Graduate School of Agriculture (K.K., J.K., S.F.) and Institute of
Low Temperature Science (K.A.), Hokkaido University, Sapporo 060-8589,
Japan
It has been accepted that xylem ray parenchyma cells (XRPCs) in
hardwood species respond to subfreezing temperatures either by deep
supercooling or by extracellular freezing. Present study by
cryo-scanning electron microscopy examined the freezing responses of
XRPCs in five boreal hardwoods: Salix sachalinensis Fr.
Schmit, Populus sieboldii Miq., Betula
platyphylla Sukat. var japonica Hara,
Betula pubescens Ehrh., and red osier dogwood
(Cornus sericea), in which XRPCs have been reported to
respond by extracellular freezing. Cryo-scanning electron microscopy
observations revealed that slow cooling of xylem to
80°C resulted
in intracellular freezing in the majority of XRPCs in S.
sachalinensis, an indication that these XRPCs had been deep
supercooled. In contrast, in the majority of XRPCs in P.
sieboldii, B. platyphylla, B.
pubescens, and red osier dogwood, slow cooling to
80°C
produced slight cytorrhysis without clear evidence of intracellular
freezing, suggesting that these XRPCs might respond by extracellular
freezing. In these XRPCs exhibited putative extracellular
freezing; however, deep etching revealed the apparent formation of
intracellular ice crystals in restricted local areas. To confirm the
occurrence of intracellular freezing, we rewarmed these XRPCs after
cooling and observed very large intracellular ice crystals as a result
of the recrystallization. Thus, the XRPCs in all the boreal hardwoods
that we examined responded by deep supercooling that was accompanied
with incomplete desiccation. From these results, it seems possible that
limitations to the deep-supercooling ability of XRPCs might be a
limiting factor for adaptation of hardwoods to cold climates.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
It is generally accepted that xylem
ray parenchyma cells (XRPCs) in hardwood species adapt to freezing of
apoplastic water by deep supercooling or by extracellular freezing
(Burke et al., 1976
; George et al., 1982
;
Sakai and Larcher, 1987
; Ashworth, 1996
;
Fujikawa and Kuroda, 2000
). Previous results, suggesting the presence of such contrasting freezing behaviors of XRPCs in hardwood species, were obtained mainly in studies by differential thermal analysis (DTA). DTA profiles of xylem under cooling conditions reveal a high temperature exotherm (HTE) generated by freezing of
apoplastic water, generally at around
5°C, as a common freezing profile of almost all hardwood species. The HTE is gradually reduced by
further cooling and generally disappears below
20°C (Quamme et al., 1973
). In xylem containing XRPCs that undergo deep
supercooling, a low temperature exotherm (LTE) is generally produced
below
20°C. It has been suggested that the LTE is produced by
intracellular freezing of XRPCs that have been supercooled (Hong
and Sucoff, 1980
). In contrast, in xylem that contains
XRPCs that exhibit extracellular freezing, no LTE is produced because
XRPCs become dehydrated during cooling and the lost water is frozen
extracellularly as a part of the HTE (Burke et al.,
1976
). Thus, in DTA studies, deep supercooling or extracellular
freezing of XRPCs has been distinguished by the presence or absence,
respectively, of an LTE.
Supercooling is a freezing avoidance mechanism and allows the survival
of XRPCs during supercooling. However, supercooling has physical limits
and ice nucleation results in lethal intracellular freezing that leads
to serious injury in all cells. The physical limit of supercooling of
pure water is
38°C (Rasmussen and MacKenzie, 1972
) and the limit of supercooling in XRPCs is similar,
being approximately
40°C (Burke et al., 1976
). The
lethal injury in XRPCs leads to the death of the entire tree
(George et al., 1982
). Extracellular freezing, in
contrast, has no such physical temperature limit. Plant cells, which
undergo extracellular freezing, exhibit a broad range of freezing
tolerance from complete sensitivity to survival in liquid nitrogen
(Sakai and Larcher, 1987
). Thus, the capacity for
extracellular freezing is believed to be a prerequisite for the
survival of the XRPCs of boreal hardwood species that are distributed
in regions where minimum air temperatures fall far below
40°C
(Burke et al., 1976
; George et al.,
1982
).
