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1.
Upon rehydration of the moss Tortula ruralis following desiccation at a rapid or slow rate, there is increasing utilization of newly synthesized-poly(A)+ RNA for protein synthesis. Initially, poly(A)+ RNA conserved in the dry moss is associated with polysomes, but by 2 hours of rehydration there is an overwhelming recruitment of newly synthesized poly(A)+ RNA, at the expense of conserved messages. In rehydrated moss, there is a marked synthesis in vivo of new proteins, which are separable by two-dimensional electrophoresis, and identifiable by fluorography. These new proteins, termed rehydration proteins, are synthesized after both rapid and slow desiccation, but their synthesis persists longer after rapid desiccation. The protein patterns obtained following in vitro translation of bulk RNA from hydrated, desiccated, and rehydrated moss were qualitatively identical. Thus the differences in protein patterns observed in vivo must result from preferential selection of specific mRNAs from the same pool, which is indicative of control of protein synthesis at the translational level. The implications of these observations in relation to the response of the moss to drying in its natural environment are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
The effects have been studied of water stress and desiccation on protein synthesis in the drought-tolerant moss Tortula ruralis and the drought-sensitive moss Hygrohypnum luridum. At any particular level of steady state water stress, the inhibition of protein synthesis was greater in H. luridum than in T. ruralis. Water stress-induced changes in the pattern of protein synthesis, as determined by the double label ratio technique, were minor in T. ruralis, but major in H. luridum. Proteins of both mosses were found to be stable during desiccation and subsequent rehydration. Changes in membrane permeability, as indicated by the leakage of amino acid, were observed during rehydration of desiccated moss and were dependent on the rate of desiccation. The leakage was small and reversible in T. ruralis but large and irreversible in H. luridum. Although H. luridum failed to recover from complete desiccation (80% loss in fresh weight), it was able to recover fully from steady state stress under conditions where a maximum loss of 55% in fresh weight was recorded.  相似文献   

3.
Bewley JD 《Plant physiology》1973,51(2):285-288
During desiccation of the moss Tortula ruralis (Hedw.) (Gaertn, Meyer and Scherb) polyribosomes are conserved. On rehydration, protein synthesis is rapidly resumed. In the presence of protein synthesis initiation inhibitors ribosome run-off from the conserved polyribosomes takes place, confirming that these retain their activity as intact structures during desiccation.  相似文献   

4.
5.
The conditions and requirements for an in vitro protein synthesizing system from the moss Tortula ruralis are outlined. Using this system the effects of desiccation, achieved quickly or slowly, were studied. Slowly dried moss retained fewer polyribosomes on desiccation but more active ribosomes than rapidly dried moss. Even in the completely desiccated moss the polyribosomes and/or free ribosomes present have retained their synthetic capacities. On rehydration, the slowly dried moss resumed protein synthesis more quickly than moss previously desiccated rapidly. Moss ribosomes are cycloheximide sensitive and chloramphenicol insensitive and thus the major protein synthesis occurs within the cytoplasm on rehydration. Extracted polyribosomes per se can withstand desiccation to a significant extent, suggesting that protection by the cytoplasm might not be necessary. The aquatic moss Hygrohypnum luridum can retain polyribosomal and ribosomal activity during desiccation, but this decreases greatly on rehydration.  相似文献   

6.
O2 consumption by the desiccation-tolerant moss Tortula ruralis and the desiccation-intolerant Cratoneuron filicinum increased markedly during the latter stages of desiccation. ATP content of the mosses during desiccation was not correlated with O2 consumption, but was influenced by the rate at which the mosses lost water. The more rapid the water loss, the more ATP that was present in the dry mosses. The pattern of O2 consumption on rehydration also was influenced by the previous rate of desiccation. After rapid desiccation of T. ruralis O2 consumption upon rehydration was considerably elevated, and for up to 24 hours. After very slow desiccation the elevation was small and brief. Normal O2 consumption did not occur in C. filicinum after rapid desiccation, but did so within a few hours of rehydration after slower speeds of drying. ATP levels in T. ruralis returned to normal within 5 to 10 minutes of rehydration. In C. filicinum, increases in ATP were closely correlated with O2 consumption. These observations are considered to be related to differential damage caused to mitochondria and to cellular integrity by different speeds of water loss. The desiccation-tolerant moss appears to be able to repair the severe damage imposed by rapid desiccation whereas the desiccation-intolerant moss cannot.  相似文献   

