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The responses of cortical microtubules to sub-zero temperatures were examined in non-acclimated (NA) and cold-acclimated (CA) rye ( Secale cereale L. cv. Voima) leaf and root cells, and in protoplasts isolated enzymatically from leaves. Responses of leaf and root cells to hypertonic solutions equivalent to the dehydration response of freezing (P. L. Steponkus and D. V. Lynch 1989. J. Bioenerg. Biomembr. 21: 21–41) were also examined. At the respective growth temperatures both NA and CA leaf and root cells had typical organization and abundance of cortical microtubules as observed by indirect immunofluorescence (IIF) staining. Unchanged microtubule arrays were still present in CA leaf cells after -4°C treatment, while in leaf cells of NA plants and in the root cells of both NA and CA plants microtubules were shorter and less abundant. After -10°C treatment the cortical microtubules were almost totally depolymerized in both types of root cells and in leaf cells of NA plants, while CA leaf cells still had abundant cortical microtubule arrays. Semiquantitative analyses of cortical microtubules (MTs) of protoplasts confirmed the findings with intact leaf cells. Hypertonic treatment of NA and CA leaf cells gave similar effects as exposure of cells to sub-zero temperatures. However, after the hypertonic treatment, more microtubules remained present in the CA root cells than in the NA root cells, suggesting that also in root cells cold acclimation increases the dehydration stability of MTs. In conclusion, cold acclimation induces both greater frost stability and greater osmotic tolerance in the cortical microtubules of the leaf cells, and greater osmotic tolerance in the microtubules of the root cells in winter rye.  相似文献   

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We assessed how small patches of contrasting urban ground cover [mesiscape (turf), xeriscape (gravel), concrete, and asphalt] altered the microclimate and performance of adjacent oleander (Nerium oleander L.) plants in Phoenix, Arizona during fall/winter (September–February) and spring/summer (March–September). Ground-cover and oleander canopy surface temperatures, canopy air temperatures and pot soil temperatures tended to be lowest in the mesiscape and highest in the asphalt and concrete. Canopy air vapor pressure deficits were lowest in the mesiscape and highest in the asphalt plot. Rates of net photosynthesis of all oleander plants were highest in October and May, and declined through mid-summer (June–July), when rates tended to be highest in the cooler mesiscape, particularly when water was limiting. During fall/winter, oleanders in the mesiscape produced 20% less biomass, 13% less leaf area, and had 12% lower relative growth rates (RG) than those in the other ground covers. Lower nighttime temperatures in the mesiscape in December led to oleander frost damage. During spring/summer, oleanders in the mesiscape produced 11% more biomass, 16% more leaf area, and had 3% higher RG than those in the other cover types. The effects of urban ground cover on oleander performance were season-specific; while oleander growth was greatest in the mesiscape during spring/summer, it was lowest during fall/winter and these plants experienced frost damage. Because all oleander plants produced >10 times as much biomass during the spring/summer, on an annual basis oleanders in the mesiscape produced 5–11% more biomass than plants in the warmer ground covers.  相似文献   

5.
The amount of proteins soluble upon boiling (especially WCS120 proteins) and the ability to develop frost tolerance (FT) after cold acclimation was studied in two frost-tolerant winter wheat cultivars, Mironovskaya 808 and Bezostaya 1. Protein gel blot analysis, mass spectrometry (MS) and image analysis of two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (2-DE) gels were used to identify and/or quantify the differences in protein patterns before (non-acclimated, NA) and after 3 weeks of cold acclimation (CA) of the wheats, when FT increased from -4 degrees C (lethal temperature (LT(50)), for both cultivars) to -18.6 degrees C in Bezostaya 1 and -20.8 degrees C in Mironovskaya 808. Only WCS120 protein was visible in NA leaves while all five WCS120 proteins were induced in the CA leaves. Mironovskaya 808 had higher accumulation of three members of WCS120 proteins (WCS120, WCS66 and WCS40) than Bezostaya 1. MS analysis of total sample of proteins soluble upon boiling showed seven COR proteins in the CA samples and only three COR proteins in the NA samples of cultivar Mironovskaya 808 (MIR). In conclusion, the level of the accumulation of WCS120, WCS66 and WCS40 distinguished our two frost-tolerant winter wheat cultivars. Moreover, the differences of CA and NA samples of the MIR were shown by liquid chromatography (LC)-tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS).  相似文献   

6.