The contrasting freeze responses of XRPCs, as revealed by DTA,
correspond to the geographic distribution of hardwood species as it
relates to the latitudinal minimum air temperatures (George et
al., 1974
). Hardwood species with XRPCs that undergo deep
supercooling are distributed in warmer areas where minimum air
temperatures never drop below
40°C, whereas species with XRPCs that
undergo extracellular freezing can grow in colder regions where minimum air temperatures fall far below
40°C and even to
70°C
(George et al., 1974
; Burke et al., 1976
;
Quamme, 1985
; Kuroda et al., 1997b
). Only a small number of the most cold-hardy
boreal hardwood species belonging to the genera Salix,
Betula, Populus, and Cornus are
distributed in cold regions where minimum air temperatures are near
70°C, and the XRPCs in these hardwood species have been reported to
lack an LTE, which suggests the extracellular freezing of the XRPCs
(Burke et al., 1976
; Sakai and Larcher,
1987
; Fujikawa and Kuroda, 2000
).
It has been proposed that the adaptation of XRPCs to freezing by deep
supercooling in many hardwood species is due to the presence of thick
and rigid cell walls (Fujii et al., 1979
;
Fujikawa et al., 1999
), which do not allow for
cytorrhysis, the collapse of cell walls together with protoplasts,
which is typical of extracellular freezing (Sakai and Larcher,
1987
). Nonetheless, in the XRPCs of most cold-hardy boreal
hardwood species that appear to undergo extracellular freezing, the
XRPCs also have thick and rigid cell walls (Ristic and Ashworth,
1994
; Fujikawa and Kuroda, 2000
). Thus, it is
unclear how XRPCs in boreal hardwood species might adapt to freezing
temperatures by extracellular freezing. Electron microscopic
observations have suggested that XRPCs of boreal hardwood species might
not respond to freezing by typical extracellular freezing.
Ristic and Ashworth (1994)
examined the freezing
behavior of XRPCs by modified freeze substitution electron microscopy
and suggested that, in the XRPCs of red osier dogwood (Cornus
sericea), which has been categorized as an extracellular-freezing
species, freezing produces plasmolysis, with contraction of protoplasts that leaves rigid cell walls in the intact position. Cryo-scanning electron microscopy (SEM) studies of XRPCs under freezing conditions have, however, failed to conform the development of freezing-induced plasmolysis in the majority of XRPCs in red osier dogwood
(Fujikawa et al., 1996
; Kuroda et al.,
1999
), as well as in other extremely cold-hardy boreal hardwood
species (Kuroda et al., 1999
). Cryo-SEM observations
showed that XRPCs in boreal hardwood species frozen to
50°C undergo
typical extracellular freezing, with the exception that shrinkage of
cells (cytorrhysis) is slight (Kuroda et al., 1999
), as
compared with the extracellular freezing of cells of other plant
tissues (Fujikawa, 1994
; Yamada et al.,
2002
).
Since XRPCs are a key element that limits the distribution of hardwood
species in colder areas (Sakai and Larcher, 1987
), we
reexamined the freezing responses of XRPCs in boreal hardwood species
in great detail. In this study, we examined freezing behavior, upon
cooling to
80°C, of XRPCs of extremely cold-hardy boreal hardwood
species that included Salix sachalinensis, Populus
sieboldii, Betula platyphylla, Betula
pubescens, and red osier dogwood, in which the XRPCs have been
classified as responding by extracellular freezing (Quamme,
1985
; Sakai and Larcher, 1987
; Fujikawa
and Kuroda, 2000
). We also examined the behavior of XRPCs upon
rewarming (to
20°C) of samples after freezing. We anticipated that
rewarming of frozen samples would clearly reveal intracellular ice
crystals if they had been produced during slow cooling, as a result of the enlargement of such crystals due to recrystallization. The present
study provided novel evidence on freezing behavior of XRPCs in boreal
hardwood species.
 |
RESULTS |
Typical Freezing Behavior of XRPCs as Observed by Cryo-SEM
Previous studies showed that the freezing behavior of XRPCs in
hardwood species can be assessed accurately by cryo-SEM
(Fujikawa and Kuroda, 2000
). The XRPCs that had been
cryofixed from room temperature, as reference samples, had
well-preserved ultrastructure, and no intracellular ice was detected by
cryo-SEM at a magnification of 10,000× (Fig.
