16 research outputs found
Cold stress effects on organelle ultrastructure in polar Caryophyllaceae species
Abstract: This study investigated leaf mesophyll cells of Caryophyllaceae plants growing in
polar regions – Cerastium alpinum and Silene involucrata from the Hornsund region of
Spitsbergen island (Svalbard Archipelago, Arctic), and Colobanthus quitensis from the Ad−
miralty Bay region on King George Island (South Shetland Islands, West Antarctic). Ultra−
structural changes were analyzed in mesophyll protoplasts of plants growing in natural Arctic
and Antarctic habitats and plants grown in a greenhouse, including plants exposed to
short−term cold stress under semi−controlled conditions. Cell organelles of plants growing in
natural polar habitats and greenhouse−grown plants were characterized by significant mor−
phological plasticity.Chloroplasts of plants studied in this work formed variously shaped pro−
trusions and invaginations that visibly increased the contact area between adjacent cell com−
partments and reduced the distance between organelles. S. involucrata plants grown under
greenhouse conditions, tested by us in this work, were characterized by highly dynamic cell
nuclei with single or multiple invaginations of the nuclear membrane and the presence of
channels and cisternae filled with cytoplasm and organelles. Crystalline inclusion proteins
were observed in the cell nuclei of C. quitensis between nuclear membranes and in the direct
proximity of heterochromatin. Our study revealed significant conformational dynamics of
organelles, manifested by variations in the optical density of matrices, membranes and envelopes, in particular in C. quitensis, which could suggest that the analyzed Caryophyllaceae
taxa are well adapted to severe climate and changing conditions in polar regions
Cold stress effects on organelle ultrastructure in polar Caryophyllaceae species
Abstract: This study investigated leaf mesophyll cells of Caryophyllaceae plants growing in polar regions -Cerastium alpinum and Silene involucrata from the Hornsund region of Spitsbergen island (Svalbard Archipelago, Arctic), and Colobanthus quitensis from the Ad− miralty Bay region on King George Island (South Shetland Islands, West Antarctic). Ultra− structural changes were analyzed in mesophyll protoplasts of plants growing in natural Arctic and Antarctic habitats and plants grown in a greenhouse, including plants exposed to short−term cold stress under semi−controlled conditions. Cell organelles of plants growing in natural polar habitats and greenhouse−grown plants were characterized by significant mor− phological plasticity. Chloroplasts of plants studied in this work formed variously shaped pro− trusions and invaginations that visibly increased the contact area between adjacent cell com− partments and reduced the distance between organelles. S. involucrata plants grown under greenhouse conditions, tested by us in this work, were characterized by highly dynamic cell nuclei with single or multiple invaginations of the nuclear membrane and the presence of channels and cisternae filled with cytoplasm and organelles. Crystalline inclusion proteins were observed in the cell nuclei of C. quitensis between nuclear membranes and in the direct proximity of heterochromatin. Our study revealed significant conformational dynamics of organelles, manifested by variations in the optical density of matrices, membranes and enve− lopes, in particular in C. quitensis, which could suggest that the analyzed Caryophyllaceae taxa are well adapted to severe climate and changing conditions in polar regions
Changes in soluble carbohydrates in polar Caryophyllaceae and Poaceae plants in response to chilling
Changes in soluble carbohydrates in polar Caryophyllaceae and Poaceae plants in response to chilling
Abstract Four species of flowering plants comprising
Arctic populations of Cerastium alpinum and Poa arctica
var. vivipara and indigenous Antarctic species Colobanthus
quitensis and Deschampsia antarctica were investigated.
Plants derived from natural origins were grown in an
experimental greenhouse in Poland (53�470N and 20�300E
latitude). Plants for experiment were collected during spring
of 2010. Soluble carbohydrates in the intact shoots of C.
alpinum and C. quitensis, polar plants of the family Caryophyllaceae,
and D. antarctica and P. arctica var. vivipara,
representatives of the family Poaceae, were analyzed by gas
chromatography, and their involvement in the plants’
response to chilling stress was examined. Plant tissues of the
examined families growing in a greenhouse conditions
(18–20 �C, short day 10/14 h light/darkness) differed in the
content and composition of soluble carbohydrates. In addition
to common monosaccharides, myo-inositol and sucrose,
Caryophyllaceae plants contained raffinose family oligosaccharides
(RFOs), D-pinitol and mono-galactosyl pinitols.
