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1.
S. Fujikawa  K. Takabe 《Protoplasma》1996,190(3-4):189-203
Summary Cortical parenchyma cells of mulberry (Morus bombycis Koidz. cv. Goroji) become extremely cold hardy in winter and can tolerate equilibrium freezing below –30 °C and subsequent immersion into liquid nitrogen. We show in this ultrastructural study that, in these extremely cold hardy cortical parenchyma cells of mulberry collected in winter, initiation of freezing at –5 °C resulted in the formation of multiplex lamellae (MPL) that completely covered the area beneath the plasma membrane. The MPL were produced by fusion of pre-existing vesicular endoplasmic reticulum (ER), via a reticular ER network. The completed MPL were composed of a parallel array of sheet-like ER cisternae. This structural reorganization of the ER was completed within 10 min upon freezing at –5 °C and was quickly reversed upon thawing. The same structural reorganization of the ER was produced by osmotic dehydration of the cortical tissues with a 2.7 osmol sorbitol solution at 20 °C. Thus, the structural reorganization of the ER upon freezing was, in fact, produced by dehydration. In winter samples, the formation of MPL with the initiation of freezing completely inhibited close apposition of membranes upon deep freezing that has been reported to be a cause of freezing injury via the production of ultrastructural changes in the plasma membrane. Similar but more or less incomplete MPL were produced by freezing or osmotic dehydration in cortical parenchyma cells collected in spring and autumn, and these MPL partly inhibited close apposition of membranes. MPL were not produced in the cells of mulberry collected in summer and close apposition of membranes occurred upon deep freezing. We speculate that the formation of MPL with the initiation of freezing might play a specific role in inhibiting the close apposition of membranes due to the specific nature of the cisternal membranes and might, consequently, be responsible for the high freezing tolerance of winter cells.  相似文献   

2.
Acclimation of winter oilseed plants in the cold (i.e. at temperatures >0 degrees C) followed by short exposure to sub-lethal freezing temperatures resulted in pronounced ultrastructural changes of leaf epidermal and mesophyll cells. The following major changes were observed upon acclimation at 2 degrees C: increased thickness of cell walls; numerous invaginations of plasma membranes; the appearance of many large vesicles localized in the cytoplasm in close proximity to the central vacuole; the occurrence of abundant populations of microvesicles associated with the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) cisternae or located in the vicinity of dictyosomes; and the occurrence of paramural bodies and myelin-like structures. In addition, large phenolic deposits were observed in the vicinity of the plasma membrane and membrane-bound organelles such as chloroplasts, large vesicles or cytoplasm/tonoplast interfaces. Transient freezing (-5 degrees C for 18 h) of the cold-acclimated leaves led to reversible disorganization of the cytoplasm and to pronounced structural changes of the cellular organelles. Chloroplasts were swollen, with the stroma occupying one half of their volume and the thylakoid system being displaced to the other half. Large phenolic aggregates disappeared but distinct layers of phenolic deposits were associated with mitochondrial membranes and with chloroplast envelopes. In frost-thawed cells recovered at 2 degrees C for 24 h, dictyosomes and dictyosome- or ER-derived small vesicles reappeared in the ribosome-rich cytoplasm. Aberrations in the structure of chloroplasts and mitochondria were less pronounced. Few phenolic deposits were seen as small grains associated with chloroplast envelopes and vesicle membranes. These observations demonstrate that plants undergo different changes in cell ultrastructure depending on whether they are subjected to chilling or freezing temperatures. Results are discussed in relation to membrane recycling and the possible role of phenolics during the first and second stages of plant acclimation at low temperature.  相似文献   

