Tripogon loliiformis elicits a rapid physiological and structural response to dehydration for desiccation tolerance


Autoria(s): Karbaschi, Mohammad Reza; Williams, Brett; Taji, Acram; Mundree, Sagadevan
Data(s)

05/02/2016

Resumo

Resurrection plants can withstand extreme dehydration to an air-dry state and then recover upon receiving water. Tripogon loliiformis (F.Muell.) C.E.Hubb. is a largely uncharacterised native Australian desiccation-tolerant grass that resurrects from the desiccated state within 72 h. Using a combination of structural and physiological techniques the structural and physiological features that enable T. loliiformis to tolerate desiccation were investigated. These features include: - (i) a myriad of structural changes such as leaf folding, cell wall folding and vacuole fragmentation that mitigate desiccation stress; - (ii) potential role of sclerenchymatous tissue within leaf folding and radiation protection; - (iii) retention of ~70% chlorophyll in the desiccated state; - (iv) early response of photosynthesis to dehydration by 50% reduction and ceasing completely at 80 and 70% relative water content, respectively; - (v) a sharp increase in electrolyte leakage during dehydration, and; - (vi) confirmation of membrane integrity throughout desiccation and rehydration. Taken together, these results demonstrate that T. loliiformis implements a range of structural and physiological mechanisms that minimise mechanical, oxidative and irradiation stress. These results provide powerful insights into tolerance mechanisms for potential utilisation in the enhancement of stress-tolerance in crop plants.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/94001/

Publicador

CSIRO Publishing

Relação

DOI:10.1071/FP15213

Karbaschi, Mohammad Reza, Williams, Brett, Taji, Acram, & Mundree, Sagadevan (2016) Tripogon loliiformis elicits a rapid physiological and structural response to dehydration for desiccation tolerance. Functional Plant Biology. (In Press)

QUT/Mundree Capacity Development Grant

Direitos

Copyright 2016 CSIRO

Fonte

Centre for Tropical Crops and Biocommodities; School of Earth, Environmental & Biological Sciences; Institute for Future Environments; Science & Engineering Faculty

Palavras-Chave #060702 Plant Cell and Molecular Biology #060705 Plant Physiology #Tripogon loliiformis #resurrection plant #Desiccation #leaf structure #membrane integrity #photosynthesis #electrolyte leakage
Tipo

Journal Article