RFOs and D-pinitol were not detected in plants of the family
Poaceae which contain 1-kestose, a specific tri-saccharide.
The accumulation of significant quantities of sucrose in all
investigated plants, RFOs in Caryophyllaceae plants and
1-kestose in Poaceae plants in response to chilling stress(4 �C for 48 h with a long day photoperiod, 20/4 h) indicates
that those compounds participate in the stress response. The
common sugar accumulating in cold stress response and
probably most important for chilling tolerance of four
investigated plants species seems to be sucrose. On the other
hand, the accumulation of above-mentioned carbohydrates
during chilling stress can be a return to sugars metabolism,
occurring in natural environmental conditions. No changes
in D-pinitol concentrations were observed in the tissues of C.
alpinum and C. quitensis plants subjected to both low and
elevated temperatures, which probably rules out the protective
effects of D-pinitol in response to cold stress
Morphological and Ultrastructural Changes of Organelles in Leaf Mesophyll Cells of the Arctic and Antarctic Plants of Poaceae Family Under Cold Influence
The influence of short-term cold stress on the metabolism of non-structural carbohydrates in polar grasses
Plants adapt to extremely low temperatures in polar regions by maximizing their photosynthetic efficiency and accumulating cryoprotective and osmoprotective compounds. Flowering plants of the family Poaceae growing in the Arctic and in the Antarctic were investigated. Their responses to cold stress were analyzed under laboratory conditions. Samples were collected after 24 h and 48 h of cold treatment. Quantitative and qualitative changes of sugars are found among different species, but they can differ within a genus of the family Poaceae. The values of the investigated parameters in Poa annua differed considerably depending to the biogeographic origin of plants. At the beginning of the experiment, Antarctic plants were acclimatized in greenhouse characterized by significantly higher content of sugars, including storage reserves, sucrose and starch, but lower total protein content. After 24 h of exposure to cold stress, much smaller changes in the examined parameters were noted in Antarctic plants than in locally grown specimens. Total sugar content and sucrose, starch and glucose levels were nearly constant in P. annua, but they varied significantly. Those changes are responsible for the high adaptability of P. annua to survive and develop in highly unsupportive environments and colonize new regions
Biology of generative reproduction of Colobanthus quitensis (Kunth) Bartl. from King George Island, South Shetland Islands
The influence of short-term cold stress on the metabolism of non-structural carbohydrates in polar grasses
Biology of generative reproduction of Colobanthus quitensis (Kunth) Bartl. from King George Island, South Shetland Islands
Biology of generative reproduction of Colobanthus quitensis (Kunth) Bartl. from King George Island, South Shetland Islands
Our macroscopic observations and microscopic studies conducted by means of a light microscope (LM) and transmission electron microscope (TEM) concerning the re-production biology of Colobanthus quitensis (Caryophyllaceae) growing in natural conditions in the Antarctic and in a greenhouse in Olsztyn (northern Poland) showed that this plant develops two types of bisexual flowers: opening, chasmogamous flowers and closed, cleistogamous ones. Cleistogamy was caused by a low temperature, high air humidity and strong wind. A small number of microspores differentiated in the microsporangia of C. quitensis, which is typical of cleistogamous species. Microsporocytes, and later microspores, formed very thick callose walls. More than twenty spheroidal, polypantoporate pollen grains differentiated in the microsporangium. They germinated on the surface of receptive cells on the dry stigma of the gynoecium or inside the microsporangium. A monosporic embryo sac of the Polygonum type differentiated in the crassinucellar ovule. During this differentiation the nucellus tissue formed and stored reserve materials. In the development of generative cells, a male germ unit (MGU) with differentiated sperm cells was observed. The smaller cell contained mainly mitochondria, and the bigger one plastids. In the process of fertilization in C. quitensis only one nucleus of the sperm cell, without cytoplasm fragments, entered the egg cell, and the proembryo developed according to the Caryophyllad type. Almost all C. quitensis ovules developed and formed perispermic seeds with a completely differentiated embryo both under natural conditions in the Antarctic and in a green-house in Olsztyn.</jats:p