3.
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   

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.
Freezing injury in protoplasts isolated from leaves of nonaccli-mated rye (Secale cereale cv Puma) is associated with the formation of the inverted hexagonal (HII) phase. However, in protoplasts from cold-acclimated rye, injury is associated with the occurrence of localized deviations in the fracture plane, a lesion referred to as the "fracture-jump lesion." To establish that these ultrastructural consequences of freezing are not unique to protoplasts, we have examined the manifestations of freezing injury in leaves of non-acclimated and cold-acclimated rye by freeze-fracture electron microscopy. At -10[deg]C, injury in nonacclimated leaves was manifested by the appearance of aparticulate domains in the plasma membrane, aparticulate lamellae subtending the plasma membrane, and by the frequent occurrence of the HII phase. The HII phase was not observed in leaves of cold-acclimated rye frozen to -35[deg]C. Rather, injury was associated with the occurrence of the fracture-jump lesion between the plasma membrane and closely appressed cytoplasmic membranes. Studies of the time dependence of HII phase formation in nonacclimated leaves indicated that freeze-induced dehydration requires longer times in leaves than in isolated protoplasts. These results demonstrate that the freeze-induced formation of the HII phase in nonacclimated rye and the fracture-jump lesion in cold-acclimated rye are not unique to protoplasts but also occur in the leaves from which the protoplasts are isolated.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
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   

8.
Z. Ristic  E. N. Ashworth 《Protoplasma》1993,172(2-4):111-123
Summary We studied cell ultrastructure and carbohydrate levels in the leaf tissue ofArabidopsis thaliana L. (Heyn) cv. Columbia during rapid cold acclimation. Freezing tolerance of the leaves from 26 day old plants was determined after 48 h and 10 days at 4°C. Acclimation treatment of 48 h decreased the lethal freezing temperature from –5.7°C to –9.4°C. Freezing tolerance was not altered further by acclimation at 4 °C for 10 days. Ultrastructural changes in the parenchyma cells were evident after 6 to 24 h of cold acclimation. The plasma membrane showed signs of extensive turnover. Evidence of membrane invaginations and sequestering of membrane material was observed. In addition, numerous microvesicles, paramural bodies, and fragments of endoplasmic reticulum were noticed in the vicinity of plasma membrane. Modifications in the structure of cell membranes were evident after 5 days of exposure to low temperature. Small, darkly stained globules were seen on the plasma membrane, tonoplast, chloroplast envelope membrane, mitochondrion outer membrane, dictyosome cisternae membrane, and microvesicle membrane. As far as we are aware, this type of membrane modification has not been described previously in plant cells exposed to low temperature. We propose to call these structures membraglobuli. Acclimation treatment also increased the concentrations of soluble sugars and starch. These observations suggest that cold acclimation inA. thaliana induces changes in both plasma membrane properties and carbohydrate composition.  相似文献   

9.
Secondary hyphae of Lyophyllum ulmarium were shown to tolerate slow freezing, which allowed extracellular freezing, to -196 degrees C. A freeze-fracture study showed that under this non-lethal freezing condition, the plasma membrane of the secondary hyphae did not show any ultrastructural changes as compared with the control, except gross cellular shrinkage. Tertiary hyphae of Lyophyllum ulmarium, on the other hand, were completely injured by slow freezing to -196 degrees C, and the plasma membrane showed distinct intramembrane particle aggregation as a result of direct membrane contact caused by severe cellular deformation. It is suggested that the absence of freezing injury in the secondary hyphae was due to ultrastructural preservation of the plasma membrane, which resulted from avoidance of severe cellular deformation, while occurrence of freezing injury in the tertiary hyphae is considered to be due to ultrastructural changes in the plasma membrane caused by severe cellular deformation.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Progress in freezing tolerance (FT) improvement through plant breeding approaches has met with little success in the last 50 years. Engineering plants for greater FT through plant transformation is one possible way to reduce the damage caused by freezing. Here, we report an improvement of the selection procedure and the transfer of the wheat Wcor410a acidic dehydrin gene in strawberry. The encoded protein has previously been shown to be associated with the plasma membrane, and its level of accumulation has been correlated with the degree of FT in different wheat genotypes. The WCOR410 protein was expressed in transgenic strawberry at a level comparable with that in cold-acclimated wheat. Freezing tests showed that cold-acclimated transgenic strawberry leaves had a 5 degrees C improvement of FT over wild-type or transformed leaves not expressing the WCOR410 protein. However, no difference in FT was found between the different plants under non-acclimated conditions, suggesting that the WCOR410 protein needs to be activated by another factor induced during cold acclimation. These data demonstrate that the WCOR410 protein prevents membrane injury and greatly improves FT in leaves of transgenic strawberry. A better understanding of the limiting factors allowing its activation may open up the way for engineering FT in different plant organs, and may find applications for the cryopreservation of human tissues and organs.  相似文献   

