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1.
Ann Bot ; 102(3): 389-97, 2008 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18593689

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The deployment of temporally separated carboxylation pathways for net CO(2) uptake in CAM plants provides plasticity and thus uncertainty on how species with this photosynthetic pathway will respond to life in a higher-CO(2) world. The present study examined how long-term exposure to elevated CO(2) influences the relative contributions that C(3) and C(4) carboxylation make to net carbon gain and to establish how this impacts on the availability of carbohydrates for export and growth and on water use efficiency over the day/night cycle. METHODS: Integrated measurements of leaf gas exchange and diel metabolite dynamics (e.g. malate, soluble sugars, starch) were made in leaves of the CAM bromeliad Aechmea 'Maya' after exposure to 700 micromol mol(-1) CO(2) for 5 months. KEY RESULTS: There was a 60 % increase in 24-h carbon gain under elevated CO(2) due to a stimulation of daytime C(3) and C(4) carboxylation in phases II and IV where water use efficiency was comparable with that measured at night. The extra CO(2) taken up under elevated CO(2) was largely accumulated as hexose sugars during phase IV and net daytime export of carbohydrate was abolished. Under elevated CO(2) there was no stimulation of dark carboxylation and nocturnal export and respiration appeared to be the stronger sinks for carbohydrate. CONCLUSIONS: Despite the increased size of the soluble sugar storage pool under elevated CO(2), there was no change in the net allocation of carbohydrates between provision of substrates for CAM and export/respiration in A. 'Maya'. The data imply the existence of discrete pools of carbohydrate that provide substrate for CAM or sugars for export/respiration. The 2-fold increase in water-use efficiency could be a major physiological advantage to growth under elevated CO(2) in this CAM bromeliad.


Subject(s)
Bromeliaceae/metabolism , Carbon Dioxide/metabolism , Periodicity , Plant Leaves/metabolism , Carbohydrates/biosynthesis , Carbon/metabolism , Darkness , Gases/metabolism , Light , Water/metabolism
4.
Plant Cell Rep ; 17(10): 791-793, 1998 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30736593

ABSTRACT

It has been previously shown that shoot tips of in vitro plantlets of sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L. clone SES1) can be cryopreserved using the encapsulation-dehydration technique (survival rate of 37% after freezing). This article reports the influence of abscisic acid (ABA) and cold acclimation on survival after cryopreservation. When ABA was added to the multiplication medium of the plants, the survival rate of shoot tips after cryopreservation was not increased (45%). After cold acclimation of the plants, their growth pattern differed (plants became apically dominant) and the survival rate of the shoot tips after cryopreservation clearly increased (70% survival and 50% plant regeneration after freezing). This improved protocol was successfully applied to three other clones.

5.
Plant Physiol ; 94(4): 1616-24, 1990 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16667895

ABSTRACT

The effect of plant water deficit on ethylene production by intact plants was tested in three species, beans (Phaseolus vulgaris L.), cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) and miniature rose (Rosa hybrida L., cv Bluesette). Compressed air was passed through glass, plant-containing cuvettes, ethylene collected on chilled columns, and subsequently assayed by gas chromatography. The usual result was that low water potential did not promote ethylene production. When plants were subjected to cessation of irrigation, ethylene production decreased on a per plant or dry weight basis of calculation. No significant promotion of ethylene production above control levels was detected when water deficit-treated bean or cotton plants were rewatered. The one exception to this was for cotton subjected to a range of water deficits, plants subjected to deficits of -1.4 to -1.6 MPa exhibited a transient increase of ethylene production of 40 to 50% above control levels at 24 or 48 hours. Ethylene was collected from intact leaves while plants developed a water deficit stress of -2.9 megapascals after rewatering, and no significant promotion of ethylene production was detected. The shoots of fruited, flowering cotton plants produced less ethylene when subjected to cessation of irrigation. In contrast, the ability of bench drying of detached leaves to increase ethylene production several-fold was verified for both beans and cotton. The data indicate that detached leaves react differently to rapid drying than intact plants react to drying of the soil with regard to ethylene production. This result suggests the need for additional attention to ethylene as a complicating factor in experiments employing excised plant parts and the need to verify the relevance of shock stresses in model systems.

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