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First published online March 7, 2002; 10.1104/pp.010616

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Plant Physiol, April 2002, Vol. 128, pp. 1323-1331

Rate of Dehydration and Cumulative Desiccation Stress Interacted to Modulate Desiccation Tolerance of Recalcitrant Cocoa and Ginkgo Embryonic Tissues1

Yongheng Liang and Wendell Q. Sun2*

Department of Biological Sciences, National University of Singapore, Kent Ridge Crescent, Singapore 119260

Rate of dehydration greatly affects desiccation tolerance of recalcitrant seeds. This effect is presumably related to two different stress vectors: direct mechanical or physical stress because of the loss of water and physicochemical damage of tissues as a result of metabolic alterations during drying. The present study proposed a new theoretic approach to represent these two types of stresses and investigated how seed tissues responded differently to two stress vectors, using the models of isolated cocoa (Theobroma cacao) and ginkgo (Ginkgo biloba) embryonic tissues dehydrated under various drying conditions. This approach used the differential change in axis water potential (Delta Psi /Delta t) to quantify rate of dehydration and the intensity of direct physical stress experienced by embryonic tissues during desiccation. Physicochemical effect of drying was expressed by cumulative desiccation stress [int <UP><SUB>o</SUB><SUP>t</SUP></UP>f(psi ,t)], a function of both the rate and time of dehydration. Rapid dehydration increased the sensitivity of embryonic tissues to desiccation as indicated by high critical water contents, below which desiccation damage occurred. Cumulative desiccation stress increased sharply under slow drying conditions, which was also detrimental to embryonic tissues. This quantitative analysis of the stress-time-response relationship helps to understand the physiological basis for the existence of an optimal dehydration rate, with which maximum desiccation tolerance could be achieved. The established numerical analysis model will prove valuable for the design of experiments that aim to elucidate biochemical and physiological mechanisms of desiccation tolerance.


1 This work was supported by the National University of Singapore (research grant nos. R-154-000-032-112 and R-154-000-074-112 to W.Q.S.).

2 Present address: LifeCell Corporation, One Millennium Way, Branchburg, NJ 08876.

* Corresponding author; e-mail wsun{at}lifecell.com; fax 908-947-1085.

© 2002 American Society of Plant Physiologists



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P. Berjak and N. W. Pammenter
From Avicennia to Zizania: Seed Recalcitrance in Perspective
Ann. Bot., January 1, 2008; 101(2): 213 - 228.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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