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Adaptation of the tonoplast V‐type H + ‐ATPase of Mesembryanthemum crystallinum to salt stress, C 3 –CAM transition and plant age
Author(s) -
RATAJCZAK R.,
RICHTER J.,
LÜTTGE U.
Publication year - 1994
Publication title -
plant, cell and environment
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.646
H-Index - 200
eISSN - 1365-3040
pISSN - 0140-7791
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-3040.1994.tb02008.x
Subject(s) - mesembryanthemum crystallinum , vacuole , salinity , crassulacean acid metabolism , ageing , halophyte , atpase , botany , biology , rosette (schizont appearance) , horticulture , biochemistry , chemistry , enzyme , cytoplasm , photosynthesis , ecology , genetics , immunology
Plants of the facultative halophyte and CAM species Mesembryanthemum crystallinum L. (Aizoaceae) were stressed for 8 d with 400 mol m −3 NaCl in the root medium. NaCl was then removed from the substratum, and the plants were watered again with NaCl‐free solution. A second set of plants was maintained as controls. A small degree of CAM, as indicated by day‐night changes in malate levels, was expressed during ageing of the plants. Salinity‐stress‐dependent CAM induction was reversible by the removal of salt, as indicated by similar Δ malate levels in previously salt‐stressed plants and in non‐stressed plants on day 19 of the experiment. Tonoplast vesicles were isolated from leaves during the time‐course of stress application, stress removal and ageing. Parameters of the tonoplast H + ‐ATPase were correlated to the application of salinity, the expression of CAM and ageing. It was concluded, first, that a pronounced increase in the amount of tonoplast H + ‐ATPase is related to salinity per se and a smaller increase to ageing; secondly, that there is an increase in the specific activity of the enzyme related to ageing; thirdly, that the induction of two new polypeptides with molecular masses of 32 and 28 kDa is correlated in time with the expression of CAM, and, fourthly, that the two new polypeptides are part of the tonoplast H + ‐ATPase holoenzyme.

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