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Because of their unique tolerance to desiccation, the so‐called resurrection plants can be considered as excellent models for extensive research on plant reactions to environmental stresses. The vegetative tissues of these species are able to withstand long dry periods and to recover very rapidly upon re‐watering. This study follows the dynamics of key components involved in leaf tissue antioxidant systems under desiccation in the resurrection plant Haberlea rhodopensis and the related non‐resurrection species Chirita eberhardtii. In H. rhodopensis these parameters were also followed during recovery after full drying. A well‐defined test system was developed to characterise the different responses of the two species under drought stress. Results show that levels of H2O2 decreased significantly both in H. rhodopensis and C. eberhardtii, but that accumulation of malondialdehyde was much more pronounced in the desiccation‐tolerant H. rhodopensis than in the non‐resurrection C. eberhardtii. A putative protective role could be attributed to accumulation of total phenols in H. rhodopensis during the late stages of drying. The total glutathione concentration and GSSG/GSH ratio increased upon complete dehydration of H. rhodopensis. Our data on soluble sugars suggest that sugar ratios might be important for plant desiccation tolerance. An array of different adaptations could thus be responsible for the resurrection phenotype of H. rhodopensis.  相似文献   

3.
The small group of resurrection plants is a unique model which could help us in further understanding of abiotic stress tolerance. The most frequently used approach for investigations on gene functions in plant systems is genetic transformation. In this respect, the establishment of in vitro systems for regeneration and micro propagation is necessary. On the other hand, in vitro cultures of such rare plants could preserve their natural populations. Here, we present our procedure for in vitro regeneration and propagation of Haberlea rhodopensis – a resurrection plant species, endemic for the Balkan region.  相似文献   

4.
With their ability to survive complete desiccation, resurrection plants are a suitable model system for studying the mechanisms of drought tolerance. In the present study, we investigated desiccation‐induced alterations in surface topography of thylakoids isolated from well‐hydrated, moderately dehydrated, severely desiccated and rehydrated Haberlea rhodopensis plants by means of atomic force microscopy (AFM), electrokinetic and optical measurements. According to our knowledge, so far, there were no reports on the characterization of surface topography and polydispersity of thylakoid membranes from resurrection plants using AFM and dynamic light scattering. To study the physicochemical properties of thylakoids from well‐hydrated H. rhodopensis plants, we used spinach thylakoids for comparison as a classical model from higher plants. The thylakoids from well‐hydrated H. rhodopensis had a grainy surface, significantly different from the well‐structured spinach thylakoids with distinct grana and lamella, they had twice smaller cross‐sectional area and were 1.5 times less voluminous than that of spinach. Significant differences in their physicochemical properties were observed. The dehydration and subsequent rehydration of plants affected the size, shape, morphology, roughness and therefore the structure of the studied thylakoids. Drought resulted in significant enhancement of negative charges on the outer surface of thylakoid membranes which correlated with the increased roughness of thylakoid surface. This enhancement in surface charge density could be due to the partial unstacking of thylakoids exposing more negatively charged groups from protein complexes on the membrane surface that prevent from possible aggregation upon drought stress.  相似文献   

5.
Desiccation tolerance is among the most important parameters for crop improvement under changing environments. Resurrection plants are useful models for both theoretical and practical studies. We performed metabolite profiling via gas chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry (GC‐MS) and high‐performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and analyzed the antioxidant capacity of the endemic resurrection plant Haberlea rhodopensis at desiccation and recovery. More than 100 compounds were evaluated. Stress response included changes in both primary and secondary metabolic pathways. The high amounts of the specific glycoside myconoside and some phenolic acids – e.g. syringic and dihydrocaffeic acid under normal conditions tend to show their importance for the priming of H. rhodopensis to withstand severe desiccation and oxidative stress. The accumulation of sucrose (resulting from starch breakdown), total phenols, β‐aminoisobutyric acid, β‐sitosterol and α‐tocopherol increased up to several times at later stages of desiccation. Extracts of H. rhodopensis showed high antioxidant capacity at stress and normal conditions. Myconoside was with the highest antioxidant properties among tested phenolic compounds. Probably, the evolution of resurrection plants under various local environments has resulted in unique desiccation tolerance with specific metabolic background. In our case, it includes the accumulation of a relatively rare compound (myconoside) that contributes alone and together with other common metabolites. Further systems biology studies on the involvement of carbohydrates, phenolic acids and glycosides in the desiccation tolerance and antioxidant capacity of H. rhodopensis will definitely help in achieving the final goal – improving crop drought tolerance.  相似文献   

