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1.
Biotech Histochem ; 67(4): 185-95, 1992 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1504180

RESUMO

A technique is described which uses the lipid fluorochrome neutral red as a cytochemical probe to detect the hydrophobic domain of the ligno-suberin matrix in native and wound periderm of potato tuber. Toluidine blue O is used as a counterstain to quench autofluorescence. The neutral red technique appears to be specific for the hydrophobic/lipid domain of suberin and is significantly more sensitive than Sudan III and IV. The fluorochrome was extensively used on paraffin-embedded tissue with excellent results but also worked on freehand sections of fresh periderm tissue. In tuber tissue undergoing wound-healing, the pattern of suberin fluorescence obtained with the neutral red probe was identical in specificity to the color pattern obtained with Sudan III/IV, but somewhat different than that observed when berberine was used. Results obtained with the neutral red probe and berberine probe visually demonstrated that during ligno-suberin biosynthesis, the depositions of hydrophobic/lipid and phenolic/lignin-like components in potato tuber periderm were separate processes. The deposition of these components does not necessarily require their simultaneous presence because the fluorescence from these probes showed that the components were not consistently present together on the cell walls.


Assuntos
Lipídeos de Membrana/análise , Vermelho Neutro , Plantas/química , Berberina , Fenômenos Químicos , Físico-Química , Fluorescência , Corantes Fluorescentes , Histocitoquímica , Lignina/análise , Lipídeos/análise , Fosfinas , Plantas/anatomia & histologia , Sensibilidade e Especificidade
2.
Plant Physiol ; 80(2): 424-8, 1986 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16664637

RESUMO

We analyzed a physiological defect that involved translucent-like tissue which occurred randomly in potato tubers (Solanum tuberosum L., cv Kennebec) after 8 months of storage. The translucent areas had reduced lipoxygenase (0.73-fold) and lipolytic acyl hydrolase (0.27-fold) activities. The effect(s) of these reduced enzyme activities in vivo is uncertain, but they may have influenced composition, turnover and permeability of membranes because potato lipid is primarily membranous in nature. Electron micrographs of the translucent tissue revealed a discernible decrease in the number of starch granules compared to normal/healthy tissue. A few remaining amyloplasts, which still contained starch granules, possessed large electrondense areas (stroma) within the organelle. Mitochondria in translucent tissue appeared to be present in increased numbers, were aggregated, had fewer but swollen cristae, and, morphologically, were of irregular size and shape suggestive of division. The result of this tuber defect appeared, in part, to be an exaggerated or accelerated form of senescence.

3.
Plant Physiol ; 78(3): 489-94, 1985 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16664271

RESUMO

Kennebec (cv) potatoes randomly developed translucent areas in their centrally located pith-parenchymal cells during storage. These defective areas were characterized as having reduced starch concentration and increased levels of free sugars (i. e. sucrose and glucose) and inorganic phosphate. Electron micrographs of potato tubers stored at 10 degrees +/- 1 degrees C for 8 months indicated that the amyloplast membrane was still intact and continuous around starch granules in both normal and prematurely sweetened tissue. The total activities of phosphorylase and sucrose-6-P synthase were elevated 5.4- and 3.8-fold, respectively, in the defective tissue compared to healthy nonsweetened tubers while there were no significant differences in the levels of sucrose synthase, UDPglucose pyrophosphorylase, invertase, or alpha-amylase. Total and specific activities of acid phosphatase were only slightly elevated in translucent tissue but their increase was significant (P < 0.05, t test) over that seen in healthy tubers. The premature sweetening in storage may have been indirectly triggered by moisture and heat stress experienced during development. Translucency eventually led to physical deterioration of the tissue.

4.
Plant Physiol ; 68(4): 950-5, 1981 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16662032

RESUMO

The oxidation of linoleic acid in incubation mixtures containing extracts of barley lipoxygenase and hydroperoxide isomerase, and the production of these enzymes in quiescent and germinated barley, were investigated. The ratio of 9-hydroperoxylinoleic acid to 13-hydroperoxylinoleic acid was higher for incubation mixtures containing extracts of quiescent barley than for mixtures containing extracts of germinated barley; production of 13-hydroperoxylinoleic acid from germinated barley exceeded that of quiescent barley. Hydroperoxy metabolites of linoleic acid were converted to 9-hydroxy-10-oxo-cis-12-octadecenoic acid, 13-hydroxy-10-oxo-trans-11-octadecenoic acid, and small amounts of 11-hydroxy-12,13-epoxy-cis-9-octadecenoic acid and 11-hydroxy-9,10-epoxy-cis-13-octadecenoic acid whether quiescent or germinated barley was the enzyme source; a fifth product, 13-hydroxy-12-oxo-cis-9-octadecenoic acid was formed only when germinated barley was the enzyme source.Lipoxygenase was readily extracted by buffer, but hydroperoxide isomerase was bound in a catalytically active state to the insoluble barley grist and was efficiently extracted only when Triton X-100 was included in the extraction buffer. Hydroperoxide isomerase was localized in the embryo of quiescent barley, but it was present in the embryo, acrospire, and in small but concentrated amounts in the rootlet of germinating barley. The levels of both lipoxygenase and hydroperoxide isomerase increased through the thirteenth day of germination.

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