Metabolic Response of Maize Roots to Hyperosmotic Shock : An in VivoP Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Study.

(31)P nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy was used to study the response of maize (Zea mays L.) root tips to hyperosmotic shock. The aim was to identify changes in metabolism that might be relevant to the perception of low soil water potential and the subsequent adaptation of the tissue to these...

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Main Authors: Spickett, C, Smirnoff, N, Ratcliffe, R
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 1992
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author Spickett, C
Smirnoff, N
Ratcliffe, R
author_facet Spickett, C
Smirnoff, N
Ratcliffe, R
author_sort Spickett, C
collection OXFORD
description (31)P nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy was used to study the response of maize (Zea mays L.) root tips to hyperosmotic shock. The aim was to identify changes in metabolism that might be relevant to the perception of low soil water potential and the subsequent adaptation of the tissue to these conditions. Osmotic shock was found to result in two different types of response: changes in metabolite levels and changes in intracellular pH. The most notable metabolic changes, which were produced by all the osmotica tested, were increases in phosphocholine and vacuolar phosphate, with a transient increase in cytoplasmic phosphate. It was observed that treatment with ionic and nonionic osmotica produced different effects on the concentrations of bioenergetically important metabolites. It is postulated that these changes are the result of hydrolysis of phosphatidylcholine and other membrane phospholipids, due to differential activation of specific membrane-associated phospholipases by changes in the surface tension of the plasmalemma. These events may be important in the detection of osmotic shock and subsequent acclimatization. A cytoplasmic alkalinization was also observed during hyperosmotic treatment, and this response, which is consistent with the activation of the plasmalemma H(+)-ATPase, together with the other metabolic changes, may suggest the existence of a complex and integrated mechanism of osmoregulation.
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spelling oxford-uuid:6a710cd7-e9be-4c5f-ac27-1bf6473daa742022-03-26T18:57:28ZMetabolic Response of Maize Roots to Hyperosmotic Shock : An in VivoP Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Study.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:6a710cd7-e9be-4c5f-ac27-1bf6473daa74EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford1992Spickett, CSmirnoff, NRatcliffe, R(31)P nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy was used to study the response of maize (Zea mays L.) root tips to hyperosmotic shock. The aim was to identify changes in metabolism that might be relevant to the perception of low soil water potential and the subsequent adaptation of the tissue to these conditions. Osmotic shock was found to result in two different types of response: changes in metabolite levels and changes in intracellular pH. The most notable metabolic changes, which were produced by all the osmotica tested, were increases in phosphocholine and vacuolar phosphate, with a transient increase in cytoplasmic phosphate. It was observed that treatment with ionic and nonionic osmotica produced different effects on the concentrations of bioenergetically important metabolites. It is postulated that these changes are the result of hydrolysis of phosphatidylcholine and other membrane phospholipids, due to differential activation of specific membrane-associated phospholipases by changes in the surface tension of the plasmalemma. These events may be important in the detection of osmotic shock and subsequent acclimatization. A cytoplasmic alkalinization was also observed during hyperosmotic treatment, and this response, which is consistent with the activation of the plasmalemma H(+)-ATPase, together with the other metabolic changes, may suggest the existence of a complex and integrated mechanism of osmoregulation.
spellingShingle Spickett, C
Smirnoff, N
Ratcliffe, R
Metabolic Response of Maize Roots to Hyperosmotic Shock : An in VivoP Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Study.
title Metabolic Response of Maize Roots to Hyperosmotic Shock : An in VivoP Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Study.
title_full Metabolic Response of Maize Roots to Hyperosmotic Shock : An in VivoP Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Study.
title_fullStr Metabolic Response of Maize Roots to Hyperosmotic Shock : An in VivoP Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Study.
title_full_unstemmed Metabolic Response of Maize Roots to Hyperosmotic Shock : An in VivoP Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Study.
title_short Metabolic Response of Maize Roots to Hyperosmotic Shock : An in VivoP Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Study.
title_sort metabolic response of maize roots to hyperosmotic shock an in vivop nuclear magnetic resonance study
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AT ratcliffer metabolicresponseofmaizerootstohyperosmoticshockaninvivopnuclearmagneticresonancestudy