Changes in the level of MACC during cold hardening and dehardening in winter wheat |
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Authors: | Ivana Machá ková ,Alena Hani ová ,Jan Krekule |
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Affiliation: | Inst. of Experimental Botany, Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences, Ke dvoru 15, 166 30 Praha 6, Czechoslovakia |
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Abstract: | Changes in the level of 1-(malonylamino)-cyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (MACC) were determined in 6 winter wheat cultivars during cold hardening at 4°C. The cultivars differed by one degree of frost resistance within the range of degree II to VII of the COMECON scale. The time-course of changes in MACC level showed a similar pattern in all 6 cultivars; i.e. increase till day 6, no changes for the next 10 days, and then a steady decrease till the end of the hardening period. There was little difference between the final and the initial levels. The increase of MACC level, expressed as per cent of the original level, was not directly correlated with either the degree of frost resistance of the actual percentage of survival. In some cultivars. mean errors exceeded the difference in MACC accumulation between cultivars closest on the resistance scale. The fate of MACC during the second half of hardening and after transfer of plants to 25°C was studied in cultivars Bezostaya and San Pastore. During the second half of the hardening period the level of MACC decreased in the leaves of both cultivars, but increased significantly in the roots. Within two days of transfer of the hardened plants to 25°C, the MACC level in leaves increased again, while that in the roots decreased. This finding, together with the preliminary evidence of very low MACC metabolism, strongly suggest that MACC accumulates in roots during the hardening period and when transferred to 25°C, it moves from roots to leaves. |
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Keywords: | 1-Aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid ethylene frost resistance hardening 1-malonylamino-cyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid Triticum aestivum wheat |
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