12.
Leakage of ions from a thawed tissue is a common phenomenon of freezing injury. This leakage is usually assumed to be due to loss of membrane semipermeability or membrane rupture by freezing injury. Freeze injured, yet living, onion (Allium cepa L.) epidermal cells were used to study alterations in cell membranes that result in leakage of ions. In spite of a large efflux of ions, freeze injured cells could be plasmolysed and they remained plasmolysed for several days just like the unfrozen control cells. Injured cells also exhibited protoplasmic streaming. Passive transport of KCl, urea and methyl urea across the cell membranes of injured and control cells was also studied. No difference could be detected for the transport rates of urea and methyl urea between control and injured cells. However, a dramatic increase in the transport rate of KCl was found for the injured cells. Depending upon the extent of initial freezing injury, an increase or a decrease in injury symptoms was found in the post-thaw period. During the progress of freezing injury, 10 days after thawing, a swelling of the protoplasm was seen in the irreversibly injured cells. In spite of this swelling, these cells could be plasmolysed. It appears that the high amount of K+ that leaks out into the extracellular water, due to freezing injury, causes protoplasmic swelling by replacing Ca2+ in the plasma membrane. We conclude that protoplasmic swelling is a sign of secondary injury. The results presented in this study show that membrane semipermeability is not completely lost and membrane rupture does not occur during the initial stage of freezing injury. In fact, the cells have the ability to repair damage depending upon the degree of injury. Our results show there are specific alterations in membrane semipermeability (e.g., transport of K+) which could be repaired completely depending on the degree of injury. These findings suggest that ion leakage due to freezing injury is due to alteration in the membrane proteins and not in the membrane lipids.  相似文献   

13.
Free radical and freezing injury to cell membranes of winter wheat   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
The symptoms of injury in microsomal membranes isolated from crowns of seedlings of Triticum aestivum , L. cultivar Fredrick after a lethal freeze-thaw stress included an increased lipid phase transition temperature, loss of lipid phosphate (lipid-P), and increased free fatty acid levels. However, minimal changes in fatty acid saturation were observed, suggesting minimal amounts of lipid peroxidation. All of these injury symptoms, including the lack of lipid peroxidation, were simulated in vitro by treatment of isolated membranes with oxygen free radicals, generated from either xanthine oxidase (EC 1.1.3.22) or paraquat (l,r-dimethyl-4,4'-bipyridinium dichloride). Further evidence indicating a relationship between free radicals and freezing injury comes from the observation that both protoplasts and microsomal membranes isolated from wheat seedlings, that had been acclimated to induce freezing tolerance, also had increased tolerance of oxygen free radicals, and contained higher lipid-soluble antioxidant levels, than those from non-acclimated seedlings. Lipid-soluble antioxidants accumulated in the crown tissue of the wheat seedling during the acclimation period. Freezing stress accelerated the formation of oxygen free radicals. Membranes isolated from crowns after a freeze–thaw stress tended to produce higher levels of superoxide as shown by the reduction of Tiron (1,2-dihydroxy-l,3-benzenedisulfonic acid). In protoplasts, increased superoxide production coincided with lethal freezing injury. These results are discussed in terms of the possible involvement of oxygen free radicals in mediating aspects of freezing injury to cell membranes.  相似文献   

