Relative sensitivity of photosynthesis and respiration to freeze-thaw stress in herbaceous species : importance of realistic freeze-thaw protocols
- PMID: 16666712
- PMCID: PMC1056024
- DOI: 10.1104/pp.89.4.1372
Relative sensitivity of photosynthesis and respiration to freeze-thaw stress in herbaceous species : importance of realistic freeze-thaw protocols
Abstract
The relative effect of a freeze-thaw cycle on photosynthesis, respiration, and ion leakage of potato leaf tissue was examined in two potato species, Solanum acaule Bitt. and Solanum commersonii Dun. Photosynthesis was found to be much more sensitive to freezing stress than was respiration, and demonstrated more than a 60% inhibition before any impairment of respiratory function was observed. Photosynthesis showed a slight to moderate inhibition when only 5 to 10% of the total electrolytes had leaked from the tissue (reversible injury). This was in contrast to respiration which showed no impairment until temperatures at which about 50% ion leakage (irreversible injury) had occurred. The influence of freeze-thaw protocol was further examined in S. acaule and S. commersonii, in order to explore discrepancies in the literature as to the relative sensitivities of photosynthesis and respiration. As bath cooling rates increased from 1 degrees C/hour to about 3 or 6 degrees C/hour, there was a dramatic increase in the level of damage to all measured cellular functions. The initiation of ice formation in deeply supercooled tissue caused even greater damage. As the cooling rates used in stress treatments increased, the differential sensitivity between photosynthesis and respiration nearly disappeared. Examination of agriculturally relevant, climatological data from an 11 year period confirmed that air cooling rates in the freezing range do not exceed 2 degrees C/hour. It was demonstrated, in the studies presented here, that simply increasing the actual cooling rate from 1.0 to 2.9 degrees C/hour, in frozen tissue from paired leaflet halves, meant the difference between cell survival and cell death.
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