis Koidz.) tree identified a predominant 18 kDa protein that was directly correlated to periods of cold acclimation. The 18 kDa protein, designated as WAP18 (winter accumulating 18 kDa proteins) increased from September to December and then gradually decreased until June. The maximum levels of WAP18 were detected in mid‐winter, which corresponds to the maximum freeze tolerance in cortical parenchyma cells of mulberry tree. Two‐dimensional gel electrophoresis confirmed that WAP18 consists of at least three proteins that range between an isoelectric point of 5.0 and 6.0. All three proteins reacted with anti‐WAP18 antibodies, thereby suggesting that they represent individual isoforms. Furthermore, N‐terminal amino acid sequence analysis demonstrated that all three proteins contain high sequence similarity to each other and high homology to pathogenesis‐related (PR) ?10/Bet v 1 protein families. The purified WAP18 exhibited in vitro cryoprotective activity for the freeze labile l ‐lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) enzyme. These results suggest that WAP18 may function in the freezing tolerance mechanism of cortical parenchyma cells of mulberry tree during winter.  相似文献   

13.
The effects of salicylic acid (SA) (0.01, 0.1 and 1 mM) and cold on freezing tolerance (freezing injury and ice nucleation activity) were investigated in winter wheat (Triticum aestivum cv. Dogu-88) grown under control (20/18 °C for 15, 30 and 45-day) and cold (15/10 °C for 15-day, 10/5 °C for 30-day and 5/3 °C for 45-day) conditions. Cold acclimatisation caused a decrease of injury to leaf segments removed from the plants and subjected to freezing conditions. Exogenous SA also decreased freezing injury in the leaves grown under cold (15/10 °C) and control (15 and 30-day) conditions. Cold conditions (10/5 and 5/3 °C) caused an increase in ice nucleation activity by apoplastic proteins, which were isolated from the leaves. For the first time, it was shown that exogenous SA caused an increase in ice nucleation activity under cold (15/10 and 10/5 °C) and control conditions. These results show that salicylic acid can increase freezing tolerance in winter wheat leaves by affecting apoplastic proteins.  相似文献   

14.
Hatchling painted turtles (Chrysemys picta) were placed individually into artificial nests constructed in jars of damp soil and then were cooled slowly to temperatures between-7.7 and-12.7 °C. Distinct exotherms were recorded in all jars when water in the soil began to freeze at temperatures between-0.9 and-2.4 °C. A second (animal) exotherm was subsequently detected in some of the jars when water in hatchlings also began to freeze. An animal exotherm occurred in the temperature records for all 23 hatchlings that died in tests terminating at temperatures between-7.7 and-10.8 °C, but no such exotherm was apparent in the temperature records for the 23 turtles that survived these treatments. Moreover, the 4 hatchlings that produced exotherms in tests terminating between-11.5 and-12.7 °C failed to survive, but 5 of 7 hatchlings that produced no exotherm in these tests also died. Thus, turtles that die at subzero temperatures above-11 °C apparently succumb to freezing when ice propagates across their integument from the frozen soil, but animals that die at temperatures below-11 °C generally perish from some other cause. These findings indicate that hatchling painted turtles overwintering inside their shallow, subterranean nests survive exposure to subzero temperatures by avoiding freezing instead of by tolerating freezing.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Abstract Moderately frost-hardy leaves of the wintergreen broadleaf woody shrubs Pyracantha coccinea and Ligustrum ovalifolium and the winter annual herb Spinacia oleracea were subjected to extended freezing stress up to 15 d at temperatures 2–8°C above the mean lethal temperature (LT50). After thawing, the fast kinetics of in vivo chlorophyll fluorescence of photosystem II (PSII) and the potential of linear photosynthetic electron transport of isolated thylakoid membranes was measured at room temperature. The lower the minimum freezing temperature and the longer the time of exposure, the greater was the suppression of the fluorescence signals of the leaves and decrease of the electron transport capacity of the thylakoid membranes. The pattern of inactivation of PSII -mediated electron flow, i.e. inhibition of photoreaction to photochemistry and/or electron donation to the photochemical reaction, during long-term freezing at temperatures somewhat above the LT50 of the leaves was similar to that observed earlier after relatively brief exposure of leaves and isolated thylakoid membranes to more severe freezing stress. As injury occurred during freezing in complete darkness, it is likely that prolonged winter stress under natural environmental conditions causes changes in the photosynthetic apparatus of moderately hardy leaves which are not due to photoinhibition.  相似文献   

