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1.
Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom ; 15(12): 935-40, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11400199

ABSTRACT

The use of matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) time-of-flight (TOF) mass spectrometry (MS) for the quantitative determination of phospholipid (PL) molecular species has been problematic, due primarily to the formation of multiple signals (corresponding to the molecular ion and other adducts) for some classes of PL. For example, analysis of phosphatidylcholine (PC) yielded signals that corresponded to protonated and sodiated molecules in the MALDI spectrum. The resulting spectral overlap among various molecular species (e.g. [PC(16:0/18:2) + Na] and [PC(18:2/18:3)]) made it impossible to ascertain their relative amounts using this technique. Other spectral ambiguities existed among different structural isomers, such as PC(18:1/18:1) and PC(18:0/18:2). We determined that molecular species could be resolved by MALDI-TOFMS by first removing the polar head (e.g. phosphocholine) from the phospholipid to effect production of only the sodiated molecules of the corresponding diacylglycerols (DAGs). Analysis of the resulting spectrum allowed unequivocal determination of the molecular species profile of PC from potato tuber and soybean. Estimation of fatty acid composition based on the molecular species determined by MALDI-TOFMS analysis agreed with that from GC-FID analysis. Post-source decay (PSD) was used to resolve standard isomers of PC (e.g. 18:1/18:1 vs. 18:0/18:2). Our results indicated that PSD is a useful approach for resolving structural isomers of PL molecular species.


Subject(s)
Glycine max/chemistry , Phosphatidylcholines/analysis , Solanum tuberosum/chemistry , Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization/methods , Chromatography, Gas/methods , Reproducibility of Results
2.
Plant Physiol ; 112(3): 1301-1313, 1996 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12226448

ABSTRACT

Glutathione-mediated free-radical-scavenging and plasma membrane ATPase activities increase as sinks for metabolic energy with advancing tuber age. Plasma membrane ATPase activity from 19-month-old tubers was 77% higher than that from 7-month-old tubers throughout sprouting. The higher activity was not attended by an increase in the amount of ATPase per unit plasma membrane protein. Concentrations of oxidized (GSSG) and reduced glutathione more than doubled as tuber age advanced from 6 to 30 months, but the proportion of GSSG to total glutathione remained constant with age. The activity of glutathione transferase, an enzyme that catabolizes lipid-hydroperoxides, increased by 44 and 205% on a fresh weight and protein basis, respectively, as tubers aged from 6 to 30 months. Glutathione reductase activity also increased with advancing age, by 90% on a fresh weight basis and 305% on a protein basis. Older tubers had more glutathione reductase per unit of soluble and mitochondrial protein. The age-induced increase in cytosolic glutathione transferase activity was likely due to increased availability of lipid-hydroperoxides and/or a positive effector. Synthesis of glutathione requires ATP, and the increased reduction of GSSG resulting from catalysis of lipid-hydroperoxides is NADPH-dependent. Thus, increased plasma membrane ATPase and glutathione-mediated free-radical-scavenging activities likely constitute substantial sinks for ATP in older tubers prior to and during sprouting. Increased oxidative stress and loss in membrane integrity and central features of aging that undoubtedly contribute to the enhanced respiration of sprouting older tubers.

3.
Plant Physiol ; 102(3): 771-782, 1993 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12231865

ABSTRACT

Growth, development, and mineral physiology of potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) plants in response to infection by three species of vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal (VAM) fungi and different levels of P nutrition were characterized. P deficiency in no-P and low-P (0.5 mM) nonmycorrhizal plants developed between 28 and 84 d after planting. By 84 d after planting, P deficiency decreased plant relative growth rate such that no-P and low-P plants had, respectively, 65 and 45% less dry mass and 76 and 55% less total P than plants grown with high P (2.5 mM). A severe reduction in leaf area was also evident, because P deficiency induced a restriction of lateral bud growth and leaf expansion and, also, decreased the relative plant allocation of dry matter to leaf growth. Root growth was less influenced by P deficiency than either leaf or stem growth. Moreover, P-deficient plants accumulated a higher proportion of total available P than high-P plants, indicating that P stress had enhanced root efficiency of P acquisition. Plant P deficiency did not alter the shoot concentration of N, K, Mg, or Fe; however, the total accumulation of these mineral nutrients in shoots of P-stressed plants was substantially less than that of high-P plants. P uptake by roots was enhanced by each of the VAM symbionts by 56 d after planting and at all levels of abiotic P supply. Species differed in their ability to colonize roots and similarly to produce a plant growth response. In this regard, Glomus intraradices (Schenck and Smith) enhanced plant growth the most, whereas Glomus dimorphicum (Boyetchko and Tewari) was least effective, and Glomus mosseae ([Nicol. and Gerd.] Gerd. and Trappe) produced an intermediate growth response. The partial alleviation of P deficiency in no-P and low-P plants by VAM fungi stimulated uptake of N, K, Mg, Fe, and Zn. VAM fungi enhanced shoot concentrations of P, N, and Mg by 28 d after planting and, through a general improvement of overall plant mineral nutrition, promoted plant growth and development.