1A). Cryofixation of the reference
samples resulted in numerous, very small intracellular ice crystals, as
a consequence of the cryofixation of intracellular water, with the even
distribution of such crystals throughout entire fractured faces of
protoplasts, when they were observed by freeze fracture replica
electron microscopy (Kuroda et al., 1997a
). The
minimum diameter of the intracellular ice crystals produced by
cryofixation in the reference samples of the boreal hardwood species
examined in this study was 28 ± 4 nm (n = 25).

View larger version (119K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 1.
Cryo-SEM photographs showing the various freezing
behaviors of XRPCs in samples of boreal hardwood species that had been
harvested in winter. A, Typical structure of an XRPC for reference.
Xylem of S. sachalinensis was cryofixed at room temperature.
B, Typical structure of an XRPC after deep supercooling. Xylem of
S. sachalinensis was cooled slowly (10°C
d 1) to 30°C and cryofixed. C, Typical
structure of an XRPC after intracellular freezing. Xylem of S. sachalinensis was cooled slowly to 60°C and cryofixed. Arrows
indicate intracellular ice crystals. D, Typical structure of XRPCs
after putative extracellular freezing. The xylem of red osier dogwood
was cooled slowly to 40°C and cryofixed. Bars = 5 µm.
|
|
Deep supercooling of XRPCs was judged, upon freezing of xylem, by the
presence of well-preserved cellular ultrastructure and the absence of
detectable intracellular ice crystals under the cryo-SEM (Fig. 1B),
similar to that of reference samples. The minimum diameter of
intracellular ice crystals produced by cryofixation in the supercooled
XRPCs of the boreal hardwood species examined in this study was 26 ± 5 nm (n = 25), as determined by freeze fracture
replica electron microscopy.
The occurrence of intracellular freezing in XRPCs during slow cooling
(10°C d
1 = 0.007°C
min
1) was easily recognized by cryo-SEM and was
characterized by the presence of larger intracellular ice crystals that
were dispersed evenly throughout entire fractured faces in the
protoplasm (Fig. 1C). The intracellular ice crystals produced by slow
cooling were more than 10 times larger than those produced by
cryofixation (cooling rate of more than 1,000°C
min
1), as we showed previously in the XRPCs
from many hardwood species (Fujikawa and Kuroda, 2000
)
and as is also the case in other plant cells (Yamada et al.,
2002
). The minimum diameter of intracellular ice crystals
produced by slow cooling in the XRPCs of the boreal hardwood species
examined in this study was 620 ± 58 nm (n = 20).
Extracellular freezing of XRPCs was judged by the occurrence of
cytorrhysis and the absence of typical intracellular ice crystals (both
large ice crystals, formed as a result of intracellular freezing by
slow cooling, and very small ice crystals, formed as a result of
cryofixation) after cooling of xylem to lower temperatures, at least
below
30°C (Fig. 1D).
Freezing Behavior of XRPCs in Boreal Hardwood Species
We examined the response to slow cooling (10°C
d
1) from
40°C to
80°C of XRPCs in
boreal hardwood species. Cryo-SEM revealed that the majority of XRPCs
in these boreal hardwood species did not show evidence of intracellular
freezing upon cooling to
40°C (Table
I). However, almost all XRPCs in S. sachalinensis underwent typical intracellular freezing (Fig. 1C)
upon slow cooling below
60°C (Table I). XRPCs in P. sieboldii also underwent typical intracellular freezing in about
only one-quarter of the total cells upon cooling to
80°C (Table I).
In XRPCs of B. platyphylla, B. pubescens, and red
osier dogwood, the incidence of cells that underwent typical
intracellular freezing was very low, bring only approximately 10% of
the total cells, even after cooling to
80°C (Table I). The number
of XRPCs with evidence of typical intracellular freezing in these
species increased gradually in parallel with a decrease in cooling
temperature from
60°C to
80°C (Table I).
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Table I.