7.
RNA species from the haploid gametophyte generation of the moss Tortula ruralis exhibit typical eukaryotic characteristics. The major ribosomal and soluble RNA species are stable during drying and rehydration. RNA synthesis occurs rapidly on reintroduction of the moss to water and incorporation into high molecular weight RNA fractions was detected after 20 to 30 minutes of rehydration and into low molecular weight fractions after 30-60 minutes. Newly synthesized ribosomal RNA was detected in ribosomes within 2 hours of rehydration, but not in polysomes. It is apparent that the ribosomal and transfer RNA conserved during desiccation is involved in the re-establishment of early protein synthesis during subsequent rehydration and that, initially, there is no requirement for newly synthesized material.  相似文献   

8.
The fatty acid composition of the phospholipids from the desiccation-tolerant moss Tortula ruralis (Hedw.) Gaertn, Meyer and Scherb and the desiccation-intolerant moss Cratoneuron filicinum has been determined. No changes in composition occur in either moss as a consequence of rapid drying, but, after slow drying, there is a decline in some unsaturated fatty acids. Upon rehydration of T. ruralis after slow drying, these acids decline further; however, within 105 minutes, they regain the same levels as those in undesiccated controls. A smaller and more transient decline occurs after rapid desiccation. Most phospholipid unsaturated fatty acids decrease during rehydration of C. filicinum, and their levels are not recovered. After both rapid and slow drying of T. ruralis, acetate and glycerol are incorporated into the phospholipid fraction, although de novo synthesis, alone, might not account for the increase in unsaturated fatty acids upon rehydration. Very little acetate or glycerol is incorporated during rehydration of C. filicinum. Loss of unsaturated fatty acids from the phospholipids of T. ruralis does not appear to be associated with increased lipoxygenase activity. Furthermore, there is little correlation between the extent of peroxidation of fatty acids due to desiccation and changes in the phospholipid fraction.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Upon desiccation of gametophytes of the desiccation-tolerant moss Tortula ruralis preexisting pools of poly(A) RNA (rRNA) remain inact, regardless of the speed at which desiccation is achieved. Preexisting poly(A)+ RNA pools (mRNA) are unaffected by slow desiccation but are substantially reduced during rapid desiccation. Poly(A) RNA involved in protein synthesis is also unaffected by desiccation, whereas the levels of polysomal poly(A)+ RNA in rapid- and slow-dried moss closely reflect the state of the protein synthetic complex in these dried samples.

Poly(A) RNA pools, both total and polysomal, are also stable during the rehydration of both rapid- and slow-dried moss. The total poly(A)+ RNA pool decreases upon rehydration, but this reduction is simply an expression of the normal turnover of poly(A)+ RNA in this moss. Analysis of polysomal fractions during rehydration reveals the continued use of conserved poly(A)+ RNA for protein synthesis. The rate of synthesis of poly(A)+ RNA upon rehydration appears to depend upon the speed at which prior desiccation is administered. Rapidly dried moss synthesizes poly(A)+ RNA at a faster rate, 60 to 120 minutes after the addition of water, than does rehydrated slowly dried moss. Recruitment of this RNA into the protein synthetic complex also follows this pattern. Comparative studies involving the aquatic moss Cratoneuron filicinum are used to gain an insight into the relevance of these findings with respect to the cellular mechanisms associated with desiccation tolerance.

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11.
The consistent correlation between desiccation tolerance in orthodox seed tissue and an accumulation of certain "late embryogenesis abundant" (LEA) proteins suggests that these proteins reduce desiccation-induced cellular damage. The aim of the present work was to test this hypothesis. Exogenous abscisic acid (ABA) was used to elevate the level of heal-soluble LEA-like proteins in axes from immature (30 days after flowering: mid-development) seeds of soybean ( Glycine max [L.] Merrill cv. Chippewa 64). As the LEA-like proteins accumulated in response to ABA, the leakage of all elements after desiccation and subsequent rehydration markedly declined. Both LEA-like protein accumulation and the decline in desiccation-induced electrolyte leakage were apparently dependent on the presence of ABA. Both effects of ABA were inhibited by cycloheximide. Light microscopy revealed a marked effect of the ABA on cellular integrity following desiccation. Osmotic stress also caused a decrease in desiccation-induced electrolyte leakage and stimulated the accumulation of LEA-like proteins. Our data are consistent with the hypothesis that the LEA-like proteins contribute to the increase in desiccation tolerance in response to ABA, and are consistent with a general protective role for these proteins in desiccation tolerance.  相似文献   

