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Desiccation tolerance in vegetative plant cells   总被引:17,自引:0,他引:17  
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Bryophytes are a non-monophyletic group of three major lineages (liverworts, hornworts, and mosses) that descend from the earliest branching events in the phylogeny of land plants. We postulate that desiccation tolerance is a primitive trait, thus mechanisms by which the first land plants achieved tolerance may be reflected in how extant desiccation-tolerant bryophytes survive drying. Evidence is consistent with extant bryophytes employing a tolerance strategy of constitutive cellular protection coupled with induction of a recovery/repair mechanism upon rehydration. Cellular structures appear intact in the desiccated state but are disrupted by rapid uptake of water upon rehydration, but cellular integrity is rapidly regained. The photosynthetic machinery appears to be protected such that photosynthetic activity recovers quickly. Gene expression responds following rehydration and not during drying. Gene expression is translationally controlled and results in the synthesis of a number of proteins, collectively called rehydrins. Some prominent rehydrins are similar to Late Embryogenesis Abundant (LEA) proteins, classically ascribed a protection function during desiccation. The role of LEA proteins in a rehydrating system is unknown but data indicates a function in stabilization and reconstitution of membranes. Phylogenetic studies using a Tortula ruralis LEA-like rehydrin led to a re-examination of the evolution of desiccation tolerance. A new phylogenetic analysis suggests that: (i) the basic mechanisms of tolerance seen in modern day bryophytes have changed little from the earliest manifestations of desiccation tolerance in land plants, and (ii) vegetative desiccation tolerance in the early land plants may have evolved from a mechanism present first in spores.  相似文献   

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The involvement of ubiquitin in vegetative desiccation tolerance   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
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Acquisition of desiccation tolerance and the related changes at the cellular level in wheat (Triticum aestivum cv. Priokskaya) kernels during normal development and premature drying on the ear were studied using a spin probe technique and low temperature scanning electron microscopy. During normal development, the ability of embryos to germinate after rapid drying and rehydration was acquired after completion of morphological development, which is a few days before mass maturity. The acquisition of desiccation tolerance, as assessed by germination, was associated with an upsurge in cytoplasmic viscosity, the onset of accumulation of protein and oil bodies, and the retention of membrane integrity upon dehydration/rehydration. These features were also used to assess cellular desiccation tolerance in the cases when germination could not occur. Slow premature drying was used to decouple the acquisition of cellular desiccation tolerance from morphogenesis. Upon premature drying of kernels on the ears of plants cut at 5 d after anthesis, desiccation-tolerant dwarf embryos were formed that were able to germinate. When plants were cut at earlier stages poorly developed embryos were formed that were unable to germinate, but cellular desiccation tolerance was nevertheless acquired. In such prematurely dried kernels, peripheral meristematic endosperm cells had already passed through similar physiological and ultrastructural changes associated with the acquisition of cellular desiccation tolerance. It is concluded that despite the apparent strong integration in seed development, desiccation tolerance can be acquired by the meristematic cells in the developing embryo and cambial layer of endosperm, independently of morphological development.  相似文献   

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The ability of vegetative plant tissues to survive desiccation is an uncommon trait, although plants that are able to do this represent all major classes of plants. Two classes of vegetative desiccation-tolerant plants exist; those that are modified desiccation-tolerant and can only survive desiccation if drying rates are slow, and those that are fully desiccation-tolerant and can survive even rapid drying rates. Investigations into the cellular level responses of these two types of plants has lead to an understanding of the underlying mechanisms of desiccation-tolerance. The following proposed mechanisms for desiccation-tolerance are presented. Modified desiccation-tolerant plants utilize inducible cellular protection systems supplemented in part by a minor rehydration induced repair component. Fully desiccation-tolerant plants utilize a rehydration induced repair system that is complemented by a constitutive protection component. This minireview explores the evidence for these proposed mechanisms in an attempt to lay the theoretical ground work for future work in this area.  相似文献   

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The moss Fontinalis antipyretica, an aquatic bryophyte previously described as desiccation-intolerant, is known to survive intermittent desiccation events in Mediterranean rivers. To better understand the mechanisms of desiccation tolerance in this species and to reconcile the apparently conflicting evidence between desiccation tolerance classifications and field observations, gross photosynthesis and chlorophyll a fluorescence were measured in field-desiccated bryophyte tips and in bryophyte tips subjected in the laboratory to slow, fast, and very fast drying followed by either a short (30 min) or prolonged (5 days) recovery. Our results show, for the first time, that the metabolic response of F. antipyretica to desiccation, both under field and laboratory conditions, is consistent with a desiccation-tolerance pattern; however, drying must proceed slowly for the bryophyte to regain its pre-desiccation state following rehydration. In addition, the extent of dehydration was found to influence metabolism whereas the drying rate determined the degree of recovery. Photosystem II (PSII) regulation and structural maintenance may be part of the induced desiccation tolerance mechanism allowing this moss to recover from slow drying. The decrease in the photochemical quenching coefficient (qP) immediately following rehydration may serve to alleviate the effects of excess energy on photosystem I (PSI), while low-level non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) would allow an energy shift enabling recovery subsequent to extended periods of desiccation. The findings were confirmed in field-desiccated samples, whose behavior was similar to that of samples slowly dried in the laboratory.  相似文献   