6.
The functional state of the photosynthetic apparatus of flowering homoiochlorophyllous desiccation tolerant plant Haberlea rhodopensis during dehydration and subsequent rehydration was investigated in order to characterize some of the mechanisms by which resurrection plants survive drought stress. The changes in the CO2 assimilation rate, chlorophyll fluorescence parameters, thermoluminescence, fluorescence imaging and electrophoretic characteristics of the chloroplast proteins were measured in control, moderately dehydrated (50% water content), desiccated (5% water content) and rehydrated plants. During the first phase of desiccation the net CO2 assimilation decline was influenced by stomatal closure. Further lowering of net CO2 assimilation was caused by both the decrease in stomatal conductance and in the photochemical activity of photosystem II. Severe dehydration caused inhibition of quantum yield of PSII electron transport, disappearance of thermoluminescence B band and mainly charge recombination related to S2QA takes place. The blue and green fluorescence emission in desiccated leaves strongly increased. It could be suggested that unchanged chlorophyll content and amounts of chlorophyll–proteins, reversible modifications in PSII electron transport and enhanced probability for non-radiative energy dissipation as well as increased polyphenolic synthesis during desiccation of Haberlea contribute to drought resistance and fast recovery after rehydration.  相似文献   

7.
Drought is one of the most significant threats to world agriculture and hampers the supply of food and energy. The mechanisms of drought responses can be studied using resurrection plants that are able to survive extreme dehydration. As plant hormones function in an intensive cross-talk, playing important regulatory roles in the perception and response to unfavorable environments, the dynamics of phytohormones was followed in the resurrection plant Haberlea rhodopensis Friv. during desiccation and subsequent recovery. Analysis of both leaves and roots revealed that jasmonic acid, along with and even earlier than abscisic acid, serves as a signal triggering the response of the resurrection plants to desiccation. The steady high levels of salicylic acid could be considered an integral part of the specific set of parameters that prime H. rhodopensis desiccation tolerance. The dynamic changes of cytokinins and auxins suggest that these hormones actively participate in the dehydration response and development of desiccation tolerance in the resurrection plants. Our data contribute to the elucidation of a global complex picture of the resurrection plant’s ability to withstand desiccation, which might be successfully utilized in crop improvement.  相似文献   

8.
The ecophysiological responses of the homoiochlorophyllous desiccation-tolerant (HDT) plant Haberlea rhodopensis showed that this plant could tolerate water deficit and both leaves and roots had high ability to survive severe desiccation. The changes and correlation between CO2 assimilation, stomatal conductance, contents of photosynthetic pigments, root respiration and specific leaf area during dehydration–rehydration cycle were investigated. The physiological activity of leaves and roots were examined in fully hydrated (control) plants and during 72 h of dehydration, as well as following 96 h of rehydration every 6 and 24 h. After 6 h of dehydration, the stomatal conductance declined and the intercellular CO2 concentration increased. The reduction in CO2 assimilation rate was observed after 54 h of dehydration. There was a good correlation between the root respiration and water content. Our results showed that the plasticity of adaptation in leaves and roots were different during extreme water conditions. Roots were more sensitive and reacted faster to water stress than leaves, but their activity rapidly recovered due to immediate and efficient utilization of periodic water supply.  相似文献   

9.
In order to investigate changes of oxidative status in relation to the activity of the various protective mechanisms in resurrection plant Ramonda nathaliae, we have analysed time and relative water content (RWC) related changes in lipid peroxidation and ion leakage, hydrogen peroxide accumulation, changes of pigment content and antioxidative enzyme activity, together with expression of dehydrins. The results indicate that enhanced oxidative status during dehydration, not previously reported for resurrection plants, could play an active role in inducing the desiccation adaptive response in R. nathaliae. A critical phase is shown to exist during dehydration (in the range of RWC between 50 and 70%) during which a significant increase in hydrogen peroxide accumulation, lipid peroxidation and ion leakage, accompanied by a general decline in antioxidative enzyme activity, takes place. This phase is designated as a transition characterized by change in the type of stress response. The initial response, relying mainly on the enzymatic antioxidative system, is suspended but more effective, desiccation specific protective mechanisms, such as expression of dehydrins, are then switched on. The expression of dehydrins in R. nathaliae could be inducible as well as constitutive. In order to cope with the oxidative stress associated with rapid rewatering, R. nathaliae reactivated antioxidative enzymes. We propose that controlled elevation of reactive oxygen species, such as hydrogen peroxide, could be an important mechanism enabling resurrection plants to sense dehydration and to trigger an adaptive programme at an appropriate stage during the dehydration/rehydration cycle.  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   

