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To improve our understanding of the mechanism of chilling injuryin chill-sensitive callus (Cornus stolontfera), early changesin cell permeability and respiratory activity were studied.Partial leakage of amino acids and an abrupt increase in permeationand oxidation of added dopamine were characteristic of chilledcallus in the late stage of chilling at 0?C (48 hr), when mostof the callus sustained severe injury. However, little or nochange in cell permeability was observed in the early stageof chilling (within 24 hr), when calli retained their viabilityfor growth after transfer to a warm temperature. These resultssuggest that changes in the cell membranes per se are by nomeans the primary step in cell injury. Temporary depressionof respiratory activity was detected soon after chilling for12 hr, but activity appeared to return to the original levelon further chilling up to 24 hr. An irreversible dysfunction,however, occurred in the respiratory system on prolonged chillingup to 48 hr. This implies that irreversible impairment of mitochondrialfunctions may not be involved in the early stage of the cellinjury. A possible relationship between these observed changesand ultrastructural changes in chilled cells is discussed. 1Contribution No. 2153 from the Institute of Low TemperatureScience. (Received June 6, 1979; )  相似文献   

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Abstract Exposure of tomato plants to a mild chilling temperature and relatively low ambient photon flux density for an extended period (10°C and 400 μmol photons m?2 s?1 d and 5°C night for 6 d) resulted in a significant decrease in the variable chlorophyll fluorescence, the quantum yield of oxygen evolution and the amount of total absorbed energy stored in photochemical intermediates, but not in the chlorophyll concentration or in the activity of ribulose biphosphate carboxylase. These results indicate that photochemical processes involving PSII were affected, and might reflect photoinhibitory effects on the photosynthetic apparatus. Chilling treatment had relatively small influence on the maximal extent of the Emerson effect. This observation, together with the sharp decrease found in the quantum yield of oxygen evolution, could be reconciled with the above results only if some dependency between the two photosystems was assumed. On the basis of this interpretation, it was concluded that the strong Emerson effect after chilling still reflects the typical imbalance between PSI and PSII centres, even though populations of such unaffected pairs are smaller than in the untreated plants. The relatively new photoacoustic technique employed in this study is shown to be useful both as a diagnostic tool and as a means of investigating changes in photochemical activity in the study of environmental stress effects on photosynthesis. The results support the view that photoinhibition can play an important role in limiting photosynthetic activity, and therefore productivity, in chilling-sensitive plants such as the tomato under the natural conditions that prevail during the winter in mediterranean climates.  相似文献   

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The potential involvement of impaired photophosphorylation in the chilling sensitivity of photosynthesis in warm climate plant species has been a topic of investigation for more than two decades. With recent advances in the analysis of photosynthetic energy transduction in intact leaves, experiments are now possible that either address or avoid important uncertainties in the significance and interpretation of earlier in vitro work. Nevertheless, different laboratories using different techniques to analyze the effects of chilling in the light on photophosphorylation in intact cucumber (Cucumis sativus) leaves have come to very different conclusions regarding the role of impaired ATP formation capacity in the inhibition of net photosynthesis. In order to evaluate these discrepancies and bring this issue to a final resolution, in this investigation, we have made a detailed analysis of the decay of the flash-induced electrochromic shift and changes in chlorophyll fluorescence yield in cucumber leaves before, during and after a 5 h light-chill at chill temperatures of between 4 and 10°C. We feel that our findings address the major discrepancies in both data and interpretation as well as provide convincing evidence that photophosphorylation is not disrupted in cucumber leaves during or after light and chilling exposure. It follows that impaired photophosphorylation is not a contributing element to the inhibition of net photosynthesis that is widely observed in warm climate plants as a result of chilling in the light.Abbreviations CF chloroplast coupling factor or CF1CF0-ATP synthase - A518 flash-induced electrochromic absorbance change measured at 518 nm - DCCD N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide - H + transmembrane electrochemical potential of hydrogen ions - the electrical charge component of H + - pH the hydrogen ion concentration component of H + - F0 and Fm the yields of chlorophyll fluorescence from dark-adapted material when all Photosystem II centers are open (F0) or closed (Fm) - F0' and Fm' F0 and Fm measured in light-adapted material - Fs steady-state chlorophyll fluorescence yield in light-adapted material - QA primary quinone electron acceptor of Photosystem II - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density  相似文献   