14.
Extracellular ice formation in winter oilseed rape leaf discs (Brassica napus L. var. oleifera L. cv. Jantar) at different temperatures resulted in a transient membrane depolarization, which was followed by a decrease in membrane electric potential. In discs which underwent supercooling (no extracellular ice was formed), no membrane depolarization was observed. The inhibitors of calcium ion channels, gadolinium and lanthanum, decreased to some extend the amplitude of the frost-induced (−6 °C) depolarization and completely eliminated the decrease in membrane potential. Changes in membrane potential were associated with the increased electrolyte efflux, measured after thawing of the discs. No efflux from supercooled discs was observed. Application of calcium channel blockers decreased the level of the efflux induced by freezing at −6°C. It is suggested that membrane depolarization is one of the primary events induced by ice formation at a leaf surface. The possible reasons for changes in the membrane electric potential and their physiological consequences are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Callus cells of potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) cv. Désirée were exposed to various subzero temperatures and examined for the freezing damage. In the cells subjected to –3 °C, plasma membranes appeared to be intact, while tonoplast seemed to be damaged and organelles to be swollen. After freezing at –6 °C, the damage became severe and plasma membranes were ruptured. After exposure to –10 °C, the damage was so severe that the cell organelles could not be recognised and cytoplasm became fragmented.  相似文献   

16.
Membrane contrast can sometimes be poor in biological samples after high pressure freezing (HPF) and freeze substitution (FS). The addition of water to the FS-medium has been shown to improve membrane contrast in animal tissue and yeast. In the present study we tested the effects of 1% and 5% water added to the FS-medium (2% osmium with 0.2% uranyl acetate in anhydrous acetone) on the quality and visibility of membranes in high pressure frozen leaf samples of Cucurbita pepo L. plants and compared them to chemically fixed cells (3% glutaraldehyde post-fixed with 1% osmium tetroxide). The addition of water to the FS-medium drastically decreased the amounts of well preserved cells and did not significantly improve the quality nor visibility of membranes. In samples that were freeze substituted in FS-media containing 1% and 5% water the width of thylakoid membranes was found to be significantly increased of about 20% and the perinuclear space was up to 76% wider in comparison to what was found in samples which were freeze substituted without water. No differences were found in the thickness of membranes between chemically and cryofixed cells that were freeze substituted in the FS-medium without water. Nevertheless, in chemically fixed cells the intrathylakoidal space was about 120% wider than in cryofixed cells that were freeze substituted with or without water. The present results demonstrate that the addition of water to the FS-medium does not improve membrane contrast but changes the width of thylakoid membranes and the perinuclear space in the present plant material. The addition of water to the FS-medium is therefore not as essential for improved membrane contrast in the investigated plant samples as it was observed in cells of animal tissues and yeast cells.  相似文献   

17.
In an effort to clarify the responses of a wide range of plant cells to freezing, we examined the responses to freezing of the cells of chilling-sensitive and chilling-resistant tropical and subtropical plants. Among the cells of the plants that we examined, those of African violet ( Saintpaulia grotei Engl.) leaves were most chilling-sensitive, those of hypocotyls in mungbean [ Vigna radiata (L.) R. Wilcz.] seedlings were moderately chilling-sensitive, and those of orchid [ Paphiopedilum insigne (Wallich ex Lindl.) Pfitz.] leaves were chilling-resistant, when all were chilled at -2 degrees C. By contrast, all these plant cells were freezing-sensitive and suffered extensive damage when they were frozen at -2 degrees C. Cryo-scanning electron microscopy (Cryo-SEM) confirmed that, upon chilling at -2 degrees C, both chilling-sensitive and chilling-resistant plant cells were supercooled. Upon freezing at -2 degrees C, by contrast, intracellular freezing occurred in Saintpaulia leaf cells, frost plasmolysis followed by intracellular freezing occurred in mungbean seedling cells, and extracellular freezing (cytorrhysis) occurred in orchid leaf cells. We postulate that chilling-related destabilization of membranes might result in the loss of the ability of the plasma membrane to act as a barrier against the propagation of extracellular ice in chilling-sensitive plant cells. We also examined the role of cell walls in the response to freezing using cells in which the plasma membrane had been disrupted by repeated freezing and thawing. In chilling-sensitive Saintpaulia and mungbean cells, the cells with a disrupted plasma membrane responded to freezing at -2 degrees C by intracellular freezing. By contrast, in chilling-resistant orchid cells, as well as in other cells of chilling-resistant and freezing-resistant plant tissues, including leaves of orchard grass ( Dactylis glomerata L.), leaves of Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. and cortical tissues of mulberry ( Morus bombycis Koids.), cells with a disrupted plasma membrane responded to freezing by extracellular freezing. Our results indicate that, in the chilling-sensitive plants cells that we examined, not only the plasma membrane but also the cell wall lacked the ability to serve as a barrier against the propagation of extracellular ice, whereas in the chilling-resistant plant cells that we examined, not only the plasma membrane but also the cell wall acted as a barrier against the propagation of extracellular ice. It appears, therefore, that not only the plasma membrane but also the cell wall greatly influences the freezing behavior of plant cells.  相似文献   

