## Abstract Haemagglutinating activity was determined in cell walls and total cell organelles of crown cells of Winter wheat (__Triticum aestivum__ L.) plants. The effect of fusicoccin (FC) was investigated using fractions obtained from plants hardened for 7 days at 2°C and from untreated plants. F
CYTOSKELETON-INDUCED ALTERATIONS OF THE LECTIN ACTIVITY IN WINTER WHEAT UNDER COLD HARDENING AND ABSCISIC ACID (ABA)
✍ Scribed by Olga Timofeeva; Ludmila Khokhlova; Nella Belyaeva; Yulia Chulkova; Liliana Garaeva
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 108 KB
- Volume
- 24
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1065-6995
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
The roots and leaves of 7‐day seedlings of three winter wheat cultivars differing in frost resistant were used to study changes in lectin activity under cytoskeleton modifiers (DMSO—7%; colchicine—1mm; oryzalin—15μm; cytochalasin B—15μm) of non‐hardened (23°C) and hardened (2–3°C, 3–7 day) plants. Plants were grown with ABA (30μm) or without ABA. Pretreatment with colchicine, oryzalin [inhibitors of microtubules (MT) polymerization], cytochalasin B [inhibitor of microfilament (MF) polymerization] increased the activity of cell wall lectins, although pretreatment with DMSO (stabilizer of microtubules) decreased the activity. Both hardening and ABA decreased the effect of the cytoskeletal modifiers. These results could be explained by the appearance of tolerant MTs with less affinity. It is probable that increase in the activity of cell wall lectins may be the compensatory mechanism which stabilizes the cytoskeleton structure in conditions tending to disrupt it. The genotype with low resistance had higher sensitivity of lectin activity to cytoskeleton modifiers than the frost resistant genotype. The results suggest that leaves have more stable MTs and MFs and stronger MT—MF binding than roots.
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