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Exposure of tomato plants (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill. cv. Floramerica) to chilling temperatures in the dark for as little as 12 h resulted in a sizable inhibition in the rate of light- and CO2-saturated photosynthesis. However, when photosynthesis was measured at low light intensity, the inhibition disappeared and the quantum yield of CO2 reduction was diminished only slightly. Chilling the tomato plants under strong illumination caused an even more rapid and severe decline in the rate of light- and CO2-saturated photosynthesis, accompanied by a large decline in the quantum efficiency. Sizeable inhibition of photosystem II activity was observed only after dark exposures to low temperature of grater than 16 h. No inhibition of photosystem I electron transfer capacity was observed even after 40 h of dark chilling. Chilling under high light resulted in a rapid decline in both photosystem I and photosystem II electron transfer capacity as well as in significant reaction center inactivation.Regardless of whether the chilling exposure was in the presence or absence of illumination and regardless of its duration, the electron transfer capacity of thylakoid membranes isolated from the treated plants was always in excess of that necessary to support light- and CO2-saturated photosynthesis. Thus, in neither case of chilling inhibition of photosynthesis does it appear that impaired electron transfer capacity represents a significant rate limitation to whole plant photosynthesis.Abbreviations BSA bovine serum albumin - DBMIB 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone - DCMU 3-(3,4-Dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DHQ duroquinol - EDTA ethylene-diamine-tetraacetic acid - HEPES N-2-hydroxylpiperazine-N-2-ethanesulfonic acid - MES 2-(N-Morpholino)ethanesulfonic acid - MV methylviologen - PS I & II photosystems I and II - PDOX p-phenylenediimine (oxidized) - TMPD N,N,N,N-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine  相似文献   

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Summary The inducing activity of the vegetalizing factor decreases after covalent coupling to CNBr-Sepharose with reduced binding capacity. The residual inducing activity is probably due to the release of a small amount of the factor from Sepharose beads. Covalent coupling to activated CH-Sepharose completely inactivated the vegetalizing factor, whereas the neuralizing factor retained its full activity. The biological activity was also very much reduced when the vegetalizing factor was bound to Sephadex beads, a derivative of dextran. Fully active factor was recovered after enzymatic degradation of the dextran matrix with dextranase. The experiments suggest that the neuralizing factor acts on the cell surface of ectoderm cells, whereas the vegetalizing factor must probably be internalized to become biologically active.  相似文献   

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The role of plasma membrane redox activity in light effects in plants   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Stimulations by light of electron transport at the plasma membrane make it possible that redox activity is involved in light-induced signal transduction chains. This is especially true in cases where component(s) of the chain are also located at the plasma membrane. Photosynthetic reactions stimulate transplasma membrane redox activity of mesophyll cells. Activity is measured as a reduction of the nonpermeating redox probe, ferricyanide. The stimulation is due to production of a cytosolic electron donor from a substance(s) transported from the chloroplast. It is unknown whether the stimulation of redox activity is a requirement for other photosynthetically stimulated processes at the plasma membrane, but a reduced intermediate may regulate proton excretion by guard cells. Blue light induces an absorbance change (LIAC) at the plasma membrane whose difference spectrum resembles certainb-type cytochromes. This transport of electrons may be due to absorption of light by a flavoprotein. The LIAC has been implicated as an early step in certain blue light-mediated morphogenic events. Unrelated to photosynthesis, blue light also stimulates electron transport at the plasma membrane to ferricyanide. The relationship between LIAC and transmembrane electron flow has not yet been determined, but blue light-regulated proton excretion and/or growth may depend on this electron flow. No conclusions can be drawn regarding any role for phytochrome because of a paucity of information concerning the effects of red light on redox activity at the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

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At chilling temperatures, plants suffer damage to photosynthesis. The sites and the mechanisms involved in this damage differ under different chilling conditions. The current status of our understanding of this damage is reviewed, and how chilling temperatures affect photosynthesis is discussed with emphasis on the role of light and the phase separation of membrane lipids. Recipient of the Botanical Society Award for Young Scientist, 1996  相似文献   