Background  

Cold acclimation is the process by which plants adapt to the low, non freezing temperatures that naturally occur during late autumn or early winter. This process enables the plants to resist the freezing temperatures of winter. Temperatures similar to those associated with cold acclimation are also used by the fruit industry to delay fruit ripening in peaches. However, peaches that are subjected to long periods of cold storage may develop chilling injury symptoms (woolliness and internal breakdown). In order to better understand the relationship between cold acclimation and chilling injury in peaches, we isolated and functionally characterized cold-regulated promoters from cold-inducible genes identified by digitally analyzing a large EST dataset.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Apoplastic antifreeze proteins (AFPs) accumulate in winter rye (Secale cereale L. cv. Musketeer) leaves during cold acclimation. Two of the rye AFPs with molecular masses of 32 and 35 kDa are similar in their amino acid sequences and epitopes to -1, 3-endoglucanase. Localization of these AFPs, which we refer to as glucanase-like proteins (GLPs), was carried out with antiserum raised against the 32 kDa AFP. Specimens from leaves and roots of non-acclimated (NA) plants and cold acclimated (CA) plants were prepared by freeze-substitution for high resolution immunoelectron microscopy. In CA leaves, high levels of GLPs were observed in cell walls of mesophyll cells adjacent to intercellular spaces and in secondary thickenings of xylem vessels. Taken together with the absence of GLPs in vacuoles, these results confirm the apoplastic accumulation of AFPs in CA winter rye. Within the cells of CA leaves, GLPs were localized in cisternae of the rough endoplasmic reticulum, the Golgi apparatus and the plasma membrane, which indicates that GLPs are secreted via an exocytic bulk-flow pathway. The occurrence of high levels of GLPs in CA leaves, their low presence in NA leaves and the lack of GLPs in roots all suggest that there is a correlation between increased accumulation of GLPs and increased freezing tolerance of these plant materials. Furthermore, the localization of GLPs in the immediate vicinity of pathways for free water within the tissues supports the view that these proteins have an important role in the crystallization and/or recrystallization of water when the leaves of CA winter rye are exposed to freezing temperatures.Abbreviations AFP antifreeze protein - BSA bovine serum albumin - CA cold acclimated - GAR goat antirabbit antiserum conjugated with colloidal gold - GLP glucanase-like protein - NA non-acclimated - PBS phosphate buffered saline - PR pathogenesis related  相似文献   

8.
Arabidopsis plants show an increase in freezing tolerance in response to exposure to low nonfreezing temperatures, a phenomenon known as cold acclimation. In the present study, we evaluated the physiological and morphological responses of various Arabidopsis ecotypes to continuous growth under chilling (14°C) and cold (6°C) temperatures and evaluated their basal freezing tolerance levels. Seedlings of Arabidopsis plants were extremely sensitive to low growth temperatures: the hypocotyls and petioles were much longer and the angles of the second pair of true leaves were much greater in plants grown at 14°C than in those grown at 22°C, whereas just intermediate responses were observed under the cold temperature of 6°C. Flowering time was also markedly delayed at low growth temperatures and, interestingly, lower growth temperatures were accompanied by longer inflorescences. Other marked responses to low temperatures were changes in pigmentation, which appeared to be both ecotype specific and temperature dependent and resulted in various visual phenotypes such as chlorosis, necrosis or enhanced accumulation of anthocyanins. The observed decreases in chlorophyll contents and accumulation of anthocyanins were much more prominent in plants grown at 6°C than in those grown at 14°C. Among the various ecotypes tested, Mt‐0 plants markedly accumulated the highest levels of anthocyanins upon growth at 6°C. Freezing tolerance examination revealed that among 10 ecotypes tested, only C24 plants were significantly more sensitive to subzero temperatures. In conclusion, Arabidopsis ecotypes responded differentially to cold (6°C), chilling (14°C) and freezing temperatures, with specific ecotypes being more sensitive in particular traits to each low temperature.  相似文献   

9.
The species richness of C(4) grasses is strongly correlated with temperature, with C(4) species dominating subtropical ecosystems and C(3) types predominating in cooler climates. Here, the effects of low temperatures on C(4) and C(3) grasses are compared, controlling for phylogenetic effects by using Alloteropsis semialata, a unique species with C(4) and C(3) subspecies. Controlled environment and common garden experiments tested the hypotheses that: (i) photosynthesis and growth are greater in the C(4) than the C(3) subspecies at high temperatures, but this advantage is reversed below 20 degrees C; and (ii) chilling-induced photoinhibition and light-mediated freezing injury of leaves occur at higher temperature thresholds in the C(4) than the C(3) plants. Measurements of leaf growth and photosynthesis showed the expected advantages of the C(4) pathway over the C(3) type at high temperatures. These declined with temperature, but were not completely lost until 15 degrees C, and there was no evidence of a reversal to give a C(3) advantage. Chronic chilling (5-15 degrees C) or acute freezing events induced a comparable degree of photodamage in illuminated leaves of both subspecies. Similarly, freezing caused high rates of mortality in the unhardened leaves of both subtypes. However, a 2-week chilling treatment prior to these freezing events halved injury in the C(3) but not the C(4) subspecies, suggesting that C(4) leaves lacked the capacity for cold acclimation. These results therefore suggest that C(3) members of this subtropical species may gain an advantage over their C(4) counterparts at low temperatures via protection from freezing injury rather than higher photosynthetic rates.  相似文献   

