4.6 Article

Desiccation tolerance in the moss Polytrichum formosum: Physiological and fine-structural changes during desiccation and recovery

Journal

ANNALS OF BOTANY
Volume 99, Issue 1, Pages 75-93

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/aob/mcl246

Keywords

bryophyta; chlorophyll fluorescence; chloroplasts; CO2 exchange desiccation tolerance; electron microscopy; metabolic inhibitors; mosses; Polytrichum formosum

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Background and Aims This study explores basic physiological features and time relations of recovery of photosynthetic activity and CO2 uptake following rehydration of a desiccation-tolerant moss in relation to the full temporal sequence of cytological changes associated with recovery to the normal hydrated state. It seeks reconciliation of the apparently conflicting published physiological and cytological evidence on recovery from desiccation in bryophytes. Methods Observations were made of water-stress responses and recovery using infrared gas analysis and modulated chlorophyll fluorescence, and of structural and ultrustructural changes by light and transmission electron microscopy. Key Results Net CO2 uptake fell to zero at approx. 40 % RWC, paralleling the fluorescence parameter Phi PSII at 200 mu mol m(-2) s(-1) PPFD. On re-wetting the moss after 9-18 d desiccation, the initially negative net CO2 uptake became positive 10-30 min after re-wetting, restoring a net carbon balance after approx. 0(.)3-1 h. The parameter F-v/F-m reached approx. 80 % of its pre-desiccation value within approx. 10 min of re-wetting. In the presence of the protein-synthesis inhibitors chloramphenicol and cycloheximide, recovery of F-v/F-m (and CO2 exchange) proceeded normally in the dark, but declined rapidly in the light. Though initial recovery was rapid, both net CO2 uptake and F-v/F-m required approx. 24 h to recover completely to pre-desiccation values. The fixation protocols produced neither swelling of tissues nor plasmolysis. Thylakoids, grana and mitochondrial cristae remained intact throughout the drying-re-wetting cycle, but there were striking changes in the form of the organelles, especially the chloroplasts, which had prominent lobes and lamellar extensions in the normally hydrated state, but rounded off when desiccated, returning slowly to their normal state within approx. 24 h of re-wetting. Sub-cellular events during desiccation and re-wetting were generally similar to those seen in published data from the pteridophyte Selaginella lepidophylla. Conclusions Initial recovery of respiration and photosynthesis (as of protein synthesis) is very rapid, and independent of protein synthesis, suggesting physical reactivation of systems conserved intact through desiccation and rehydration, but full recovery takes approx. 24 It. This is consistent with the cytological evidence, which shows the thylakoids and cristae remaining intact through the whole course of dehydration and rehydration. Substantial and co-ordinated changes in other cell components, which must affect spatial relationships of organelles and metabolic systems, return to normal on a time span similar to full recovery of photosynthesis. Comparison of the present data with recently published results suggests a significant role for the cytoskeleton in desiccation responses.

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