12.
Desiccation presents a major challenge for the Antarctic midge, Belgica antarctica. In this study, we use proteomic profiling to evaluate protein changes in the larvae elicited by dehydration and rehydration. Larvae were desiccated at 75% relative humidity (RH) for 12 h to achieve a body water loss of 35%, approximately half of the water that can be lost before the larvae succumb to dehydration. To evaluate the rehydration response, larvae were first desiccated, then rehydrated for 6 h at 100% RH and then in water for 6 h. Controls were held continuously at 100% RH. Protein analysis was performed using 2‐DE and nanoscale capillary LC/MS/MS. Twenty‐four identified proteins changed in abundance in response to desiccation: 16 were more abundant and 8 were less abundant; 84% of these proteins were contractile or cytoskeletal proteins. Thirteen rehydration‐regulated proteins were identified: 8 were more abundant and 5 were less abundant, and 69% of these proteins were also contractile or cytoskeletal proteins. Additional proteins responsive to desiccation and rehydration were involved in functions including stress responses, energy metabolism, protein synthesis, glucogenesis and membrane transport. We conclude that the major protein responses elicited by both desiccation and rehydration are linked to body contraction and cytoskeleton rearrangements.  相似文献   

13.
14.
All bryophytes evolved desiccation tolerance (DT) mechanisms during the invasion of terrestrial habitats by early land plants. Are these DT mechanisms still present in bryophytes that colonize aquatic habitats? The aquatic bryophyte Fontinalis antipyretica Hedw. was subjected to two drying regimes and alterations in protein profiles and sucrose accumulation during dehydration and rehydration were investigated. Results show that during fast dehydration, there is very little variation in protein profiles, and upon rehydration proteins are leaked. On the other hand, slow dehydration induces changes in both dehydration and rehydration protein profiles, being similar to the protein profiles displayed by the terrestrial bryophytes Physcomitrella patens (Hedw.) Bruch and Schimp. and, to what is comparable with Syntrichia ruralis (Hedw.) F. Weber and D. Mohr. During dehydration there was a reduction in proteins associated with photosynthesis and the cytoskeleton, and an associated accumulation of proteins involved in sugar metabolism and plant defence mechanisms. Upon rehydration, protein accumulation patterns return to control values for both photosynthesis and cytoskeleton whereas proteins associated with sugar metabolism and defence proteins remain high. The current results suggest that bryophytes from different ecological adaptations may share common DT mechanisms.  相似文献   

15.
Misra, S. and Bewley, J. D. 1986. Desiccation of Phaseolus vulgansseeds during and following germination, and its effect uponthe translatable mRNA population of the seed axes.—J.exp. BoL 37: 364–374. After imbibition and germination, seeds of P. vulgaris passfrom a stage where they are insensitive to desiccation to astage where they are sensitive. Desiccation of seeds duringthe sensitive stage results in an almost total impairment ofprotein synthesis upon subsequent rehydration. Seeds desiccatedduring the desiccation-tolerant stage, however, resume proteinsynthesis at almost control levels. The protein patterns obtained following in Vitro translationof bulk RNA from fresh imbibed, desiccated, and desiccated-rehydratedseed axes were qualitatively similar at 5 HAI (the desiccation-tolerant stage). The drying treatment resulted in increasedintensity of extant proteins at 5 and 12 HAI. At 12 HAI (thetransition stage between the desiccation-tolerant and desiccation-intolerantphases) desiccation and subsequent rehydration triggered synthesisof a unique set of proteins-the rehydration proteins. At 20HAI (the desiccation-intolerant stage) desiccation resultedin an overall decline in the intensity of proteins synthesizedin vitro. Also the rehydration proteins were not synthesizedin response to a drying and rehydration treatment at this time. Key words: Seed germination, desiccation, mRNA, in vitro translation, Phaseolus vulgaris  相似文献   

