In Vivo Perturbation of Membrane-Associated Calcium by Freeze-Thaw Stress in Onion Bulb Cells : Simulation of This Perturbation in Extracellular KCl and Alleviation by Calcium.

نویسندگان

  • R Arora
  • J P Palta
چکیده

Incipient freeze-thaw stress in onion bulb scale tissue is known to cause enhanced efflux of K(+), along with small but significant loss of cellular Ca(2+). During the post-thaw period, irreversibly injured cells undergo a cytological aberration, namely, ;protoplasmic swelling.' This cellular symptom is thought to be caused by replacement of Ca(2+) from membrane by extracellular K(+) and subsequent perturbation of K(+) transport properties of plasma membrane. In the present study, onion (Allium cepa L. cv Sweet Sandwich) bulbs were slowly frozen to either -8.5 degrees C or -11.5 degrees C and thawed over ice. Inner epidermal peels from bulb scales were treated with fluorescein diacetate for assessing viability. In these cells, membrane-associated calcium was determined using chlorotetracycline fluorescence microscopy combined with image analysis. Increased freezing stress and tissue infiltration (visual water-soaking) were paralleled by increased ion leakage. Freezing injury (-11.5 degrees C; irreversible) caused a specific and substantial loss of membrane-associated Ca(2+) compared to control. Loss of membrane-associated Ca(2+) caused by moderate stress (-8.5 degrees C; reversible) was much less relative to -11.5 degrees C treatment. Ion efflux and Ca(2+)-chlorotetracycline fluorescence showed a negative relationship. Extracellular KCl treatment simulated freeze-thaw stress by causing a similar loss of membrane-associated calcium. This loss was dramatically reduced by presence of extracellular CaCl(2). Our results suggest that the loss of membrane-associated Ca(2+), in part, plays a role in initiation and progression of freezing injury.

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Protoplasmic Swelling as a Symptom of Freezing Injury in Onion Bulb Cells : Its Simulation in Extracellular KCl and Prevention by Calcium.

Freezing injury, in onion bulb tissue, is known to cause enhanced K(+) efflux accompanied by a small but significant loss of Ca(2+) following incipient freezing injury and swelling of protoplasm during the postthaw secondary injury. The protoplasmic swelling of the cell is thought to be caused by the passive influx of extracellular K(+) into the cell followed by water uptake. Using outer epider...

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عنوان ژورنال:
  • Plant physiology

دوره 87 3  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 1988