10.
To elucidate the fundamental mechanisms and subsequent evolutionary aspects of plant cold acclimation, we examined the effect of cold acclimation on freezing tolerance in Klebsormidium flaccidum, a green alga belonging to Charophyceae, a sister group of land plants. Freezing tolerance of K. flaccidum was significantly enhanced by cold treatment: survival increased from 15% at -10 degrees C when grown at 18 degrees C to 55 and 85% after exposure at 2 degrees C for 2 and 7 d, respectively. Accompanying the development of freezing tolerance, soluble sugars (glucose and sucrose), a putative glycoside and amino acids, including gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), accumulated to high levels in the alga, suggesting that these solutes play a crucial role in the cold acclimation of K. flaccidum. Interestingly, the application of abscisic acid (ABA) did not change the freezing tolerance of the alga. We also observed changes in cell structure, including increased numbers and sizes of starch grains in chloroplasts, chloroplast enlargement, vacuole size reduction and cytoplasmic volume increase. These results suggest that K. flaccidum responds well to cold treatment and develops freezing tolerance in a process comparable to that of land plants.  相似文献   

11.
Levels of endogenous glycine betaine in the leaves were measured in response to cold acclimation, water stress and exogenous ABA application in Arabidopsis thaliana. The endogenous glycine betaine level in the leaves increased sharply during cold acclimation treatment as plants gained freezing tolerance. When glycine betaine (10 mM) was applied exogenously to the plants as a foliar spray, the freezing tolerance increased from -3.1 to -4.5 degrees C. In addition, when ABA (1 mM) was applied exogenously, the endogenous glycine betaine level and the freezing tolerance in the leaves increased. However, the increase in the leaf glycine betaine level induced by ABA was only about half of that by the cold acclimation treatment. Furthermore, when plants were subjected to water stress (leaf water potential of approximately -1.6 MPa), the endogenous leaf glycine betaine level increased by about 18-fold over that in the control plants. Water stress lead to significant increase in the freezing tolerance, which was slightly less than that induced by the cold acclimation treatment. The results suggest that glycine betaine is involved in the induction of freezing tolerance in response to cold acclimation, ABA, and water stress in Arabidopsis plants.  相似文献   

12.
Photosynthetic acclimation to temperature and irradiance was studied in the filamentous, non-heterocystous cyanobacterium Plectonema boryanum UTEX 485. Growth rates of this cyanobacterium measured at ambient CO2 were primarily influenced by temperature with minimal effects of irradiance. Both growth temperature and irradiance affected linolenic (18:3) and linoleic acid (18:2) levels in the four major lipid classes in an independent but additive manner. In contrast, photosynthetic acclimation was not due to either growth temperature or irradiance per se, but rather, due to the interaction of these environmental factors. P. boryanum grown at low temperature and moderate irradiance mimicked cells grown at high light. Compared to cells grown at either 29 degrees C/150 micromol m(-2) s(-1) (29/150) or 15/10, P. boryanum grown at either 15/150 or 29/750 exhibited: (1) reduced cellular levels of Chl a and phycobilisomes (PBS), and concomitantly higher content of an orange-red carotenoid, myxoxanthophyll; (2) higher light saturated rates (Pmax) when expressed on a Chl a basis but lower apparent quantum yields of oxygen evolution and (3) enhanced resistance to high light stress. P. boryanum grown at 15/150 regained normal blue-green pigmentation within 16 h after a temperature shift to 29 degrees C at a constant irradiance of 150 micromol m(-2) s(-1). DBMIB and KCN but not DCMU and atrazine partially inhibited the change in myxoxanthophyll/Chl a ratio following the shift from 15 to 29 degrees C. We conclude that P. boryanum responds to either varying growth temperature or varying growth irradiance by adjusting the ability to absorb light through decreasing the cellular contents of Chl a and light-harvesting pigments and screening of excessive light by myxoxanthophyll predominantly localized in the cell wall/cell membrane to protect PSII from over-excitation. The possible role of redox sensing/signalling for photosynthetic acclimation of cyanobacteria to either temperature or irradiance is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
The changes in the antioxidant enzymes activity, total protein and proline content and their correlations with freezing tolerance (FT) (expressed as LT50) were investigated at 11 different olive cultivars at cold-acclimation (CA, in February) and non-acclimation (NA, in August) stages. Leaf samples were collected from each cultivar and were divided into two groups. The first group was immediately frozen in liquid nitrogen for further biochemical analysis. The second ones was subjected to different freezing temperatures (?5, ?10, ?15 and ?20 °C) for 10 h, in order to determine their FT. The unfrozen control samples were kept at 4 °C. The results showed that Fishomi, Mission and Shengeh were the most freezing tolerant among other cultivars. In contrast, Zard, Manzanilla and Amigdalolia were the most sensitive ones. The cold acclimation enhanced the activities of superoxide dismutase (SOD), peroxidase (POD), ascorbate peroxidase (APX), catalase (CAT), polyphenol oxidase (PPO) and total protein content. However, proline content and phenylalanine ammonia-lyase (PAL) activity did not change or even decreased slightly at CA stage, compare to those samples at NA stage. It was found that LT50 to be closely correlated to POD, CAT, and PPO activity at CA and NA stages. Overall, higher leaf POD, CAT, and PPO activity could be used as important selection criteria in screening tolerant olive cultivars for cold zone climatic.  相似文献   

