Literature DB >> 30551303

Low-temperature immobilization of water in Antarctic Turgidosculum complicatulum and in Prasiola crispa. Part I. Turgidosculum complicatulum.

M Bacior1, H Harańczyk2, P Nowak3, P Kijak2, M Marzec2, J Fitas4, M A Olech5.   

Abstract

The studies of low-temperature immobilization of bound water in Antarctic lichenized fungus Turgidosculum complicatulum were performed using 1H NMR and DSC over a wide range of thallus hydration. 1H NMR free induction decays were decomposed into a solid component well described by the Gaussian function and two exponentially decaying components coming from a tightly bound water and from a loosely bound water fraction. 1H NMR spectra revealed one averaged mobile proton signal component. 1H NMR measurements recorded in time and in frequency domain suggest the non-cooperative bound water immobilization in T. complicatulum thallus. The threshold of the hydration level estimated by 1H NMR analysis at which the cooperative bound water freezing was detected was Δm/m0 ≈ 0.39, whereas for DSC analysis was equal to Δm/m0 = 0.375. Main ice melting estimated from DSC measurements for zero hydration level of the sample starts at tm = -(19.29 ± 1.19)°C. However, DSC melting peak shows a composed form being a superposition of the main narrow peak (presumably melting of mycobiont areas) and a broad low-temperature shoulder (presumably melting of isolated photobiont cells). DSC traces recorded after two-hour incubation of T. complicatulum thallus at -20 °C suggest much lower threshold level of hydration at which the ice formation occurs (Δm/m0 = 0.0842). Presumably it is a result of diffusion induced migration of separated water molecules to ice microcrystallites already present in thallus, but still beyond the calorimeter resolution.
Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Keywords:  DSC; Freezing resistance; Lichens; NMR; Phase growth

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Year:  2018        PMID: 30551303     DOI: 10.1016/j.colsurfb.2018.10.059

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Colloids Surf B Biointerfaces        ISSN: 0927-7765            Impact factor:   5.268


  1 in total

1.  Symbiosis at its limits: ecophysiological consequences of lichenization in the genus Prasiola in Antarctica.

Authors:  Beatriz Fernández-Marín; Marina López-Pozo; Alicia V Perera-Castro; Miren Irati Arzac; Ana Sáenz-Ceniceros; Claudia Colesie; Asunción De Los Ríos; Leo G Sancho; Ana Pintado; José M Laza; Sergio Pérez-Ortega; José I García-Plazaola
Journal:  Ann Bot       Date:  2020-01-06       Impact factor: 4.357

  1 in total

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