Literature DB >> 12806779

Different responses of tobacco antioxidant enzymes to light and chilling stress.

Tsanko Gechev1, Hilde Willekens, Mark Van Montagu, Dirk Inzé, Wim Van Camp, Valentina Toneva, Ivan Minkov.   

Abstract

The effect of elevated light treatment (25 degrees C, PPFD 360 mumol m-2 sec-1) or chilling temperatures combined with elevated light (5 degrees C, PPFD 360 mumol m-2 sec-1) on the activity of six antioxidant enzymes, guaiacol peroxidases, and glutathione peroxidase (GPx, EC 1.11.1.9) protein accumulation were studied in tobacco Nicotiana tabacum cv. Petit Havana SR1. Both treatments caused no photooxidative damage, but chilling caused a transient wilting. The light treatment increased the activities of ascorbate peroxidase (APx, EC 1.11.1.11) and guaiacol peroxidases while catalase (EC 1.11.1.6), superoxide dismutase (SOD, EC 1.15.1.1), monodehydroascorbate reductase (MDHAR, EC 1.6.5.4), dehydroascorbate reductase (DHAR, EC 1.8.5.1), and glutathione reductase (EC 1.6.4.2) were unchanged. In contrast, chilling treatment did not increase any of the antioxidant enzyme activities, but decreased catalase and to a lesser extent DHAR activities. Glutathione peroxidase protein levels increased sporadically under light treatment and constantly under chilling. Both chilling and light stress caused induction of glutathione synthesis and accumulation of oxidised glutathione, although the predominant part of the glutathione pool remained in the reduced form. Antioxidant enzymes from the chilling treated plants were measured at both 25 degrees C and 5 degrees C. Measurements at 5 degrees C revealed a 3-fold reduction in catalase activity, compared with that measured at 25 degrees C, indicating that the overall reduction in catalase after four days of chilling was approximately 10-fold. The overall reduction in activity for the other antioxidant enzymes after four days of chilling was 2-fold for GR and APx, 1.5-fold for MDHAR, 3.5-fold for DHAR. The activity of SOD was the same at 25 and 5 degrees C. These results indicate that catalase and DHAR are most strongly affected by the chilling treatment and may be the rate-limiting factor of the antioxidant system at low temperatures.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12806779     DOI: 10.1078/0176-1617-00753

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Plant Physiol        ISSN: 0176-1617            Impact factor:   3.549


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