4.
Plant Physiol ; 102(1): 115-124, 1993 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12231802

ABSTRACT

Previous research has shown that cell membranes of potato (Solanum tuberosum L. cv Russet Burbank) seed-tubers lose integrity between 7 and 26 months of storage (4[deg]C, 95% relative humidity), and this loss coincides with a significant decrease in growth potential. The age-induced decline in membrane integrity is apparently due to increased peroxidative damage of membrane lipids. Malondialdehyde (MDA) and ethane concentrations (sensitive markers of lipid peroxidation and membrane damage) increased in seed-tuber tissues with advancing age. Moreover, in vivo ethane production from discs of cortex tissue from 13- and 25-month-old seed-tubers was 87% greater (on average) than that from discs from 1-month-old tubers. Calcium suppressed ethane production from all ages of tissue discs, and the effect was concentration dependent. Linoleic acid enhanced ethane production from 5- and 17-month-old tubers by 61 and 228%, respectively, suggesting that older tissue may contain a higher free-radical (FR) titer and/or lower free polyunsaturated fatty acid content. In addition, throughout plant establishment, the internal ethane concentration of older seed-tubers was 54% higher than that of younger seed-tubers. MDA concentration of tuber tissue declined by about 65% during the initial 7 months of storage and then increased 267% as tuber age advanced to 30 months. The age-induced trend in tuber reducing sugar concentration was similar to that of MDA, and the two were linearly correlated. The age-dependent increase in reducing sugars may thus reflect peroxidative degeneration of the amyloplast membrane, leading to increased starch hydrolysis. Compared with 5-month-old seed tubers, 17- and 29-month-old seed-tubers had significantly higher levels of lipofuscin-like fluorescent compounds (FCs), which are produced when MDA reacts with free amino acids. Age-dependent increases in MDA, ethane, and FCs were not associated with higher activities of phospholipase and lipoxygenase in tissue from older tubers. In fact, 8-month-old seed-tubers had significantly higher activities of these enzymes than 20-month-old seed-tubers. However, the activities of superoxide dismutase, peroxidase, and catalase in 20-month-old tubers were substantially higher out of storage, and increased at a faster rate during plant establishment, than in 8-month-old seed-tubers. Collectively, these results suggest that a gradual build-up of FRs leads to peroxidative damage of membrane lipids during aging of potato seed-tubers.