Percentage of XRPCs with evidence of intracellular
ice crystals as observed at the frozen state
Data were obtained from Cryo-SEM observations. Percentages are
means ± SD of results from three samples in each
case. In each sample, more than 100 cells were observed.
|
|
The majority of XRPCs in P. sieboldii, B. platyphylla, B. pubescens, and red osier dogwood, which
were exempted from typical intracellular freezing, exhibited freezing
behavior suggestive of extracellular freezing. These cells underwent
slight cytorrhysis although the extent of collapse was generally slight
(Figs. 2A and 1D). In general, collapsed
cells are located in adjacent to vessels in which the lumen was filled
with ice crystals (Fig. 2A). In the XRPCs that underwent putative
extracellular freezing, observations of fractured protoplasts in freeze
fracture replicas at higher magnification also did not show clear
evidence of the typical intracellular freezing produced by slow
freezing or by cryofixation in samples cooled to
40°C (Fig. 2B).
These results, obtained by observations in the frozen state, suggest
that the majority of XRPCs in P. sieboldii, B. platyphylla, B. pubescens, and red osier dogwood
respond to subfreezing temperatures by extracellular freezing,
confirming the results of a previous study (Fujikawa and Kuroda,
2000
).

View larger version (189K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 2.
Freezing behavior of XRPCs that had been
cooled slowly (10°C d 1) to 80°C (except
B, which shows a sample that was cooled slowly to 40°C) and
cryofixed. A, Cryo-SEM photograph showing XRPCs in red osier dogwood.
The sample was not deeply etched. B, Freeze fracture replica showing
part of a fractured protoplast in B. platyphylla. The
sample was not deeply etched. PF, Protoplasmic fracture face in
the plasma membrane; O, oil droplet; T, tonoplast; and endoplasmic
reticulum (ER) located just beneath the plasma membrane. C, Cryo-SEM
photograph showing an XRPC in P. sieboldii. The sample was
deeply etched. Many holes (large arrows), the result of removal of ice
crystals by deep etching, were produced near the periphery of the
plasma membrane, leaving shrunken materials (small arrows) in each
hole. D, Cryo-SEM photograph showing an XRPC of B. platyphylla. The sample was deeply etched. Holes and shrunken
materials are indicated by arrows and small arrows, respectively. E,
Freeze fracture replica showing part of a fractured protoplast in
B. platyphylla. The sample was deeply etched. Ice crystals
or spaces produced by removal of ice crystals (large arrows) are seen
at the periphery of oil droplets that left shrunken oil droplets (small
arrows). Ice crystals were also produced occasionally in the lumen of
vesicles (arrowhead). Note that the periphery of cell organelles other
than oil droplets did not yield holes after deep etching. Bars in
cryo-SEM photographs (A, C, and D) = 5 µm. Bars in freeze
fracture replicas (B and E) = 1 µm.
|
|
Formation of Intracellular Ice Crystals with a Specific
Distribution in XRPCs That Underwent Putative Extracellular
Freezing
In the majority of XRPCs that underwent putative extracellular
freezing in P. sieboldii, B. platyphylla,
B. pubescens, and red osier dogwood, numerous small holes
were produced in the fractured protoplasm when samples were observed in
the frozen state after deep etching (Fig. 2, C and D). We postulated
initially that these small holes might be concave fracture faces of
vesicles produced by membrane fracturing, which left behind the
exoplasmic fracture faces (EFs) of vesicle membranes. However, the
presence of these holes was unclear before deep etching (Fig. 2, A and
B), and deeper etching produced deeper holes. Therefore, we next
postulated that the small holes produced by deep etching might be ice
crystals with a specific distribution. The holes produced by deep
etching were not detected upon freezing above
40°C, but showed a
tendency to increase gradually in frequency upon a decrease in freezing temperature. After slow cooling to
80°C with deep etching, almost all XRPCs in the boreal hardwood species had holes in the fractured protoplasm.
Freeze fracture replicas developed from deeply etched samples revealed
often that the bottom of each hole had a typically smooth surface that
corresponded morphologically to the etched surface of an ice crystal
(Fig. 2E). Furthermore, the surfaces of holes did not include
structures that corresponded to exoplasmic fracture faces with membrane
particles. Rather, the surfaces were smooth. The small holes produced
by deep etching corresponded, in many cases, to the distribution of oil
droplets (Fig. 2B), and included nonetchable shrunken materials in the
center of holes (Figs. 2, C-E). The appearance of the shrunken
materials corresponded to that of oil droplets, with multiplex fracture
faces, which are typical of the appearance of oil droplets in reference
samples (Fig. 2B).