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* BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The ability of partial dehydration and abscisic acid pretreatments to increase desiccation tolerance in the cyanobacterial lichen Peltigera polydactylon was tested. * METHODS: Net photosynthesis and respiration were measured using infrared gas analysis during a drying and rehydration cycle. At the same time, the efficiency of photosystem two was measured using chlorophyll fluorescence, and the concentrations of chlorophyll a were spectrophotometrically assayed. Heat production was also measured during a shorter drying and rehydration cycle using differential dark microcalorimetry. * KEY RESULTS: Pretreating lichens by dehydrating them to a relative water content of approx. 0.65 for 3 d, followed by storing thalli hydrated for 1 d in the light, significantly improved their ability to recover net photosynthesis during rehydration after desiccation for 15 but not 30 d. Abscisic acid pretreatment could substitute for partial dehydration. The improved rates of photosynthesis during the rehydration of pretreated material were not accompanied by preservation of photosystem two activity or chlorophyll a concentrations compared with untreated lichens. Partial dehydration and ABA pretreatments appeared to have little direct effect on the desiccation tolerance of the mycobiont, because the bursts of respiration and heat production that occurred during rehydration were similar in control and pretreated lichens. * CONCLUSIONS: Results indicate that the photobiont of P. polydactylon possesses inducible tolerance mechanisms that reduce desiccation-induced damage to carbon fixation, and will therefore improve the supply of carbohydrates to the whole thallus following stress. In this lichen, ABA is involved in signal transduction pathways that increase tolerance of the photobiont.  相似文献   

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In order to ultimately understand the whole plant mechanism of attaining desiccation tolerance, we undertook to investigate the root tissues of the resurrection plant Xerophyta viscosa, as previous work has only been conducted on the leaf tissues of resurrection plants. An aeroponic plant growth system was designed and optimised to observe the root’s response to desiccation without the restrictions of a soil medium, allowing easy access to roots. Successful culture of both X.viscosa and the control, Zea mays, was achieved and dehydration stress was implemented through reduction of nutrient solution spraying of the roots. After drying to the air dry state (achieved after 7 days for roots and 10 days for shoots), rehydration was achieved by resumption of root spraying. X.viscosa plants survived desiccation and recovered but Z. mays did not. The activity of the antioxidant enzymes superoxide dismutase, catalase, ascorbate peroxidase and glutathione reductase and quantities of ascorbate and glutathione were determined during root desiccation. There was an initial decline in activity in all enzymes upon drying to 80% RWC, but activity thereafter remained constant, at rates indicative of potential metabolic activity, to the air-dry state. This data suggests that these enzymes are not denatured by desiccation of the root tissue. Ascorbate and glutathione content remained constant at concentrations of 70 and 100 μM, respectively during drying. Thus root tissues appear to retain antioxidant potential during drying, for use in recovery upon rehydration, as has been reported for leaf tissues of this and other resurrection plants.  相似文献   

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《Journal of bryology》2013,35(4):281-286
Abstract

The effects of treatments that increase desiccation tolerance were tested on the activity of the enzymes superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase (CAT) in the moss Atrichum androgynum subjected to a drying/wetting cycle. Hardening by both abscisic acid (ABA) pretreatment and partial dehydration significantly increased the rate of recovery of photosynthesis during rehydration following desiccation. Hardening treatments had little effect on SOD activity. In non-hardened plants, SOD activity increased three-fold during desiccation for 32 h at 52% rh, but hardened material tended to display smaller increases in activity. During rehydration, SOD activities rapidly declined to their initial values in all treatments. Hardening by partial dehydration, but not ABA, reduced CAT activity. After desiccation for 32 h, material from all treatments displayed about half the initial CAT activity, and activity did not change during subsequent rehydration. Results show that, while the induction of SOD appears to play a role in desiccation tolerance, a similar induction occurred in both hardened and non-hardened mosses. Induction of greater activities of enzymes that scavenge reactive oxygen species is not responsible for the added tolerance induced by hardening treatments.  相似文献   

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The majority of terrestrial plants are unable to survive in very dry environments. However, a small group of plants, called ‘resurrection’ plants, are extremely desiccation-tolerant and are capable of losing more than 90% of the cellular water in vegetative tissues. Resurrection plants can remain dried in an anabiotic state for several years and, upon rehydration, are able to resume normal growth and metabolism within 24 h. Vegetative desiccation tolerance is thought to have evolved independently several times within the plant kingdom from mechanisms that allow reproductive organs to survive air-dryness. Resurrection plants synthesise a range of compounds, either constitutively or in response to dehydration, that protect various components of the cell wall from damage during desiccation and/or rehydration. These include sugars and late embryogenesis abundant (LEA) proteins that are thought to act as osmoprotectants, and free radical-scavenging enzymes that limit the oxidative damage during dehydration. Changes in the cell wall composition during drying reduce the mechanical damage caused by the loss of water and the subsequent shrinking of the vacuole. These include an increase in expansin or cell wall-loosening activity during desiccation that enhances wall flexibility and promotes folding.  相似文献   

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