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Query: UMLS:C0085593 (chills)
4,268 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Chilling effects on respiration during the recovery period were studied in two maize (Zea mays L.) cultivars differing in their tolerance to chilling: Penjalinan, a chilling-sensitive cultivar, and Z7, a chilling-tolerant cultivar. Both cultivars were exposed to 5 degrees C for 5 d, after which measurements were taken at 25 degrees C. Chlorophyll fluorescence analysis in dark-adapted leaves showed less damage in cv Z7 than in cv Penjalinan during recovery from the chilling treatment. Studies of the electron partitioning between the cytochrome and the alternative respiratory pathways during chilling recovery using the oxygen isotope fractionation technique showed that, although total leaf respiration was not affected by the chilling treatment in either of the two cultivars, electron partitioning to the alternative pathway was significantly increased in the more stressed chilling-sensitive cv Penjalinan, suggesting that increased activity of the alternative pathway is not related to the plant tolerance to chilling. These results suggest a possible role of the alternative pathway in plants under stress rather than specifically contributing to plant resistance to chilling.
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PMID:The electron partitioning between the cytochrome and alternative respiratory pathways during chilling recovery in two cultivars of maize differing in chilling sensitivity. 1063 Dec 63

After 48 hours at 2 degrees C, hypocotyls from chill-sensitive Cucumis sativus seedlings showed a burst of O(2) uptake. The alternative pathway became engaged to close to 45% full capacity during this postchilling respiratory burst. However, it only accounted for up to 50% of this increased respiratory O(2) uptake. By 24 hours after chilling, when the seedlings were fully recovered from visible symptoms of chilling injury, the flux through the alternative pathway was back to the level (about 10%) found before chilling. Blocking chilling-induced ethylene production with aminoethoxyvinylglycine had no effect on this increased utilization of the alternative pathway.The direct effects of temperature on respiration rates and the effects of inhibitors suggested that there was a rapid increase in alternative pathway activity and decrease in the cytochrome pathway activity. The possibility that the alternative pathway represents a compensatory mechanism for the more labile cytochrome pathway is discussed.
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PMID:Temperature Effects on the Activity of the Alternative Respiratory Pathway in Chill-Sensitive Cucumis sativus. 1666 29

Chilling injury is sustained by dry pollen of Typha latifolia L. upon hydration in germination medium at 0 degrees C. This injury is evidenced as poor germination, low vigor, and depressed respiration. Isolated mitochondria showed multiple sites of impaired electron transport. Besides losses of cytochrome (Cyt) c and NAD(+), the activities of membrane-bound enzyme complexes such as Cyt oxidase, NADH-duroquinone oxidoreductase, succinate-duroquinone oxidoreductase, and malate-duroquinone oxidoreductase were severely affected.Similarly, as in isolated mitochondria, in situ tests of mitochondrial activity showed that Cyt c was partially lost from its site of action. Re-addition of the lost Cyt c to the grains restored the N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl p-phenylenediamine dihydrochloride plus ascorbate-mediated electron transport from Cyt c to O(2), but did not significantly accelerate the overall O(2) uptake. Electron flow to duroquinone in the injured grains was low, indicating that lesions at the substrate side of ubiquinone determine the rate of O(2) consumption. Leakage of NAD(+), and also of adenylate phosphates and Krebs cycle substrates out of the injured grains, was considerable.Increasing the initial moisture content of the grains strongly enhanced their resistance to cold hydration. Below 17% moisture content (fresh weight basis), the decrease in vigor closely matched the loss of NAD(+) and adenosine phosphates. Vitality was irreversibly lost by cold hydration below 10 to 12% initial moisture content.Injury to dry pollen was prevented by imbibition at 27 degrees C. Decrease of vigor and increased leakage, however, started below 20 degrees C, and complete loss of vitality occurred below 10 degrees C.These results are interpreted as evidence that loss of membrane integrity is the primary cause of imbibitional chilling injury.
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PMID:Imbibitional chilling injury in pollen: involvement of the respiratory chain. 1666 16

The effects of chilling on respiration (SHAM-resistant, cytochrome pathway and KCN-resistant, alternative pathway), temperature sensitivity, relative electrolyte conductivity, and degrees of oxidative stress (H(2)O(2) and malonaldehyde (MDA) contents) were separately examined in leaves and roots of cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.). After chilling at 8 degrees C for 4 days, both total respiration and KCN-resistant respiration in roots increased at different measurement temperatures. In contrast, SHAM-resistant respiration remained unchanged. In comparison, chilling significantly decreased the total respiration in leaves and this decrease was mostly due to a decrease in SHAM-resistant respiration. Chilling apparently decreased the sensitivity of KCN-resistant respiration to changes of temperature. The reduction levels of ubiquinone pool (UQr/UQt) increased both in chilled leaves and roots whilst pyruvate content increased only in chilled roots, but not in chilled leaves. Furthermore increases of H(2)O(2) and MDA contents were much greater in leaves than in roots. The same trend was also observed for ion leakage from tissues. Taken together, the results suggested that the higher chilling tolerance of roots was associated with their high total respiration and KCN-resistant respiration.
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PMID:Different effects of chilling on respiration in leaves and roots of cucumber (Cucumis sativus). 1709 83