Freeze fracture replicas also showed that, apart from the formation of
etchable areas (possibly ice crystals) that surrounded oil droplets,
small ice crystals were very occasionally produced within small
vacuoles (Fig. 2E). Such small intracellular ice crystals within
vesicles were difficult to detect by cryo-SEM, as well as on
freeze-fracture replicas in the absence of deep etching.
Freezing Behavior of XRPCs as Judged by Results of
Rewarming
We also examined the behavior of XRPCs after rewarming frozen
samples. We postulated that the results of rewarming might provide clear evidence of intracellular freezing, if it had occurred during slow cooling, namely the enlargement of ice crystals upon
recrystallization. In XRPCs of S. sachalinensis, which
exhibited clear intracellular freezing during slow cooling below
60°C (Fig. 1C), the majority of XRPCs produced very large
intracellular ice crystals upon rewarming to
20°C (Table
II), and these crystals resembled those
in Figure 3, A and B. After rewarming,
only a small number of very large ice crystals of 3.2 ± 0.7 5 µm (minimum diameter; n = 20) were observed in
fractured protoplasts.
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Table II.
Percentage of XRPCs with evidence of intracellular
freezing as a result of rewarming
Samples were frozen to indicated temperatures, rewarmed to 20°C,
and cryofixed. Data were obtained from cryo-SEM observations.
Percentages are means ± SD of results from three
samples in each case. In each sample, more than 100 cells were
observed.
|
|

View larger version (108K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 3.
Cryo-SEM photographs showing the behavior upon
rewarming of XRPCs after cooling. A, XRPCs in B. platyphylla, after slow cooling to 60°C, rewarming to
20°C, and cryofixation. Arrows indicate very large intracellular
ice crystals. B, XRPCs in red osier dogwood, after slow cooling to
80°C, rewarming to 20°C, and cryofixation. Arrows indicate very
large ice crystals. C, An XRPC in P. sieboldii, after slow
cooling to 60°C, rewarming to 20°C, and cryofixation. Arrows
indicated very large ice crystals. All bars = 5 µm.
|
|
In other species, including P. sieboldii, B. platyphylla, B. pubescens, and red osier dogwood, in
which the majority of XRPCs apparently underwent extracellular
freezing, with, perhaps, local development of small intracellular ice
crystals, rewarming to
20°C after cooling below
40°C also
produced small numbers of very large intracellular ice crystals of
3.8 ± 0.8 5 µm in minimum diameter (n = 50) in
the majority of XRPCs (Fig. 3; Table II). The number of cells
exhibiting local development of small intracellular ice crystals that
were seen after deep etching (Fig. 2, C-E) and the number of cells
exhibiting very large intracellular ice crystals after rewarming were
roughly corresponded. Thus, rewarming provided clear evidence that
almost all XRPCs in all the boreal hardwood species examined underwent
intracellular freezing during slow cooling below
40°C, indicating
that XRPCs in these species adapt to subfreezing temperatures by deep supercooling.
Some samples that had been slowly cooled to
60°C and
80°C were
kept at these temperatures for an additional week, and some samples
were kept at
20°C and
40°C for 1 week and then slowly cooled to
80°C. After such long-term preservation under freezing conditions,
rewarming yielded the same results as routine slow cooling. These
results indicate that, in nature, XRPCs of all the boreal hardwood
species examined respond to the freezing of apoplastic water by deep
supercooling between temperatures of
40°C and
80°C and do not
respond by extracellular freezing.
 |
DISCUSSION |
Studies involving DTA, for the most part, have suggested that
XRPCs in hardwood species exhibit contrasting freezing behaviors that
are based on the presence or absence of an LTE. Previous studies by
cryo-SEM confirmed that the development of an LTE corresponds to the
intracellular freezing of XRPCs after the breakdown of deep
supercooling (Fujikawa et al., 1994
). In contrast, it
has not been confirmed that lack of an LTE always corresponds to the extracellular freezing of XRPCs (Fujikawa et al., 1996
).
