Plant Physiol, October 2002, Vol. 130, pp. 1032-1042
Early Salt Stress Effects on the Changes in Chemical Composition
in Leaves of Ice Plant and Arabidopsis. A Fourier Transform
Infrared Spectroscopy Study1
Jyisy
Yang and
Hungchen E.
Yen*
Departments of Chemistry (J.Y.) and Botany (H.E.Y.), National
Chung-Hsing University, Taichung, Taiwan 40227
A technique based on Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR)
spectrometry was developed to detect the corresponding changes in chemical composition associated with the rapid changes in sodium and
water content in 200 mM NaCl-stressed halophyte ice plants (Mesembryanthemum crystallinum). The changes in
glycophyte Arabidopsis stressed with 50 mM NaCl were also
examined for comparison. The obtained IR spectra were further processed
by deconvolution and curve fitting to examine the chemical nature of
the responding sources in the leaves. Using three stages of ice plant
leaves, absorption bands corresponding to carbohydrates, cell wall
pectin, and proteins were identified, with distinct IR spectra
representing each developmental stage. Within 48 h of mild salt
stress, the absorption band intensities in the fingerprint region
increased continuously in both plants, suggesting that the carbon
assimilation was not affected at the early stage of stress. The
intensities of ester and amide I absorption bands decreased slightly in
Arabidopsis but increased in ice plant, suggesting that the cell
expansion and protein synthesis ceased in Arabidopsis but continued in
ice plant. In both plants, the shift in amide I absorption band was observed hourly after salt stress, indicating a rapid conformational change of cellular proteins. Analyses of the ratio between major and
minor amide I absorption band revealed that ice plant was able to
maintain a higher-ordered form of proteins under stress. Furthermore,
the changes in protein conformation showed a positive correlation to
the leaf sodium contents in ice plant, but not in Arabidopsis.
1
This work was supported by National Science
Council of Taiwan (grant no. NSC 89-2311-B005-069 to
H.E.Y.).
*
Corresponding author; e-mail heyen{at}dragon.nchu.edu.tw; fax
886-4-22874740.
© 2002 American Society of Plant Physiologists