Wheat seed ageing viewed through the cellular redox environment and changes in pH |
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Authors: | Manuela Nagel Charlotte E. Seal Louise Colville Axel Rodenstein Sun Un Josefine Richter |
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Affiliation: | 1. Genebank Department, IPK, Seeland, Germany;2. Department of Comparative Plant and Fungal Biology, Kew, UK;3. Institute of Inorganic Chemistry, University Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany;4. Department of Biochemistry, Biophysics and Structural Biology, Institute for Integrative Biology of the Cell, I2BC), Université Paris-Saclay, Gif-sur-yvette, France |
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Abstract: | To elucidate biochemical mechanisms leading to seed deterioration, we studied 23 wheat genotypes after exposure to seed bank storage for 6–16 years compared to controlled deterioration (CD) at 45?°C and 14 (CD14) and 18% (CD18) moisture content (MC) for up to 32 days. Under two seed bank storage conditions, seed viability was maintained in cold storage (CS) at 0?°C and 9% seed MC, but significantly decreased in ambient storage (AS) at 20?°C and 9% MC. Under AS and CS, organic free radicals, most likely semiquinones, accumulated, detected by electron paramagnetic resonance, while the antioxidant glutathione (GSH) was partly lost and partly converted to glutathione disulphide (GSSG), detected by HPLC. Under AS the glutathione half-cell reduction potential (EGSSG/2GSH) shifted towards more oxidising conditions, from ?186 to ?141?mV. In seeds exposed to CD14 or CD18, no accumulation of organic free radicals was observed, GSH and seed viability declined within 32 and 7 days, respectively, GSSG hardly changed (CD14) or decreased (CD18) and EGSSG/2GSH shifted to ?116?mV. The pH of extracts prepared from seeds subjected to CS, AS and CD14 decreased with viability, and remained high under CD18. Across all treatments, EGSSG/2GSH correlated significantly with seed viability (r?=?0.8, p<.001). Data are discussed with a view that the cytoplasm is in a glassy state in CS and AS, but during the CD treatments, underwent transition to a liquid state. We suggest that enzymes can be active during CD but not under the seed bank conditions tested. However, upon CD, enzyme-based repair processes were apparently outweighed by deteriorative reactions. We conclude that seed ageing by CD and under seed bank conditions are accompanied by different biochemical reactions. |
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Keywords: | Antioxidants EPR ESR gene bank germination organic radicals seed longevity |
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