In XRPCs of tropical and subtropical hardwood species, in which DTA
failed to reveal an LTE, cryo-SEM revealed the freezing response of
XRPCs, namely deep supercooling, with a limit of around
10°C
(Kuroda et al., 1997a
). In this latter case, one
of the reasons for the failure of DTA to detect an LTE was an
overlap of the temperature range between the HTE and the LTE.
Similarly, in XRPCs of a few moderately cold-hardy hardwood
species, as well as those of many softwood species, although DTA failed
to detect an LTE, cryo-SEM provided evidence of deep supercooling with
around
20°C (Fujikawa et al., 1999
; Fujikawa
and Kuroda, 2000
). In such cases, failure of DTA to reveal an
LTE was probably due to shortage of LTE to be detected, due to a small
number of XRPCs in these species. All these earlier results together
suggested that the XRPCs of all hardwood species, with the exception of
the most cold-hardy boreal hardwood species, respond to freezing by
deep supercooling (Fujikawa and Kuroda, 2000
).
The XRPCs in the most cold-hardy boreal hardwood species have been
shown, in previous DTA studies, to lack an LTE throughout the entire
year (Fujikawa et al., 1996
). Previous cryo-SEM
observations did, however, provide clear evidence of deep supercooling
in these XRPCs, in samples harvested in summer exclusively, with a
limit of around
10°C (Fujikawa et al., 1996
).
However, previous cryo-SEM observations did not provide evidence of
deep supercooling in XRPCs in samples of boreal hardwood species
harvested in winter. Thus, it remained possible that XRPCs in boreal
hardwood species might change their freezing responses seasonally from
deep supercooling in summer to extracellular freezing in winter
(Fujikawa and Kuroda, 2000
). However, in the present
study, we found that XRPCs in boreal hardwood species respond, even in
winter, to subfreezing temperatures by deep supercooling.
The evidence for deep supercooling of XRPCs in boreal hardwood species
harvested in winter was difficult to detect clearly by cryo-SEM in our
previous study when samples were observed in the frozen state at
temperatures as low as
50°C (Kuroda et al., 1999
).
However, in the present study, when cryo-SEM observations were made to
80°C, even in the frozen state, XRPCs in S. sacchalinensis revealed the clear occurrence of intracellular
freezing upon breakdown of deep supercooling below
60°C. Our
previous cryo-SEM study showed that XRPCs in this species do not
undergo intracellular freezing to
50°C (Kuroda et al.,
1999
). Thus, the limit of supercooling in XRPCs of S. sachalinensis is suggested to be close to
60°C. It is
important to note again that, although cryo-SEM observations revealed
clear evidence of intracellular freezing in XRPCs, DTA never revealed
an LTE in S. sachalinensis. The failure of DTA to detect an
LTE in this species might be due to shortage of LTE to be detected by
the small numbers of XRPCs. Apart from S. sachalinensis, however, the majority of XRPCs in other boreal hardwood species did not
show clear evidence of deep supercooling when they were observed by
cryo-SEM, in the frozen state, even at
80°C (Fig. 2). The majority
of XRPCs in these species, namely P. sieboldii, B. platyphylla, B. pubescens, and red osier dogwood,
exhibited cytorrhysis upon freezing, which was evidence of the
dehydration that is characteristic of extracellular freezing, although
the extent of collapse was slight. Other evidence for dehydration was
also evident as the rearrangement of the ER just beneath the plasma
membranes (Fig. 2B), as shown in the XRPCs of red osier dogwood during
freezing in a previous study (Kuroda et al.,
1997b
). Fujikawa and Takabe (1994)
showed that dehydration causes the rearrangement of ER in the cortical
parenchyma cells of mulberry (Morus bombycis Koidz.). Thus,
all these results support the hypothesis that XRPCs in most cold-hardy
boreal hardwood species undergo extracellular freezing.
