Effects of mild night chilling on respiration of expanding cotton leaves

Citation
C. Lawrence et As. Holaday, Effects of mild night chilling on respiration of expanding cotton leaves, PLANT SCI, 157(2), 2000, pp. 233-244
Citations number
41
Categorie Soggetti
Plant Sciences","Animal & Plant Sciences
Journal title
PLANT SCIENCE
ISSN journal
01689452 → ACNP
Volume
157
Issue
2
Year of publication
2000
Pages
233 - 244
Database
ISI
SICI code
0168-9452(20000822)157:2<233:EOMNCO>2.0.ZU;2-J
Abstract
Utilizing expanding leaves of cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L. cv. Coker 312), the hypothesis that suboptimal night temperatures above those for putative phase transitions of mitochondrial lipids caused greater substrate control of night respiration and increased the control that respiration exerted on ATP-dependent metabolism was tested. Night respiratory CO2 evolution rates for 5-7-day-old leaves growing at 30/19 degrees (day/night) nearly equaled those of leaves exposed to 28 degrees C nights, while leaves exposed to 15 degrees C nights had rates that were 42% of those at 28 degrees C. No rest riction of respiration by carbohydrate supply was detected for leaves grown at either cool night temperature or when warm-grown plants were transferre d to cool night conditions. Pyruvate utilization was more sensitive to mild chilling than glycolysis. Growth at 30/19 or 30/15 degrees C resulted in h igher nocturnal ATP:ADP and energy charge for expanding leaves than growth at 30/28 degrees C, suggesting a lessening of respiratory control of ATP-de pendent metabolism with long-term night chilling. However, cool night expos ure resulted in reductions in total phosphorylated adenylates, and the low ATP content, most notably occurring during 15 degrees C nights, may have re stricted some metabolic activity. The cause of these low ATP levels and the ir possible effects on cotton metabolism during chilling remain to be eluci dated. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.