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. 1967 Mar;42(3):361-5.
doi: 10.1104/pp.42.3.361.

Water and salt stresses, kinetin and protein synthesis in tobacco leaves

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Water and salt stresses, kinetin and protein synthesis in tobacco leaves

A Ben-Zioni et al. Plant Physiol. 1967 Mar.

Abstract

The capacity of tobacco (Nicotiana rustica) leaf discs to incorporate l-leucine (14)C into proteins was measured. Leaf discs were obtained from plants which experienced soil water depletion, or which were exposed to a saline or osmotic stress in the root medium. The stresses were brief of relatively short duration and water potential did not decrease below 4 bars in the root media. Leaf discs were sampled 2 hours after stress removal, achieved by reirrigation, or replacement of saline and osmotic solutions with normal nutrient solution. Plants were always turgid when leaves were sampled.All stressed tissues showed reduced capacity to incorporate l-leucine (14)C into protein. The reduction was about 50% and could not be attributed either to reduced uptake into the discs, or to possible isotopic dilution. Incorporation decreased progressively with leaf age in control discs as well as in stressed leaf discs. At all ages tested, incorporation in stressed discs was lower than that of the control. Full recovery of incorporation capacity in stressed discs was obtained when discs were sampled 72 hours after stress removal but not earlier.Kinetin pretreatment prior to incubation with labelled leucine partially restored incorporation in stressed discs. The differences in response to kinetin of stressed and control discs suggest a lower endogenous level of cytokinins in the stressed discs. The results were qualitatively similar regardless of the kind of stress given to the plants during pretreatment. This supports the hypothesis that the normal supply of root cytokinins is important in shoot metabolism.

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