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The higher the incubation temperature, the higher the light intensity that membrane vesicles of the thermophilic cyanobacterium Synechococcus 6716 require for the saturation of O2-production. If membrane vesicles are incubated at temperatures at which intact cells are growing optimally, photosynthetic O2-production and membrane energization decrease rapidly, suggesting that the thermophilic properties are rapidly lost. If membrane integrity is maintained (spheroplasts) the harmful effect of higher temperatures is much less. The effects of 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzo-quinone (DBMIB), 5-chloro-3-t-butyl-2-chloro-4-nitrosalicylanilide (S-13), 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) and N,N-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD) are the same as in chloroplasts, be it that DCCD acts as an electron transfer inhibitor at higher concentrations. The supposed alternative site of DCMU inhibition in cyanobacteria is rejected.Spheroplasts show a reversible energy-dependent fluorescence quenching of 9-amino-6-chloro-2-methoxyacridine (ACMA) caused by illumination. ATP hydrolysis only give rise to fluorescence quenching in membrane vesicles. Long incubation at higher temperatures reduces the fluorescence quenching of membrane vesicles and spheroplasts, the latter being more stable than the former.Abbreviations 9AA 9-aminoacridine - ACMA 9-amino-6-chloro-2-methoxyacridine - Chl chlorophyll - DBMIB 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone - DCCD N,N-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DCPIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - DCP 1,5-diphenylcarbazide - PMS methyl-phenazoniummethosulfate - PS-I photosystem I - PS-II photosystem II - S-13 5-chloro-3-t-butyl-2 chloro-4-nitrosalicylanilide  相似文献   

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《Plant science》1987,49(2):75-79
The photosynthetic activity of leaf slices from Spinacia oleracea L., Cucumis sativus L. and Nerium oleander L. was measured in 25° C immediately after preincubation for 2.5 h at various photon flux densities (PFD) with chilling at 4°C, or at a moderate (450 μmol m−2 s−1) PFD with various temperatures below 25°C. Inhibition of photosynthesis was evident in C. sativus and 45°C-grown N. oleander after preincubation at 4°C at all PFD. The inhibition was most severe at fluxes in excess of the moderate PFD under which the plants were grown. Photosynthesis in S. oleracea and 20°C-grown N. oleander was not inhibited at 4°C unless the PFD was in excess of this moderate PFD. The inhibition of photosynthesis was initiated in C. sativus below 13°C, and in 45°C-grown N. oleander below 8°C. A phase transition in the polar lipids from the thylakoids of these plants was detected at about the same temperatures. For S. oleracea and 20°C-grown N. oleander preincubated under the same conditions, there was no inhibition of photosynthesis and no phase transition above 0°C. These results show that some component of photosynthesis was disrupted in the light at temperatures below that of the phase transition in the thylakoid polar lipids.  相似文献   

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The activities of several gibberellins in stimulating germination of wild-type and GA-deficient gal seeds of Arabidopsis thaliana were compared. Of the six compounds tested GA4 and GA7-isolactone had the highest activity and GA7 and GA9 the lowest; activities of GA1 and GA3 were intermediate. Combined application of pure GAs presented no indications that more than one GA receptor is involved. Four GAs were identified in extracts from wild-type and GA-insensitive gai seeds by combined gas chromatography mass spectrometry: GA1, GA3, GA4 and GA9. Effects of light and chilling on levels of GA1, GA4 and GA9 were studied using deuterated standards. Light increased both GA levels and germination in unchilled wild-type and gai seeds. As a result of irradiation GA levels in gai seeds were 7–10 times as high as in wild-type seeds. In the dark germination was 0%, in the light 14% of gai seeds and 95% of wild-type seeds germinated. A chilling pre-treatment of 7 days at 2°C was required to enhance further the germination of gai seeds in the light. Light did not increase GA levels of chilled seeds of either genotype; levels of GA4 and GA9 of chilled gai seeds, in the light were respectively 7 and 12 times lower than in non-chilled seeds, whereas the latter seeds germinated better. Slightly elevated levels of GA4 were detected in darkness after chilling, but germination capacity was still 0%. These results strengthened the conclusion that GAs are required for germination of A. thaliana seeds, whereby GA4 has intrinsic biological activity. However, it is unlikely that light and chilling stimulate germination primarily by increasing levels of GA. Instead GA sensitivity is a possible alternative.  相似文献   

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The light dependent energization of the thylakoid membrane was analyzed in isolated intact spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) chloroplasts incubated with different concentrations of inorganic phosphate (Pi). Two independent methods were used: (a) the accumulation of [14C]5,5-dimethyl-2,4-oxazolidinedione and [14C] methylamine; (b) the energy dependent chlorophyll fluorescence quenching. The inhibition of CO2 fixation by superoptimal medium Pi or by adding glyceraldehyde—an inhibitor of the Calvin cycle—leads to an increased energization of the thylakoid membrane; however, the membrane energization decreases when chloroplasts are inhibited by suboptimal Pi. This specific `low phosphate' effect could be partially reversed by adding oxaloacetate, which regenerates the electron acceptor NADP+ and stimulates linear electron transport. The energization seen in low Pi is, however, always lower than in superoptimal Pi, even in the presence of oxaloacetate. Energization recovers in the presence of low amounts of N,N′-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, which reacts with proton channels including the coupling factor 1 ATP synthase. N,N′-Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide has no effect on energization of chloroplasts in superoptimal Pi. These results suggest there is a specific `low phosphate' proton leak in the thylakoids, and its origin is discussed.  相似文献   

