Plant physiology
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Low concentrations of the glucose (Glc) analog mannose (Man) inhibit germination of Arabidopsis seeds. Man is phosphorylated by hexokinase (HXK), but the absence of germination was not due to ATP or phosphate depletion. The addition of metabolizable sugars reversed the Man-mediated inhibition of germination. ⋯ Since these latter two sugars are taken up at a rate similar to that of Man, uptake is unlikely to be involved in the inhibition of germination. Furthermore, we show that mannoheptulose, a specific HXK inhibitor, restores germination of seeds grown in the presence of Man. We conclude that HXK is involved in the Man-mediated repression of germination of Arabidopsis seeds, possibly via energy depletion.
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Freezing behavior of wood tissue of red osier dogwood (Cornus sericea L.) cannot be explained by current concepts of freezing resistance. Previous studies indicated that water in wood tissue presumably froze extracellularly. However, it was observed that xylem ray parenchyma cells within these tissues could survive temperatures as low as -80[deg]C and the walls of these cells did not collapse during freezing (S. ⋯ No evidence of intracellular ice formation was observed in parenchyma cells exposed to freezing stress. Differences in protoplasm contraction and appearance of cells with fragmented protoplasm likely indicated seasonal changes in cold hardiness of the wood tissue of red osier dogwood. We speculate that the appearance of fragmented protoplasm may indicate that cells are being injured by an alternative mechanism in spring and summer.
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Cells of the cyanobacterium, Synechococcus PCC7942, grown under high inorganic carbon (C(i)) conditions (1% CO(2); pH 8) were found to be photosynthetically dependent on exogenous CO(2). This was judged by the fact that they had a similar photosynthetic affinity for CO(2) (K(0.5)[CO(2)] of 3.4-5.4 micromolar) over the pH range 7 to 9 and that the low photosynthetic affinity for C(i) measured in dense cell suspensions was improved by the addition of exogenous carbonic anhydrase (CA). The CA inhibitor, ethoxyzolamide (EZ), was shown to reduce photosynthetic affinity for CO(2) in high C(i) cells. ⋯ EZ was found to cause a small drop in photosystem II activity, but this level of inhibition was not sufficient to explain the large effect that EZ had on CO(2) usage. High C(i) cells of Anabaena variabilis M3 and Synechocystis PCC6803 were also found to be sensitive to 200 micromolar EZ. We discuss the possibility that the inhibitory effect of EZ on CO(2) usage in high C(i) cells of Synechococcus PCC7942 may be due to inhibition of a ;CA-like' function associated with the CO(2) utilizing C(i) pump or due to inhibition of an internal CA activity, thus affecting CO(2) supply to ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase.
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Studies of stem water in red-osier dogwood (Cornus stolonifera Michx.) using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy indicated that most freezing occurs at temperatures above -30 C in cold-hardy and tender stems. Hardy and tender stems had about the same amount of unfrozen water at -40 C (0.28 gram of water per gram dry weight). ⋯ Fully hardy samples not slowly precooled to at least -15 C did not survive direct immersion in liquid N(2). The results support the hypothesis that cooling rate is an unimportant factor in tissue survival at and below temperatures where there is little freezable water.