17.
 The freezing behavior of xylem ray parenchyma cells in several woody species, Ficus elastica, F. microcarpa, Mangifera indica, Hibiscus Rosa-sinensis, and Schefflera arboricola, that are native to non-frost tropical and subtropical zones, was investigated by differential thermal analysis (DTA), cryo-scanning electron microscopy (cryo-SEM) and freeze-replica electron microscopy. Although profiles after DTA did not exhibit clear evidence of supercooling in the xylem ray parenchyma cells, electron microscopy revealed that the majority of xylem ray parenchyma cells in all of the woody species examined were supercooled to around –10°C upon freezing temperatures and were not frozen extracellularly. It seems likely that DTA failed to reveal the low temperature exotherm (LTE), that is produced by breakdown of supercooling in the xylem ray parenchyma cells as a consequence of the overlap between the high temperature exotherm and the LTE in each case. The xylem ray parenchyma cells in these woody species were very sensitive to dehydration, and supercooling had, to some extent, a protective effect against freezing injury. It is suggested that the capacity for supercooling of xylem ray parenchyma cells of tropical and subtropical woody species might be the result of inherent structural characteristics, such as rigid cell walls and compact xylem tissues, rather than the result of positive adaptation to freezing temperatures. The present and previous results together indicate that the responses of xylem ray parenchyma cells in a wide variety of hardwood species to freezing temperatures can be explained as a continuum, the specifics of which depend upon the temperatures of the growing conditions. Received: 24 January 1997 / Accepted: 13 May 1997  相似文献   

18.
Although cellular injury in some woody plants has been correlated with freezing of supercooled water, there is no direct evidence that intracellular ice formation is responsible for the injury. In this study we tested the hypothesis that injury to xylem ray parenchyma cells in supercooling tissues is caused by intracellular ice formation. The ultrastructure of freezing-stress response in xylem ray parenchyma cells of flowering dogwood (Cornus florida L.) was determined in tissue prepared by freeze substitution. Wood tissue was collected in the winter, spring, and summer of 1992. Specimens were cooled from 0 to -60[deg]C at a rate of 5[deg]C h-1. Freezing stress did not affect the structural organization of wood tissue, but xylem ray parenchyma cells suffered severe injury in the form of intracellular ice crystals. The temperatures at which the ice crystals were first observed depended on the season in which the tissue was collected. Intracellular ice formation was observed at -20, -10, and -5[deg]C in winter, spring, and summer, respectively. Another type of freezing injury was manifested by fragmented protoplasm with indistinguishable plasma membranes and damaged cell ultrastructure but no evidence of intracellular ice. Intracellular cavitation may be a source of freezing injury in xylem ray parenchyma cells of flowering dogwood.  相似文献   

19.
Free protoplasts were prepared from the living bark tissue of the trunk of summer and winter black locust trees by enzymic digestion of thin slices of the tissue for 3 hours in a medium containing 2% Onozuka cellulase, 2% Rhozyme pectinase, and 2% Driselase in mannitol solutions using 0.4 molar mannitol for summer tissue and 1.0 molar mannitol for winter tissues. Cleaned suspensions of protoplasts and also thin slices of tissue with cells intact were frozen to temperatures of −10 C, −20 C, −30 C, −40 C and liquid nitrogen in sucrose and balanced salt solutions. Similar suspensions of protoplasts were also subjected to strong osmotic dehydration (plasmorrhysis) in a series of balanced salt solutions of increasing molarity. Tests for survival showed that protoplasts retain the same properties of either extreme susceptibility or extreme resistance to injury by freezing or osmotic dehydration as the cells from which they are prepared. Winter protoplasts showed capability for tolerating freezing to −196 C and plasmorrhysis in 5 molar salt solutions. These results indicate that protoplasts are a valid and useful system for investigating the properties of the protoplasm and surface membranes associated with the seasonal development of extreme hardiness in the cells of woody plants.  相似文献   

20.
Pieces excised from leaf bases and laminae of seedlings of Triticum aestivum L. cv. Lennox were slowly frozen, using a specially designed apparatus, to temperatures between 2° and 14° C. These treatments ranged from non-damaging to damaging, based on ion-leakage tests to be found in the accompanying report (Pearce and Willison 1985, Planta 163, 304–316). The frozen tissue pieces were then freeze-fixed by rapidly cooling them, via melting Freon, to liquid-nitrogen temperature. The tissue was subsequently prepared for electron microscopy by freeze-etching. Ice crystals formed during slow freezing would tend to be much larger than those formed during subsequent freeze-fixation. Ice crystals surrounding the excised tissues were much larger in the frozen than in the control tissues (the latter rapidly freeze-fixed from room temperature). Large ice crystals were present between cells of frozen laminae and absent from controls. Intercellular spaces were infrequent in control leaf bases and no ice-filled intercellular spaces were found in frozen leaf bases. Intracellular ice crystals were smaller in frozen tissues than in controls. It is concluded that all ice formation before freeze-fixation was extracellular. This extracellular ice was either only extra-tissue (leaf bases), or extra-tissue and intercellular (laminae). Periplasmic ice was sometimes present, in control as well as slowly frozen tissues, and the crystals were always small; thus they were probably formed during freeze-fixation rather than during slow freezing. The plasma membrane sometimes showed imprints of cell-wall microfibrils. These were less abundant in leaf bases at 8° C than in controls, and were present on only a minority of plasma membranes from laminae. Therefore, extracellular ice probably did not compress the cells substantially, and changes in cell size and shape were possibly primarily a result of freezing-induced dehydration. Fine-scale distortions (wrinkles) in the plasma membrane, while absent from controls, were present, although only rarely, in both damaged and non-damaged tissues; they were therefore ice-induced but not directly related to the process of damage.  相似文献   

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