12.
The resurrection plant, Haberlea rhodopensis can survive nearly total desiccation only in its usual low irradiation environment. However, populations with similar capacity to recover were discovered recently in several sunny habitats. To reveal what kind of morphological, structural and thylakoid-level alterations play a role in the acclimation of this low-light adapted species to high-light environment and how do they contribute to the desiccation tolerance mechanisms, the structure of the photosynthetic apparatus, the most sensitive component of the chlorophyll-retaining resurrection plants, was analyzed by transmission electron microscopy, steady state low-temperature fluorescence and two-dimensional Blue-Native/SDS PAGE under desiccation and rehydration.  相似文献   

13.
Xerophyta humilis is a poikilochlorophyllous monocot resurrection plant used as a model to study vegetative desiccation tolerance. Dehydration imposes tension and ultimate loss of integrity of membranes in desiccation sensitive species. We investigated the predominant molecular species of glycerolipids present in root and leaf tissues, using multiple reaction monitoring mass spectrometry, and then analysed changes therein during dehydration and subsequent rehydration of whole plants. The presence of fatty acids with long carbon chains and with odd numbers of carbons were detected and confirmed by gas chromatography. Dehydration of both leaves and roots resulted in an increase in species containing polyunsaturated fatty acids and a decrease in disaturated species. Upon rehydration, lipid saturation was reversed, with this being initiated immediately upon watering in roots but only 12–24 hr later in leaves. Relative levels of species with short‐chained odd‐numbered saturated fatty acids decreased during dehydration and increased during rehydration, whereas the reverse trend was observed for long‐chained fatty acids. X. humilis has a unique lipid composition, this report being one of the few to demonstrate the presence of odd‐numbered fatty acids in plant phosphoglycerolipids.  相似文献   

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The group of homoiochlorophyllous resurrection plants evolved the unique capability to survive severe drought stress without dismantling the photosynthetic machinery. This implies that they developed efficient strategies to protect the leaves from reactive oxygen species (ROS) generated by photosynthetic side reactions. These strategies, however, are poorly understood. Here, we performed a detailed study of the photosynthetic machinery in the homoiochlorophyllous resurrection plant Craterostigma pumilum during dehydration and upon recovery from desiccation. During dehydration and rehydration, C. pumilum deactivates and activates partial components of the photosynthetic machinery in a specific order, allowing for coordinated shutdown and subsequent reinstatement of photosynthesis. Early responses to dehydration are the closure of stomata and activation of electron transfer to oxygen accompanied by inactivation of the cytochrome b6f complex leading to attenuation of the photosynthetic linear electron flux (LEF). The decline in LEF is paralleled by a gradual increase in cyclic electron transport to maintain ATP production. At low water contents, inactivation and supramolecular reorganization of photosystem II becomes apparent, accompanied by functional detachment of light‐harvesting complexes and interrupted access to plastoquinone. This well‐ordered sequence of alterations in the photosynthetic thylakoid membranes helps prepare the plant for the desiccated state and minimize ROS production.  相似文献   

16.
复苏植物可以耐受极度干旱的环境,脱水至10%相对水分含量后仍然可以复苏.苦苣苔科植物包含有较多复苏植物,不同类群的复苏机理可能存在差异.该文选择分布在亚热带和温带石灰岩地区的锈色蛛毛苣苔(Paraboea rufescens)和心叶马铃苣苔(Oreocharis cordatula)两种苦苣苔科植物,并对这两个物种的叶...  相似文献   

17.

Background and Aims

Haberlea rhodopensis is a perennial, herbaceous, saxicolous, poikilohydric flowering plant that is able to survive desiccation to air-dried state under irradiance below 30 µmol m−2 s−1. However, desiccation at irradiance of 350 µmol m−2 s−1 induced irreversible changes in the photosynthetic apparatus, and mature leaves did not recover after rehydration. The aim here was to establish the causes and mechanisms of irreversible damage of the photosynthetic apparatus due to dehydration at high irradiance, and to elucidate the mechanisms determining recovery.

Methods

Changes in chloroplast structure, CO2 assimilation, chlorophyll fluorescence parameters, fluorescence imaging and the polypeptide patterns during desiccation of Haberlea under medium (100 µmol m−2 s−1; ML) irradiance were compared with those under low (30 µmol m−2 s−1; LL) irradiance.

