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Phospholipids, free sterols and adenosine triphosphatase of plasma membrane‐enriched preparations from roots of citrus genotypes differing in chloride exclusion ability
Author(s) -
Douglas Trevor John,
Walker Robert Ronald
Publication year - 1984
Publication title -
physiologia plantarum
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.351
H-Index - 146
eISSN - 1399-3054
pISSN - 0031-9317
DOI - 10.1111/j.1399-3054.1984.tb05922.x
Subject(s) - atpase , adenosine triphosphatase , sodium , chemistry , phospholipid , biochemistry , biology , enzyme , membrane , organic chemistry
Plasma membrane‐enriched preparations from fibrous roots of three citrus genotypes differing in their abilities for chloride exclusion, and grown in the presence of 0,50 or 100 m M NaCl for 4 weeks, were analysed for phospholipid and free sterol content and vanadate‐sensitive adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) activity over a range of temperatures. The best chloride excluder, Rangpur lime (Citrus reticulaia Blanco var. austera hyb.?), had significantly higher maximal ATPase activity than both the moderate chloride excluder. Kharna khatta (Citrus kharna Raf.), and the worst chloride excluder, Etrog citron (Citrus medico L.), at all assay temperatures below 28°C. Salt treatment had no effect on maximal ATPase activity of either Rangpur lime or Etrog citron but resulted in increased activity of the enzyme in Kharna khatta at temperatures below 28°C. Arrhenius plots of ATPase activity from the three citrus genotypes showed that, in controls, the activation energy (E.,) of Rangpur lime ATPase was significantly lower than that of both Kharna khatta and Etrog citron. The thermotropic phase transition temperature (T f ) for Rangpur lime (27°C) was also lower than for the other citrus genotypes (31°C). Salt treatment resulted in increases in both Ea and T, for Rangpur lime, decreases in both parameters for Kharna khatta and no change of either parameter for Etrog citron. An inverse relationship between E a and the phospholipid to free sterol ratio was evident for plasma membrane preparations from all three citrus genotypes in the presence and absence of salt treatment suggesting that changes in membrane fluidity, particularly those induced by free sterols, have the potential to influence active as well as passive ion transport processes and thus may play a significant role in the chloride exclusion mechanism.

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