Careful cryo-SEM observations of XRPCs in P. sieboldii,
B. platyphylla, B. pubescens, and red osier
dogwood, after deep etching even in the frozen states, revealed the
possibility that intracellular ice crystals might be produced in local
areas of protoplasts in XRPCs upon cooling below
40°C. To confirm
the intracellular freezing in these species, we rewarmed frozen
samples, postulating that recrystallization of water upon rewarming
might better reveal the presence of ice crystals if intracellular
freezing had occurred during slow cooling. Observations of XRPCs upon
rewarming clearly revealed that very large intracellular ice crystals
were produced in the majority of XRPCs that had been cooled below
40°C (Fig. 3). Little intracellular ice crystals were produced upon
rewarming in XRPCs that had been cooled above
40°C. It has also
been shown that no intracellular ice crystals were produced upon
rewarming of the cortical parenchyma cells of a hardwood that has
undergone extracellular freezing to
80°C (Fujikawa,
1995
). We confirmed similar enlargement of intracellular
ice crystals by rewarming the XRPCs in S. sachalinensis, in
which large and distinct intracellular ice crystals had been produced
during slow cooling (Fig. 1C). Our results indicate clearly that the
formation of very large intracellular ice crystals that occurs after
rewarming is due to recrystallization of intracellular ice crystals and
reflects the occurrence of intracellular freezing in XRPCs during slow cooling below
40°C. The formation of very large intracellular ice
crystals after rewarming indicates that relatively large amounts of
intracellular ice crystals were developed after slow cooling below
40°C. It is suggested that the etchable materials that surrounded
oil droplets, observed in the frozen state (Fig. 2, C-E), might
correspond to intracellular ice crystals, although the reasons for such
local segregation of ice crystals, in particular around oil droplets,
are unknown.
After rewarming of XRPCs in P. sieboldii, B. platyphylla, B. pubescens, and red osier dogwood, the
majority of XRPCs showed clear evidence of intracellular freezing below
60°C but a small number of XRPCs did not show any evidence of the
formation of large ice crystals (Table II). This result might be
interpreted to indicate that a small number of XRPCs adapt to freezing
by extracellular freezing. However, in S. sachalinensis,
although 97% to 100% of cells showed visible evidence of
intracellular freezing in the frozen state below
60°C, only 76% to
85% cells contained very large intracellular ice crystals after
rewarming. The reduction in the incidence of intracellularly frozen
cells after rewarming in this case might originate from the reduced chance of a fracture passing through sparsely distributed, very large
intracellular ice crystals. Similarly, the observation that, in XRPCs
of P. sieboldii, B. platyphylla, B. pubescens, and red osier dogwood, the frequency of very large
intracellular ice crystals after rewarming exceeded 85%, in terms of
the total number of cells, might reflect the possibility that almost
all cells underwent intracellular freezing.
Deep supercooling far below
40°C might occur as a result of the
concentration of solutes in XRPCs during slow freezing
(Rasmussen and MacKenzie, 1972
). A DTA study by
Gusta et al. (1983)
showed depression of the LTE in
XRPCs of scarlet oak (Quercus coccinea Muenchh.), riverbank
grape (Vitis riparia Michx.), and American elm (Ulmus
americana) due to dehydration of XRPCs during freezing. Clear
evidence for dehydration in XRPCs of most cold-hardy boreal hardwood
species during slow freezing is also provided by the occurrence of
cytorrhysis, as well as by the dehydration-induced structural changes
in the ER. However, it is important to stress that dehydration is
incomplete. We showed that the XRPCs persisted in supercooling at the
very slow cooling rate we used (10°C d
1) and
even after more prolonged exposure to freezing. Thus, we can conclude
that XRPCs in most cold-hardy boreal hardwood species, which were long
believed to respond to subfreezing temperatures by extracellular
freezing, actually respond by deep supercooling accompanied by
incomplete desiccation, between
40°C and
80°C. The failure to
detect an LTE in analyses of these boreal hardwood species might be due
to shortage of LTE to be detected by the small numbers of XRPCs
together with partial dehydration of these XRPCs during slow cooling.
One of the boreal hardwood species examined, B. pubescens,
was a clone of trees that were originally grown at a forest boundary in
Siberia where a minimum air temperature of
70°C had been recorded. Thus, the identification of the freezing behavior of XRPCs in this
species as deep supercooling accompanied by incomplete desiccation might reflect a critical adaptive mechanism of XRPCs in hardwood species that grow in the coldest environments. Our present and previous
studies provide evidence that the majority of XRPCs in all hardwood
species respond to freezing of apoplastic water, for the most part, by
deep supercooling. The adaptation to cold of XRPCs in boreal hardwood
species by deep supercooling suggests that, in all hardwood species,
limitations to the deep-supercooling ability of XRPCs might be a
limiting factor for adaptation of hardwood species to cold climates in nature.
