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  • Sucrose synthesis and salt stress  (1)
  • osmometric behavior  (1)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-1424
    Keywords: Chlorella emersonii ; unicellular alga ; osmotic responses ; cell volume ; membrane permeability ; hyperosmotic shock ; osmometric behavior
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Summary In osmotic experiments involving cells of the euryhaline unicellular green algaChlorella emersonii exposed to hyperosmotic stress by immersion in a range of low molecular weight organic and inorganic solutes, a temporary breakdown in the selective permeability of the plasma membrane was observed during the initial phase of transfer to media of high osmotic strength (up to 2000 mosmol kg−1). Thus, although the cells appeared to obey the Boyle-van't Hoff relationship in all cases, showing approximately linear changes in volume (at high salinity) as a function of the reciprocal of the external osmotic pressure, the extent of change was least for the triitols, propylene glycol and glycerol, intermediate for glucose, sorbitol, NaCl and KCl, with greatest changes in media containing the disaccharides sucrose and maltose. In NaCl-treated cells, uptake of external solute and loss of internal ions was observed in response to hyperosmotic treatment while sucrose-treated cells showed no significant uptake of external solute, although loss of intracellular K+ was observed. These observations suggest that the widely used technique of estimating cellular turgor, and osmotic/nonosmotic volume by means of the changes in volume that occur upon transfer to media containing increasing amounts of either a low molecular weight organic solute or an inorganic salt may be subject to error. The assumption that all algal cells behave as “ideal osmometers,” with outer membranes that are permeable to water but not to solutes, during the course of such experiments is therefore incorrect, and the data need to be adjusted to take account of hyperosmotically induced external solute penetration and/or loss of intracellular osmotica before meaningful estimates of cell turgor and osmotic volume can be obtained.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Cyanobacteria ; Osmoregulation ; Photosynthesis and salt stress ; Salt stress ; Sucrose synthesis and salt stress ; Synechococcus
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Synechococcus PCC 6301 synthesized sucrose as a compatible solute following hyperosmotic shock induced by NaCl. Initial rates of photosynthetic 14C incorporation were reduced following salt shock. Photosynthetic rates were comparable in cells enriched for glycogen (by growth in NO 3 - -deficient medium) and cells grown in NO 3 - -sufficient medium in the absence of osmotic shock. Incorporation of 14C was predominantly into the NaOH fraction and the residual acidic fraction in cells grown in NO 3 - -sufficient medium, whereas incorporation was predominantly into the residual acidic fraction in cells grown in NO 3 - -deficient medium. Following salt stress, 14C incorporation was initially into the ethanol-soluble fraction and the majority of tracer was recovered in sucrose. Carbon-14 was detected in sucrose in cells which had been enriched for [14C]glycogen prior to salt stress, inferring that glycogen can act as a carbon source for sucrose synthesis following salt stress. Changes in the specific activity of sucrose are consistent with an initial synthesis of sucrose from glycogen followed by synthesis of sucrose using newly fixed carbon, in response to salt stress.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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