18.
Exposure of plant cells and tissues to low or freezing temperatures often lead to uncontrolled and detrimental ion leakage. Therefore, when plants acclimate to low temperatures, processes that control ionic homeostasis are important. Here we characterized H+ ATPase and ATP-dependent Ca2+ transport activities in isolated plasma membranes of cold-acclimated and non-acclimated winter rye leaves (Secale cereale L. cv. Voima). Cold acclimation resulted in a two-fold higher Ca2+ transport activity, significantly different (P = 0.021) from that of non-acclimated rye, whereas only a small increase in H+ ATPase activity, measured as ATP hydrolysis, was observed in cold-acclimated compared to non-acclimated preparations. In plasma membranes, extensively washed with EDTA and Brij 58 to remove endogenous calmodulin, Ca2+ transport activity increased to about double by calmodulin addition, with both non-acclimated and cold-acclimated material. Uptake of Ca2+ was seen within the pHrange analyzed (pH 6–8), with an optimum at pH 7.2 with both materials, and both in the absence and in the presence of calmodulin. The increase in activity of ATP-dependent Ca2+ transport in cold-acclimated rye plasma membranes probably reflects the capacity needed to sustain the resting level of cytosolic Ca2+ concentration that is characteristic to the cold-acclimated situation.  相似文献   

19.
Abscisic acid (ABA) has been postulated to play a role in the development of freezing tolerance during the cold acclimation process in higher plants, but its role in cold tolerance in tower land plants has not been elucidated. The moss Physcomitrella patens rapidly developed freezing tolerance when its protonemata were grown in a medium containing ABA, with dramatic changes in the LT50 value from -2 degrees C to over -10 degrees C. We examined physiological and morphological alterations in protonema cells caused by ABA treatment to elucidate early cellular events responsible for rapid enhancement of freezing tolerance. Microscopic observations revealed that ABA treatment for 1 day resulted in a dramatic alteration in the appearance of intracellular organelles. ABA-treated cells had slender chloroplasts, with a reduced amount of starch grains, in comparison with those of non-treated cells. The ABA-treated cells also had several segmented vacuoles while many of non-treated cells had one central vacuole. When frozen to -4 degrees C, freezing injury-associated ultrastructural changes such as formation of aparticulate domains and fracture-jump lesions were frequently observed in the plasma membrane of non-treated protonema cells but not in that of ABA-treated cells. The ABA treatment increased the osmotic concentration of the protonema cells, in correlation with accumulation of free soluble sugars. These results suggest that ABA-induced accumulation of soluble sugars, associated with morphological changes in organelles, mitigated freezing-induced structural damage in the plasma membrane, eventually leading to enhancement of freezing tolerance in the protonema cells.  相似文献   

20.
Responses of the plasma membrane to low temperatures   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
The plasma membrane is considered to be the primary site of injury when plant cells are subjected to extracellular freezing. In order for plants or plant cells to acquire freezing tolerance, it is, thus, necessary that the plasma membrane increases its cryostability during freeze-thaw excursion. During cold acclimation both under natural and artificial conditions, there are compositional, structural and functional changes occurring in the plasma membrane, many, if not all, of which ultimately contribute to increased stability of the plasma membrane under freezing conditions. In addition, changes in the cytosol or intracellular compartments also affect the cryobehaviour of the plasma membrane during freeze-induced dehydration. Although many alterations occurring during cold acclimation influence the cryobehaviour of the plasma membrane comprehensively, recent advances in functional genomics approaches provide interesting information on the function of specific proteins for plasma membrane behaviour under freezing conditions.  相似文献   

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