5.
Plant Physiol ; 101(1): 147-160, 1993 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12231674

ABSTRACT

Morphological and biochemical interactions between a vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal (VAM) fungus (Glomus fasciculatum [Thaxt. sensu Gerdemann] Gerdemann and Trappe) and potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) plants during the development of P deficiency were characterized. Nonmycorrhizal (NM) plants grown for 63 d with low abiotic P supply (0.5 mM) produced 34, 52, and 73% less root, shoot, and tuber dry matter, respectively, than plants grown with high P (2.5 mM). The total leaf area and the leaf area:plant dry weight ratio of low-P plants were substantially lower than those of high-P plants. Moreover, a lower shoot:root dry weight ratio and tuber:plant dry weight ratio in low-P plants than in high-P plants characterized a major effect of P deficiency stress on dry matter partitioning. In addition to a slower rate of growth, low-P plants accumulated nonreducing sugars and nitrate. Furthermore, root respiration and leaf nitrate reductase activity were lower in low-P plants than in high-P plants. Low abiotic P supply also induced physiological changes that contributed to the greater efficiency of P acquisition by low-P plants than by high-P plants. For example, allocation of dry matter and P to root growth was less restricted by P deficiency stress than to shoot and tuber growth. Also, the specific activities of root acid phosphatases and vanadate-sensitive microsomal ATPases were enhanced in P-deficient plants. The establishment of a VAM symbiosis by low-P plants was essential for efficient P acquisition, and a greater root infection level for P-stressed plants indicated increased compatibility to the VAM fungus. By 63 d after planting, low-P VAM plants had recovered 42% more of the available soil P than low-P NM plants. However, the VAM fungus only partially alleviated P deficiency stress and did not completely compensate for inadequate abiotic P supply. Although the specific activities of acid phosphatases and microsomal ATPases were only marginally influenced by VAM infection, VAM roots characteristically had a higher protein concentration and, consequently, enhanced microsomal ATPase and acid phosphatase activities on a fresh weight basis compared with NM roots. Morphological and ultrastructural details of VAM plants are discussed in relation to the influence of the VAM symbiosis on P nutrition of potato.

6.
Plant Physiol ; 100(1): 341-51, 1992 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16652967

ABSTRACT

In mycorrhizal symbioses, susceptibility of a host plant to infection by fungi is influenced by environmental factors, especially the availability of soil phosphorus. This study describes morphological and biochemical details of interactions between a vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal (VAM) fungus and potato (Solanum tuberosum L. cv Russet Burbank) plants, with a particular focus on the physiological basis for P-induced resistance of roots to infection. Root infection by the VAM fungus Glomus fasciculatum ([Thaxt. sensu Gerdemann] Gerdemann and Trappe) was extensive for plants grown with low abiotic P supply, and plant biomass accumulation was enhanced by the symbiosis. The capacity of excised roots from P-deficient plants to produce ethylene in the presence or absence of exogenous 1-amino cyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC) was markedly reduced by VAM infection. This apparent inhibition of ACC oxidase (ACC(ox)) activity was localized to areas containing infected roots, as demonstrated in split-root studies. Furthermore, leachate from VAM roots contained a potent water-soluble inhibitor of ethylene generation from exogenous ACC by nonmycorrhizal (NM) roots. The leachate from VAM-infected roots had a higher concentration of phenolics, relative to that from NM roots. Moreover, the rates of ethylene formation and phenolic concentration in leachates from VAM roots were inversely correlated, suggesting that this inhibitor may be of a phenolic nature. The specific activity of extracellular peroxidase recovered in root leachates was not stimulated by VAM infection, although activity on a fresh weight basis was significantly enhanced, reflecting the fact that VAM roots had higher protein content than NM roots. Polyphenol oxidase activity of roots did not differ between NM and VAM roots. These results characterize the low resistance response of P-deficient plants to VAM infection. When plants were grown with higher abiotic P supply, the relative benefit of the VAM symbiosis to plant growth decreased and root infection was lower. The in vivo ACC(ox) activity was also greater in roots of plants grown on high levels of P compared with those grown on low levels, although the influence of VAM infection was partially to counteract the nutritional effect of P on ACC(ox) activity. Similar to ACC(ox) activity, extracellular peroxidase activity of roots increased linearly with increasing abiotic P supply, thus indicating a greater potential for resistance to VAM infection. These findings suggest that VAM fungi may alter phenolic metabolism of roots so as to hinder ethylene production and the root's ability to invoke a defense response. Raising the abiotic P supply to plants at least partially restores the capacity of roots to produce ethylene and may, in this way, increase the root's resistance to VAM infection.

