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Plant Physiology 62:699-705 (1978) © 1978 American Society of Plant Biologists Freeze-Thaw Injury to Isolated Spinach Protoplasts and Its Simulation at Above Freezing Temperatures 1Department of Agronomy, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853
Possibilities to account for the mechanism of freeze-thaw injury to isolated protoplasts of Spinacia oleracea L. cv. Winter Bloomsdale were investigated. A freeze-thaw cycle to 3.9 C resulted in 80% lysis of the protoplasts. At 3.9 C, protoplasts are exposed to the equivalent of a 2.1 osmolal solution. Isolated protoplasts behave as ideal osmometers in the range of concentrations tested (0.35 to 2.75 osmolal), arguing against a minimum critical volume as a mechanism of injury. Average protoplast volume after a freeze-thaw cycle was not greatly different than the volume before freezing, arguing against an irreversible influx of solutes while frozen. A wide variety of sugars and sugar alcohols, none of which was freely permeant, were capable of protecting against injury which occurred when protoplasts were frozen in salt solutions. The extent of injury was also dependent upon the type of monovalent ions present, with Li = Na > K = Rb = Cs and Cl
2 Present address: Department of Horticulture and Forestry, Cook College-Rutgers University, New Brunswick, N.J. 08903. 1 Department of Agronomy Series Paper 1214.
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