Key Results

Well-watered plants (control) at 100 µmol m−2 s−1 were not damaged. Plants desiccated at LL or ML had similar rates of water loss. Dehydration at ML decreased the quantum efficiency of photosystem II photochemistry, and particularly the CO2 assimilation rate, more rapidly than at LL. Dehydration induced accumulation of stress proteins in leaves under both LL and ML. Photosynthetic activity and polypeptide composition were completely restored in LL plants after 1 week of rehydration, but changes persisted under ML conditions. Electron microscopy of structural changes in the chloroplast showed that the thylakoid lumen is filled with an electron-dense substance (dense luminal substance, DLS), while the thylakoid membranes are lightly stained. Upon dehydration and rehydration the DLS thinned and disappeared, the time course largely depending on the illumination: whereas DLS persisted during desiccation and started to disappear during late recovery under LL, it disappeared from the onset of dehydration and later was completely lost under ML.

Conclusions

Accumulation of DLS (possibly phenolics) in the thylakoid lumen is demonstrated and is proposed as a mechanism protecting the thylakoid membranes of H. rhodopensis during desiccation and recovery under LL. Disappearance of DLS during desiccation in ML could leave the thylakoid membranes without protection, allowing oxidative damage during dehydration and the initial rehydration, thus preventing recovery of photosynthesis.Key words: Haberlea rhodopensis, resurrection plant, electron microscopy, blue–green fluorescence, chlorophyll fluorescence  相似文献   

18.
In this paper the expression of C3 and CAM in the resurrection plants Haberlea rhodopensis Friv. and Ramonda serbica Pan?, during the transition from biosis to anabiosis and Wee versa is reported for the first time. The transition from predominantly C3 metabolism to net dark fixation of CO2 occurred in leaves of R.serbica during desiccation. Desiccated plants of H. rhodopensis react by reducing light assimilation of CO2. When watering was resumed night time fixation of CO2 by R. serbica was observed within 24 hours. The recovery of CO2 fixation by H. rhodopensis was not seen until the 8 th day. Desiccated and rehydrated plants of H. rhodopensis recapture a higher proportion of respiratory CO2 than well-watered plants. Since both species have little capacity for water conservation in their tissues, the early onset of high recycling of CO2 following drought could be an important mechanism for potentially saving water.  相似文献   

19.
Angiosperm resurrection plants exhibit poikilo‐ or homoiochlorophylly as a response to water deficit. Both strategies are generally considered as effective mechanisms to reduce oxidative stress associated with photosynthetic activity under water deficiency. The mechanism of water deficit‐induced chlorophyll (Chl) degradation in resurrection plants is unknown but has previously been suggested to occur as a result of non‐enzymatic photooxidation. We investigated Chl degradation during dehydration in both poikilochlorophyllous (Xerophyta viscosa) and homoiochlorophyllous (Craterostigma pumilum) species. We demonstrate an increase in the abundance of PHEOPHORBIDE a OXYGENASE (PAO), a key enzyme of Chl breakdown, together with an accumulation of phyllobilins, that is, products of PAO‐dependent Chl breakdown, in both species. Phyllobilins and PAO levels diminished again in leaves from rehydrated plants. We conclude that water deficit‐induced poikilochlorophylly occurs via the well‐characterized PAO/phyllobilin pathway of Chl breakdown and that this mechanism also appears conserved in a resurrection species displaying homoiochlorophylly. The roles of the PAO/phyllobilin pathway during different plant developmental processes that involve Chl breakdown, such as leaf senescence and desiccation, fruit ripening and seed maturation, are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Water stress is a major limitation for plant survival and growth. Several physiological and antioxidative mechanisms are involved in the adaptation to water stress by plants. In this experiment, tea cultivars (TV-1, TV-20, TV-29 and TV-30) were subjected to drought stress by withholding water for 20 days followed by rehydration. An experiment was thus performed to test and compare the effect of dehydration and rehydration in growing seedlings of tea cultivars. The effect of drought stress and post stress rehydration was measured by studying the reactive oxygen species (ROS) metabolism in tea. Water stress decreased nonenzymic antioxidants like ascorbate and glutathione contents with differential responses of enzymic antioxidants in selected clones of Camellia sinensis indicating an oxidative stress situation. This was also apparent from increased lipid peroxidation, O2 and H2O2 content in water stress imposed plants. But the oxidative damage was not permanent as the plants recovered after rehydration. Comparatively less decrease in antioxidants, higher activities of POX, GR, CAT with higher phenolic contents suggested better drought tolerance of TV-1, which was also visible from the recovery study, where it showed lower ROS level and higher recovery of antioxidant property in response to rehydration, thus proving its better recovery potential. On the other hand, highest H2O2 and lipid peroxidation with decrease in phenolic content during stress in TV-29 suggested its sensitivity to drought. The antioxidant efficiency and biochemical tolerance in response to drought stress thus observed in the tested clones of Camellia sinensis can be arranged in the order as TV-30 > TV-1 > TV-29 > TV-20.  相似文献   

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