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Photosynthetic activity, in leaf slices and isolated thylakoids, was examined at 25° C after preincubation of the slices at either 25° C or 4° C at a moderate photon flux density (PFD) of 450 mol·m–2·s–1, or at 4° C in the dark. The plants used wereSpinacia oleracea L.,Cucumis sativus L. andNerium oleander L. which was acclimated to growth at 20° C or 45° C. The plants were grown at a PFD of 550 mol·m–2·s–1. Photosynthesis, measured as CO2-dependent O2 evolution, was not inhibited in leaf slices from any plant after preincubation at 25° C at a moderate PFD or at 4° C in the dark. However, exposure to 4° C at a moderate PFD induced an inhibition of CO2-dependent O2 evolution within 1 h inC. sativus, a chilling-sensitive plant, and in 45° C-grownN. oleander. The inhibition in these plants after 5 h reached 80% and 40%, respectively, and was independent of the CO2 concentration but was reduced at O2 concentrations of less than 3%. Methyl-viologen-dependent O2 exchange in leaf slices from these plants was not inhibited. There was no photoxidation of chlorophyll, in isolated thylakoids, or any inhibition of electron transport at photosystem (PS)II, PSI or through both photosystems which would account for the inhibition of photosynthesis. The conditions which inhibit photosynthesis in chilling-sensitive plants do not cause inhibition inS. oleracea, a chilling-insensitive plant, or in 20° C-grownN. oleander. The CO2-dependent photosynthesis, measured at 5° C, was reduced to about 3% of that recorded at 25° C in chilling-sensitive plants but only to about 30% in the chilling-insensitive plants. Methyl-viologen-dependent O2 exchange, measured at 5° C, was greater than 25% of the activity at 25° C in all the plants. The results indicate that the mechanism of the chilling-induced inhibition of photosynthesis does not involve damage to PSII. That inhibition of photosynthesis is observed only in the chilling-sensitive plants indicates it is related, in some way, to the disproportionate decrease in photosynthetic activity in these plants at chilling temperatures.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - DPIPH reduced form of 2,6-dichlorophenol-indophenol - DMQ 2,5-dimethyl-p-benzoquinone - MV methyl viologen - 20°-oleander Nerium oleander grown at 20° C - 45°-oleander N. oleander grown at 45° C - PFD photon flux density (photon fluence rate) - PSI and PSII photosystem I and II, respectively  相似文献   

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The effect of a chilling stress, at a moderate photon flux density for a few hours, on the peroxidation of membrane lipids and on superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity was compared in leaf slices of chilling-sensitive and chilling-insensitive plants. The aim was to determine if susceptibility to chill-temperature photoinhibition could be related to either damage to membrane lipids by superoxide and-or a decrease in activity of chloroplast SOD. Plants used were Nerium oleander L., grown at 45° C, and Cucumis sativus L., both susceptible to chill-temperature photoinhibition, and N. oleander, grown at 20° C and Spinacia oleracea L., both insensitive to chill-temperature photoinhibition. Lipid peroxidation was assessed by measuring the concentration of malondialdehyde (MDA). Leaf slices from all plants showed a basal level of MDA which decreased by about 15% when the leaf slices were chilled in the light. The level of MDA was not increased by the addition of either KHCO3 or methyl viologen during chilling but it was increased, up to threefold, by the addition of Rose Bengal, which produces singlet oxygen. Chloroplast SOD activity was assessed in leaf extracts as the cyanide-sensitive production of H2O2 in a system which produced superoxide. Activity of SOD was similar in all the plants and was altered little by chilling. The results show that for the plants tested, chilling at a moderate photon flux density for 5 h does not increase the susceptibility of cell membranes to peroxidative damage nor does it decrease the activity of SOD. It was concluded that the susceptibility of chilling-sensitive plants to chill-temperature photoinhibition cannot be explained on the basis of differences in the vulnerability of membrane lipids to damage by superoxide or differences in SOD activity.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - MDA malondialdehyde - MV methyl viologen - O 2 - superoxide - 20°-oleander Nerium oleander grown at 20° C - 45°-oleander N. oleander grown at 45° C - PFD photon flux density - SOD superoxide dismutase Deceased  相似文献   

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