PLANT PHYSIOLOGY , Vol 101, Issue 3 939-945, Copyright © 1993 by American Society of Plant Biologists
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ENVIRONMENTAL AND STRESS PHYSIOLOGY |
Estimation and Analysis of Cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.) Leaf Cellular Heat Sensitivity
C. R. Caldwell
Climate Stress Laboratory, United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Beltsville, Maryland 20705-2350
Triphenyl tetrazolium chloride (TTC) reduction by cucumber (Cucumis sativus
L. cv Poinsett 76 and cv Ashley) leaf discs was used as a viability assay
to examine the effect of temperature pretreatment on the tissue response to
acute hyperthermia. Semi-logarithmic plots of TTC reduction as a function
of incubation time at different temperatures from 40 to 60[deg]C resembled
the heat survival curves of animal cells. Heat inactivation rates were
obtained and subjected to "quasi" Arrhenius analyses by analytical methods
derived from the animal studies. The Arrhenius plots of TTC reduction rates
for cv Ashley leaf discs preincubated at 25 or 37[deg]C and for cv Poinsett
76 preincubated at 37[deg]C were linear with the same activation energy
(Ea) of about 80 kcal mol-1. The Arrhenius plot of cv Poinsett 76
preincubated at 25[deg]C was nonlinear with an Ea of about 80 kcal mol-1 at
temperatures below 46[deg]C and an Ea of about 27.5 kcal mol-1 at
temperatures above 47[deg]C. The significance of these differences is
discussed in terms of the role of protein denaturation in the thermal
sensitivity of cucumber disc reduction of TTC and the applicability of
these methods to the analysis of plant cellular heat sensitivity.