14.
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   

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ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: Ecotypes of Colobanthus qutensis Kunt Bartl (Cariophyllaceae) from Andes Mountains andMaritime Antarctic grow under contrasting photoinhibitory conditions, reaching differentialcold tolerance upon cold acclimation. Photoinhibition depends on the extent of photodamageand recovery capability. We propose that cold acclimation increases resistance to lowtemperature-induced photoinhibition, limiting photodamage and promoting recovery undercold. Therefore, the Antarctic ecotype (cold hardiest) should be less photoinhibited and havebetter recovery from low-temperature-induced photoinhibition than the Andean ecotype. Bothecotypes were exposed to cold induced photoinhibitory treatment (PhT). Photoinhibition andrecovery of photosystem II (PSII) was followed by fluorescence, CO2 exchange, andimmunoblotting analyses. RESULTS: The same reduction (25%) in maximum PSII efficiency (Fv/Fm) was observed in both coldacclimated(CA) and non-acclimated (NA) plants under PhT. A full recovery was observed inCA plants of both ecotypes under dark conditions, but CA Antarctic plants recover faster thanthe Andean ecotype.Under PhT, CA plants maintain its quantum yield of PSII, while NA plants reduced itstrongly (50% and 73% for Andean and Antarctic plants respectively). Cold acclimationinduced the maintenance of PsaA and Cyt b6/f and reduced a 41% the excitation pressure inAntarctic plants, exhibiting the lowest level under PhT. Cold acclimation decreasessignificantly NPQs in both ecotypes, and reduce chlorophylls and D1 degradation in Andeanplants under PhT.NA and CA plants were able to fully restore their normal photosynthesis, while CA Antarcticplants reached 50% higher photosynthetic rates after recovery, which was associated toelectron fluxes maintenance under photoinhibitory conditions. CONCLUSIONS: Cold acclimation has a greater importance on the recovery process than on limitingphotodamage. Cold acclimation determined the kinetic and extent of recovery process underdarkness in both C. quitensis ecotypes. The greater recovery of PSII at low temperature in theAntarctic ecotype was related with its ability to maintain PsaA, Cyt b6/f and D1 protein afterphotoinhibitory conditions. This is probably due to either a higher stability of thesepolypeptides or to the maintenance of their turnover upon cold acclimation. In both cases, itis associated to the maintenance of electron drainage from the intersystem pool, whichmaintains QA more oxidized and may allow the synthesis of ATP and NADPH necessariesfor the regeneration of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate in the Calvin Cycle. This could be a keyfactor for C. quitensis success under the harsh conditions and the short growing period in theMaritime Antarctic.  相似文献   

