نتایج جستجو برای: freezing tolerance

تعداد نتایج: 144104  

Journal: :Plant physiology 2010
Taniya Dhillon Stephen P Pearce Eric J Stockinger Assaf Distelfeld Chengxia Li Andrea K Knox Ildikó Vashegyi Attila Vágújfalvi Gabor Galiba Jorge Dubcovsky

In winter wheat (Triticum spp.) and barley (Hordeum vulgare) varieties, long exposures to nonfreezing cold temperatures accelerate flowering time (vernalization) and improve freezing tolerance (cold acclimation). However, when plants initiate their reproductive development, freezing tolerance decreases, suggesting a connection between the two processes. To better understand this connection, we ...

Journal: :Journal of experimental botany 2001
R Ohno S Takumi C Nakamura

Time-courses of the development of freezing tolerance and the expression of a cold-responsive gene wlt10 were monitored during cold acclimation in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.). Bioassay showed that cold acclimation conferred much higher freezing tolerance on a winter cultivar than a spring cultivar. Northern blot analysis showed that the expression of wlt10 encoding a novel wheat member of a ce...

حمید رحیمیان, , عبدالرضا باقری, , محمد کافی, , احمد نظامی, , مهدی نصیری محل, ,

The present experiment was aimed to evaluate the freezing tolerance of two cold tolerant (MCC426 and MCC252) and a cold susceptible (MCC505) chickpea genotypes. The study was carried out in a split-plot factorial design with three replications. Factorial arrangement of genotype and acclimation (acclimation and non acclimation) were imposed as main plot and temperatures (0, -4, -8, -12, 16, -20º...

Journal: :تولید گیاهان زراعی 0

sever coldness causes damage to the wheat and affect its growth and yield, thereby this experiment was conducted in controlled conditions to investigate freezing tolerance of 29 wheat genotypes. acclimation treatments (in two levels: acclimation and non-acclimation) were considered in the main plot and combination of temperature (0, -4, -8, -12, -16 ◦c) and genotypes as sub plot. survival perce...

Journal: :The Journal of experimental biology 2003
Jason T Irwin Richard E Lee

The physiological responses supporting freeze tolerance in anurans are well known, but the evolution of this trait remains little studied. This is the first common-garden study of geographic variation in cryoprotective responses to freezing and the degree of freeze tolerance. We studied the gray treefrogs (Hyla versicolor and H. chrysoscelis) from sympatric sites in Minnesota, Indiana and Misso...

Journal: :The Plant journal : for cell and molecular biology 2007
Zhanguo Xin Ajin Mandaokar Junping Chen Robert L Last John Browse

The eskimo1 (esk1) mutation of Arabidopsis resulted in a 5.5 degrees C improvement in freezing tolerance in the absence of cold acclimation. Here we show that the increase in freezing tolerance is not associated with any increase in the ability to survive drought or salt stresses, which are similar to freezing in their induction of cellular dehydration. Genome-wide comparisons of gene expressio...

2016
Elisa Schulz Takayuki Tohge Ellen Zuther Alisdair R. Fernie Dirk K. Hincha

In plants from temperate climates such as Arabidopsis thaliana low, non-freezing temperatures lead to increased freezing tolerance in a process termed cold acclimation. This process is accompanied by massive changes in gene expression and in the content of primary metabolites and lipids. In addition, most flavonols and anthocyanins accumulate upon cold exposure, along with most transcripts enco...

2015
Lorraine M. McGill Adam J. Shannon Davide Pisani Marie-Anne Félix Hans Ramløv Ilona Dix David A. Wharton Ann M. Burnell

Anhydrobiotic animals can survive the loss of both free and bound water from their cells. While in this state they are also resistant to freezing. This physiology adapts anhydrobiotes to harsh environments and it aids their dispersal. Panagrolaimus davidi, a bacterial feeding anhydrobiotic nematode isolated from Ross Island Antarctica, can survive intracellular ice formation when fully hydrated...

2014
Jon P. Costanzo M. Clara F. do Amaral Andrew J. Rosendale Richard E. Lee

We compared physiological characteristics and responses to experimental freezing and thawing in winter and spring samples of the wood frog, Rana sylvatica, indigenous to Interior Alaska, USA. Whereas winter frogs can survive freezing at temperatures at least as low as −16C, the lower limit of tolerance for spring frogs was between −2.5C and −5C. Spring frogs had comparatively low levels of the ...

2008

ABA, a phytohormone, regulates many agronomically important aspects of plant growth and development, including seed maturation, dormancy and stress tolerance (Finkelstein et al. 2002). During vegetative growth, endogenous ABA levels increase upon conditions of water stress, and ABA acts as an essential mediator in triggering the plant response to these adverse environmental stresses (Finkelstei...

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