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Plant Physiology 90:1088-1095 (1989)
© 1989 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Environmental and Stress Physiology

Plasma Membrane ATPase Activity following Reversible and Irreversible Freezing Injury 1

S. Iswari and Jiwan P. Palta

Department of Horticulture, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin 53706

Plasma membrane ATPase has been proposed as a site of functional alteration during early stages of freezing injury. To test this, plasma membrane was purified from Solanum leaflets by a single step partitioning of microsomes in a dextran-polyethylene glycol two phase system. Addition of lysolecithin in the ATPase assay produced up to 10-fold increase in ATPase activity. ATPase activity was specific for ATP with a Km around 0.4 millimolar. Presence of the ATPase enzyme was identified by immunoblotting with oat ATPase antibodies. Using the phase partitioning method, plasma membrane was isolated from Solanum commersonii leaflets which had four different degrees of freezing damage, namely, slight (reversible), partial (partially reversible), substantial and total (irreversible). With slight (reversible) damage the plasma membrane ATPase specific activity increased 1.5- to 2-fold and its Km was decreased by about 3-fold, whereas the specific activity of cytochrome c reductase and cytochrome c oxidase in the microsomes were not different from the control. However, with substantial (lethal, irreversible) damage, there was a loss of membrane protein, decrease in plasma membrane ATPase specific activity and decrease in Km, while cytochrome c oxidase and cytochrome c reductase were unaffected. These results support the hypothesis that plasma membrane ATPase is altered by slight freeze-thaw stress.


1 This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Agriculture competitive grant (agreement No. 85-CRCR-1-1673) and by the College of Agricultural and Life Sciences, and a grant from the graduate school, University of Wisconsin, Madison.







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Copyright © 1989 by the American Society of Plant Biologists