17.
Loik ME  Nobel PS 《Plant physiology》1993,103(3):871-876
The responses to low temperature were determined for two species of cacti sensitive to freezing, Ferocactus viridescens and Opuntia ficus-indica, and a cold hardy species, Opuntia fragilis. Fourteen days after shifting the plants from day/night air temperatures of 30/20[deg]C to 10/0[deg]C, the chlorenchyma water content decreased only for O. fragilis. This temperature shift caused the freezing tolerance (measured by vital stain uptake) of chlorenchyma cells to be enhanced only by about 2.0[deg]C for F. viridescens and O. ficus-indica but by 14.6[deg]C for O. fragilis. Also, maintenance of high water content by injection of water into plants at 10/0[deg]C reversed the acclimation. The endogenous abscisic acid (ABA) concentration was below 0.4 pmol g-1 fresh weight at 30/20[deg]C, but after 14 d at 10/0[deg]C it increased to 84 pmol g-1 fresh weight for O. ficus-indica and to 49 pmol g-1 fresh weight for O. fragilis. Four days after plants were sprayed with 7.5 x 10-5 M ABA at 30/20[deg]C, freezing tolerance was enhanced by 0.5[deg]C for F. viridescens, 4.1[deg]C for O. ficus-indica, and 23.4[deg]C for O. fragilis. Moreover, the time course for the change in freezing tolerance over 14 d was similar for plants shifted to low temperatures as for plants treated with exogenous ABA at moderate temperatures. Decreases in plant water content and increases in ABA concentration may be important for low-temperature acclimation by cacti, especially O. fragilis, which is widely distributed in Canada and the United States.  相似文献   

18.
The aim of this study was to find a correlation between the freezing tolerance of three chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.) cultivars (?nci, I??k-05, and Sar?-98) and their wild relative C. echinospermum and physiological responses. Chickpea plants (15-d-old) were subjected to cold acclimation (CA) (10 °C for 7 d), freezing (-3 or -5 °C for 2 h), and subsequent rewarming (25 °C for 7 d). In two separate experiments with three replications, we determined growth, water status, photosystem 2 photochemical activity, photosynthetic pigments, H2O2, malondialdehyde, and proline content, relative leakage ratio, antioxidant enzyme activities, and gene expressions in cultivars different in freezing tolerance. Freezing temperatures adversely affected all the physiological parameters of all cultivars. Rewarming did not lead to complete recovery. The cultivar ?nci was more tolerant to the freezing temperatures than others.  相似文献   

19.
Elevated atmospheric CO2 adversely affects freezing tolerance in many evergreens, but the underlying mechanism(s) have been elusive. We compared effects of elevated CO2 with those of daytime warming on acclimation of snow gum (Eucalyptus pauciflora) to freezing temperatures under field conditions. Reduction in stomatal conductance g(c) under elevated CO2 was shown to cause leaf temperature to increase by up to 3 degrees C. In this study, this increase in leaf temperature was simulated under ambient CO2 conditions by using a free air temperature increase (FATI) system to warm snow gum leaves during daytime, thereby increasing the diurnal range in temperature without affecting temperature minima. Acclimation to freezing temperatures was assessed using measures of electrolyte leakage and photosynthetic efficiency of leaf discs exposed to different nadir temperatures. Here, we show that both elevated CO2 and daytime warming delayed acclimation to freezing temperatures for 2-3 weeks after which time freeze tolerance of the treated plants in both the FATI and open top chamber (OTC) experiments did not differ from control plants. Our results support the hypothesis that delayed development of freezing tolerance under elevated CO2 is because of higher daytime leaf temperatures under elevated CO2. Thus, potential gains in productivity in response to increasing atmospheric CO2 and prolonging the growing season may be reduced by an increase in freezing stress in frost-prone area.  相似文献   

20.
The change of chlorophyll fluorescence parameters in froze leaves of 3 leaf-age seedlings were examined using two winter barley cultivars (Chumai 1 and Mo 103) differing in cold tolerance to investigate physiological response to low temperature as affected by cold acclimation (under 3/1 degrees C, day/night for 5 days before freezing treatment) and irradiation size (high irradiance: 380+/-25 micromol m(-2)s(-1) and low irradiance: 60+/-25 micromol m(-2)s(-1)) during recovery. The results showed that non-lethal freezing shock (exposed to -8 degrees C for 18 h) did not obviously affect maximum quantum efficiency in photosystem II (PSII), but dramatically increased non-photochemical quenching and reduced effective quantum yield in PSII. Cold acclimation significantly improved stability of photosynthetic function of leaves after freezing stress through buffering excessive energy and alleviating photoinhibition during recovery, indicating it increased recovery ability of barley plants from freezing injury. High irradiance was quite harmful to the stability of PSII in barley plants during recovery from freezing injury. The electron transport rate of PSII varied with cold-acclimation, irradiance and genotype. Cold acclimation caused significant increase in electron transport rate of PSII for relatively tolerant cultivar Mo 103, but not for relatively sensitive cultivar Chumai 1. It can be concluded that some chlorophyll fluorescence parameters during recovery from freezing shock may be used as the indicators in identification and evaluation of cold tolerance in barley.  相似文献   

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