Freezing survival at liquid nitrogen temperature has been reported in
twigs of boreal hardwood species belonging to genera Salix,
Populus, and Betula (Sakai, 1965
).
However, all these results were obtained from twigs that were prefrozen
and then immersed directly to cryogen. Such an experimental condition,
rapid cooling by direct immersion to cryogen after partial dehydration
by prefreezing, may produce vitrification of water in XRPCs and may
result in survival of twigs by avoiding occurrence of intracellular
freezing of XRPCs. The survival test of twigs in these species at slow cooling, which mimicked to natural condition, is now under examination in our laboratory.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Plant Materials
Fresh twigs of approximately 4 years of age were obtained from
Salix sachalinensis Fr. Schmit, Populus
sieboldii Miq., Betula platyphylla Sukat. var
japonica Hara, and red osier dogwood (Cornus sericea) that were growing on the campus of Hokkaido University (Sapporo) in winter (December to February). Similar twigs were also
obtained in winter from a specimen of Betula pubescens
Ehrh. that was a clone of trees that were originally growing at a
forest boundary in Siberia, and was growing on the field in the
University Forest in Hokkaido (University of Tokyo, Yamabe). Fresh
twigs of these trees were kept at 0°C for 1 d after sampling.
Small blocks (3 × 3 × 4 mm) were removed at 4°C from the
xylem, including second and third annual rings, and used for experiments.
Freezing and Rewarming of Samples
A small block of xylem was put in a specimen holder and
distilled water was added to surround the surfaces of the block located outside the holder to prevent drying during long-term cooling. The
xylem blocks in specimen holders were placed in a freezer kept at
5°C, allowed to equilibrate for 1 h, and frozen by seeding the
surrounding water with ice. Samples were cooled down by transferring them in a stepwise manner to refrigerators maintained at temperatures down to
80°C at intervals of 5°C. Samples were kept for 12 h at each temperature (approximate cooling rate: 10°C
d
1). In some cases, cooling was performed linearly from
10°C at a rate of 0.007°C min
1 in a programmable
freezer (ES-100P, Tajiri Co. Ltd., Sapporo, Japan). The linear cooling
resulted in the same freezing responses of XRPCs as those obtained by
step-wise freezing. Samples that had been cooled to a given temperature
were cryofixed by direct immersion in cooled Freon 22 at
150°C. For
rewarming, some samples that had been cooled to a given temperature
were transferred directly to a refrigerator kept at
20°C for 4 h and then cryofixed. Reference samples were cryofixed at a room
temperature. All cryofixed samples were stored in liquid nitrogen.
Cryo-SEM
Cryofixed samples were transferred to the cold stage and kept at
108°C, in a specimen preparation chamber of a cryo-SEM (840A-SEM, JEOL Co. Ltd., Tokyo). Samples were equilibrated and fractured with a
cold knife to expose tangential faces of the earlywood xylem. Fracture
faces were rotary-evaporated with platinum-carbon soon after fracturing
or after etching for 5 min (deep etching). After evaporation, samples
were transferred to the cold stage of an SEM column that was kept at
160°C. Secondary emission images were recorded at an accelerating
voltage of 5 kV.
Freeze Fracture Replica Electron Microscopy
Freeze fracture replicas were produced with a freeze-etching
apparatus (JFD-7000, JEOL Co. Ltd.) under fracture and etching conditions similar to those used for cryo-SEM. Fracture faces were
shadowed unidirectionally with evaporation by platinum-carbon and
followed by rotary evaporation with C. After removal of samples by
immersion in concentrated sulfuric acid, commercial bleach, and
acetone, replicas were observed with a transmission electron microscope
(1200 EX, JEOL Co. Ltd.) at an accelerating voltage of 100 kV.
Measurement of Ice Crystal Size
Both cryo-SEM and freeze-fracture replica photographs were
enlarged to more than 10,000×. The minimum diameter of individual ice
crystals was measured by a scale directly on the photographs.
The authors thank Dr. S. Kamoda (University Forest in Hokkaido,
University of Tokyo, Yamabe, Hokkaido) for the generous gift of
B. pubescens twigs.
Received July 23, 2002; returned for revision October 7, 2002; accepted November 3, 2002.
Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at
www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.011601.