7.
Plant Physiol ; 93(3): 967-75, 1990 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16667608

ABSTRACT

Studies were conducted to characterize the effect of advanced potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) seed-tuber age on plant growth potential and whole-plant morphology. Plant growth from single-eye seedcores from 5- to 18-month old ;Russet Burbank' seedtubers was compared. Loss in apical dominance was apparent with advanced age. On a per-core basis, the amount of plant dry weight was equal for the two ages at 30 days from planting. However, individual plants from older cores displayed reduced shoot, root and leaf dry weights, leaf area, and leaf number. These effects reflected altered dry-matter partitioning and contributed to an overall change in plant morphology with advanced age. On a total seedcore basis, relative growth rate of plants from older seedcores was greater than that from younger seedcores over the 30 day growth interval. Leaf area ratio was also greater for plants from the older seedcores; however, unit leaf rate was not affected by tuber age and plants from both young and old seedcores assimilated dry matter at the same rate. Age-induced differences in growth indices reflected differences in the degree of plant differentiation over the interval of study. Treating younger seedcores with 1-naphthaleneacetic acid (NAA) prior to planting inhibited overall plant growth. In older cores, NAA stimulated root growth, restored apical dominance, decreased leaf number per plant, and increased average leaf area per leaf. In short, NAA altered the morphology of plants growing from older seedcores to more closely resemble that of plants growing from younger seedcores. While auxin significantly altered plant form, vigor of plants from older seedcores was not fully restored by auxin treatment, indicating that age-reduced vigor of potato seed-tubers is not solely mediated by auxin.

8.
Plant Physiol ; 91(1): 183-9, 1989 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16666993

ABSTRACT

Growth potential of potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) plants is influenced by seed-tuber age. After 24 days of growth, single-eye seedcores from 7-month-old seed-tubers produced 64% more foliar dry matter than those from 19-month-old seed-tubers, reflecting a higher growth rate. This study was initiated to determine if differences in polyamine (PA) metabolism are associated with aging and age-reduced vigor of potato seed-tubers. As tubers aged in storage, putrescine (Put) increased 2.2-fold, while spermidine (Spd) and spermine (Spm) decreased 33% and 38%, respectively. Ethylene content of the tuber tissue also increased with advancing age, suggesting that during the aging process S-adenosylmethionine was directed toward ethylene biosynthesis at the expense of the PAs. Single-eye cores from 7- and 19-month-old tubers were sown and PA levels in core and shoot tissues were monitored during plant development. Put titer of younger cores increased 8.8-fold by 12 days. In contrast, the increase in Put over the initial titer in older cores was 2.9-fold. The reduced ability of older cores to synthesize Put during plant establishment is probably due to a 45% decline in ornithine decarboxylase activity between 12 and 16 days after planting. Lack of available Put substrate limited the biosynthesis of Spd and Spm, and thus their concentrations remained lower in older cores than in younger cores. Lower PA titer in older cores during plant establishment is thus coincident with reduced growth potential. Concentrations of Put and Spd were higher in shoots developing from older cores throughout the study, but there was no age-related difference in Spm content. In contrast, activities of arginine and S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylases were higher in shoots from younger cores during establishment. The results indicate that aging affects PA metabolism in both tuber and developing plant tissues, and this may relate to loss of growth potential with advancing seed-tuber age.

9.
Plant Physiol ; 68(6): 1279-84, 1981 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16662092

ABSTRACT

Triacontanol (TRIA) increased fresh and dry weight and total reducible nitrogen (total N) of rice (Oryza sativa L.) seedlings within 40 minutes. Increases in total N in the supernatants from homogenates of corn (Zea mays L.) and rice leaves treated with TRIA for one minute before grinding occurred within 30 and 80 minutes, respectively. The source for the increase was investigated utilizing atmospheric substitution and enrichment and depletion studies with (15)N. The increase in total N in seedlings was shown to be independent of method of N analysis and the presence of nitrate in the plants. Automated Kjeldahl determinations showing apparent increases in N composition due to TRIA were shown to be correlated with hand Kjeldahl, elemental analysis, and chemiluminescent analysis in three independent laboratories. TRIA did not alter the nitrate uptake or endogenous levels of nitrate in corn and rice seedlings. Enrichment experiments revealed that the total N increases in rice seedlings, in vivo, and in supernatants of corn leaf homogenates, in vitro, are not due to atmospheric N(2). TRIA increased the soluble N pools of the plants, specifically the free amino acid and soluble protein fractions. No differences in depletion or enrichment of (15)N incorporated into soluble and insoluble N fractions of rice seedlings could be detected on an atom per cent (15)N basis. The apparent short-term total N increases cannot be explained by current knowledge of major N assimilation pathways. TRIA may stimulate a change in the chemical composition of the seedlings, resulting in interference with standard methods of N analysis.

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