16.
17.
Dhindsa RS 《Plant physiology》1987,85(4):1094-1098
Rapidly dried Tortula ruralis, a drought-tolerant moss, is known to synthesize proteins on rehydration at a much lower rate than the slowly dried moss. The reasons for this low rate of protein synthesis are unclear. We have found that during rehydration of rapidly dried moss, there is a negative correlation between the rate of protein synthesis and the tissue levels of oxidized glutathione (GSSG) and lipid peroxidation. When rapidly dried moss, which is known to show extensive solute leakage, is rehydrated in the presence of 100 millimolar K+, 5 millimolar Mg2+, 1 millimolar ATP, and 1 millimolar GTP, either separately or together, there is no stimulation of protein synthesis. When it is hydrated in the presence of either 5 millimolar glucose-6-phosphate or 0.1 millimolar NADPH, protein synthesis is stimulated but the stimulation is transitory. A second addition of either of these two chemicals causes a second transient stimulation of protein synthesis. A transitory decrease in the rate of GSSG accumulation is observed during rehydration in the presence of glucose-6-phosphate or NADPH. Both glucose-6-phosphate and NADPH are known to reverse GSSG-induced inhibition of protein synthesis in rabbit reticulocyte lysate. Results of the present study suggest that the rate of protein synthesis during rehydration of rapidly dried moss is not limited by the availability of ions or energy sources. Since exogenously applied GSSG has been shown to inhibit in vivo and in vitro protein synthesis and since it is known to accumulate during rehydration of rapidly dried, but not slowly dried, moss, it is suggested that the low rate of protein synthesis during rehydration of the rapidly dried moss is, at least in part, due to endogenous GSSG.  相似文献   

18.
19.
L. Lalonde  J. D. Bewley 《Planta》1986,167(4):504-510
As germination of axes of Pisum sativum L. seeds progressed, profound quantitative and qualitative changes occurred in the patterns of protein synthesis. This was shown by fluorography of gels following two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis separation of [35S]methioninelabelled proteins. The effects of desiccation during germination on these in-vivo protein-synthesis patterns were followed. Desiccation differentially affected the synthesis of proteins. Usually, however, upon rehydration following desiccation the types of proteins being synthesized were recognizable as those synthesized earlier during imbibition of control, once-imbibed axes: seeds imbibed for 8 h, and then dried, did not recommence synthesis of proteins typical of 8-h-imbibed control seeds, but rather of 4-h-imbibed control seeds. Seeds imbibed for 12 h, and then dried and rehydrated, synthesized proteins typical of 4-h-and 8-h-control seeds. Thus drying of germinating pea axes caused the proteinsynthesizing mechanism to revert to producing proteins typical of earlier stages of imbibition. Drying during germination never caused the seed to revert to the metabolic status of the initial mature dry state, however.Abbreviation DR dried and rehydrated  相似文献   

20.
Some organisms are able to survive the loss of almost all their body water content, entering a latent state known as anhydrobiosis. The sleeping chironomid (Polypedilum vanderplanki) lives in the semi-arid regions of Africa, and its larvae can survive desiccation in an anhydrobiotic form during the dry season. To unveil the molecular mechanisms of this resistance to desiccation, an anhydrobiosis-related Expressed Sequence Tag (EST) database was obtained from the sequences of three cDNA libraries constructed from P. vanderplanki larvae after 0, 12, and 36 h of desiccation. The database contained 15,056 ESTs distributed into 4,807 UniGene clusters. ESTs were classified according to gene ontology categories, and putative expression patterns were deduced for all clusters on the basis of the number of clones in each library; expression patterns were confirmed by real-time PCR for selected genes. Among up-regulated genes, antioxidants, late embryogenesis abundant (LEA) proteins, and heat shock proteins (Hsps) were identified as important groups for anhydrobiosis. Genes related to trehalose metabolism and various transporters were also strongly induced by desiccation. Those results suggest that the oxidative stress response plays a central role in successful anhydrobiosis. Similarly, protein denaturation and aggregation may be prevented by marked up-regulation of Hsps and the anhydrobiosis-specific LEA proteins. A third major feature is the predicted increase in trehalose synthesis and in the expression of various transporter proteins allowing the distribution of trehalose and other solutes to all tissues.  相似文献   

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