Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 5 de 5
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
2.
J Plant Res ; 136(2): 211-225, 2023 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36690846

ABSTRACT

To clarify the wintering ability of the cactus Nopalea cochenillifera cv. Maya (edible Opuntia sp., common name "Kasugai Saboten"), we investigated the effects of temperature and antioxidant capacity on chilling acclimatization. We analyzed the anatomy of cladode chlorenchyma tissue of plants exposed to light under chilling. We found that chilling acclimatization can be achieved by exposure to approximately 15 °C for 2 weeks and suggest that it is affected by whether or not antioxidant capacity can recover. The overwintering cacti had the thinnest cuticle but firm cuticular wax, which is important in the acquisition of low temperature tolerance under strong light. In cacti with severe chilling injury, round swollen nuclei with clumping chloroplasts were localized in the upper part (axial side) of the cell, as though pushed up by large vacuoles in the lower part. In overwintering cacti, chloroplasts were arranged on the lateral side of the cell as in control plants, but they formed pockets: invaginations with a thin layer of chloroplast stroma that surrounded mitochondria and peroxisomes. Specific cellular structural changes depended on the degree of chilling stress and provide useful insights linking chloroplast behavior and structural changes to the environmental stress response.


Subject(s)
Opuntia , Antioxidants , Cold Temperature , Chloroplasts , Plants , Acclimatization/physiology
3.
J Exp Bot ; 58(8): 1957-67, 2007.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17452753

ABSTRACT

The aerial surfaces of the common or crystalline ice plant Mesembryanthemum crystallinum L., a halophytic, facultative crassulacean acid metabolism species, are covered with specialized trichome cells called epidermal bladder cells (EBCs). EBCs are thought to serve as a peripheral salinity and/or water storage organ to improve survival under high salinity or water deficit stress conditions. However, the exact contribution of EBCs to salt tolerance in the ice plant remains poorly understood. An M. crystallinum mutant lacking EBCs was isolated from plant collections mutagenized by fast neutron irradiation. Light and electron microscopy revealed that mutant plants lacked EBCs on all surfaces of leaves and stems. Dry weight gain of aerial parts of the mutant was almost half that of wild-type plants after 3 weeks of growth at 400 mM NaCl. The EBC mutant also showed reduced leaf succulence and leaf and stem water contents compared with wild-type plants. Aerial tissues of wild-type plants had approximately 1.5-fold higher Na(+) and Cl(-) content than the mutant grown under 400 mM NaCl for 2 weeks. Na(+) and Cl(-) partitioning into EBCs of wild-type plants resulted in lower concentrations of these ions in photosynthetically active leaf tissues than in leaves of the EBC-less mutant, particularly under conditions of high salt stress. Potassium, nitrate, and phosphate ion content decreased with incorporation of NaCl into tissues in both the wild type and the mutant, but the ratios of Na(+)/K(+) and Cl(-)/NO(3)(-)content were maintained only in the leaf and stem tissues of wild-type plants. The EBC mutant showed significant impairment in plant productivity under salt stress as evaluated by seed pod and seed number and average seed weight. These results clearly show that EBCs contribute to succulence by serving as a water storage reservoir and to salt tolerance by maintaining ion sequestration and homeostasis within photosynthetically active tissues of M. crystallinum.


Subject(s)
Mesembryanthemum/metabolism , Sodium Chloride/metabolism , Homeostasis , Mesembryanthemum/cytology , Mesembryanthemum/genetics , Mutation , Nitrates/metabolism , Phenotype , Phosphates/metabolism , Photosynthesis , Plant Leaves/cytology , Plant Leaves/genetics , Plant Leaves/metabolism , Plant Stems/cytology , Plant Stems/genetics , Plant Stems/metabolism , Potassium/metabolism , Reproduction , Seeds/genetics , Seeds/growth & development , Seeds/metabolism
4.
Planta ; 219(3): 500-6, 2004 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15064950

ABSTRACT

Plants have evolved various photoprotective mechanisms to mitigate photodamage. Here we report the diurnal movement of chloroplasts in the leaves of succulent crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) plants under combined light and water stress. In leaves of water-stressed plants, the chloroplasts became densely clumped in one or sometimes two areas in the cytoplasm under light and dispersed during darkness. The chloroplast clumping resulted in leaf optical changes, with a decrease in absorptance and an increase in transmittance. The plant stress hormone abscisic acid induced chloroplast clumping in the leaf cells under light. We suggest that the marked chloroplast movement in these CAM plants is a photoprotective strategy used by the plants subjected to severe water stress.


Subject(s)
Chloroplasts/ultrastructure , Abscisic Acid/pharmacology , Cactaceae/drug effects , Cactaceae/physiology , Cactaceae/ultrastructure , Chloroplasts/drug effects , Chloroplasts/physiology , Crassulaceae/drug effects , Crassulaceae/physiology , Crassulaceae/ultrastructure , Microscopy, Electron , Movement/radiation effects , Photobiology , Photoperiod , Plant Leaves/drug effects , Plant Leaves/physiology , Plant Leaves/ultrastructure , Water/metabolism
5.
Plant Physiol ; 132(3): 1550-9, 2003 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12857835

ABSTRACT

We compared the structural, biochemical, and physiological characteristics involved in photorespiration of intergeneric hybrids differing in genome constitution (DtDtR, DtDtRR, and DtRR) between the C(3)-C(4) intermediate species Diplotaxis tenuifolia (DtDt) and the C(3) species radish (Raphanus sativus; RR). The bundle sheath (BS) cells in D. tenuifolia included many centripetally located chloroplasts and mitochondria, but those of radish had only a few chloroplasts and mitochondria. In the hybrids, the numbers of chloroplasts and mitochondria, the ratio of centripetally located organelles to total organelles, and the mitochondrial size in the BS cells increased with an increase in the constitution ratio of the Dt:R genome. The P-protein of glycine decarboxylase (GDC) was confined to the BS mitochondria in D. tenuifolia, whereas in radish, it accumulated more densely in the mesophyll than in the BS mitochondria. In the hybrids, more intense accumulation of GDC in the BS relative to the mesophyll mitochondria occurred with an increase in the Dt:R ratio. These structural and biochemical features in the hybrids were reflected in the gas exchange characteristics of leaves, such as the CO(2) compensation point. Our data indicate that the leaf structure, the intercellular pattern of GDC expression, and the gas exchange characteristics of C(3)-C(4) intermediate photosynthesis are inherited in the hybrids depending on the constitution ratio of the parent genomes. Our findings also demonstrate that the apparent reduced photorespiration in C(3)-C(4) intermediate plants is mainly due to the structural differentiation of mitochondria and chloroplasts in the BS cells combined with the BS-dominant expression of GDC.


Subject(s)
Brassicaceae/genetics , Brassicaceae/metabolism , Genome, Plant , Hybridization, Genetic , Photosynthesis , Raphanus/genetics , Raphanus/metabolism , Amino Acid Oxidoreductases/genetics , Amino Acid Oxidoreductases/metabolism , Brassicaceae/enzymology , Cell Respiration , Glycine Dehydrogenase (Decarboxylating) , Organelles/enzymology , Organelles/metabolism , Plant Leaves/cytology , Plant Leaves/enzymology , Plant Leaves/metabolism , Raphanus/enzymology
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...