Flooding tolerance and cell wall alterations in maize mesocotyl during hypoxia

Authors

  • Patrícia Goulart Vitorino
  • José Donizeti Alves
  • Paulo César Magalhães
  • Marcelo Murad Magalhães
  • Luíz Carlos Oliveira Lima
  • Luiz Edson Mota de Oliveira

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S1678-3921.pab2001.v36.6226

Keywords:

pectic substances, hemicellulose

Abstract

This research aimed to characterize the tolerance to flooding and alterations in pectic and hemicellulose fractions from mesocotyl of maize tolerant to flooding when submitted to hypoxia. In order to characterize tolerance seeds from maize cultivars Saracura BRS-4154 and BR 107 tolerant and sensitive to low oxygen levels, respectively, were set to germinate. Plantlet survival was evaluated during five days after having been submitted to hypoxia. After fractionation with ammonium oxalate 0.5% (w/v) and KOH 2M and 4M, Saracura BRS-4154 cell wall was obtained from mesocotyl segments with different damage intensities caused by oxygen deficiency exposure. The cell wall fractions were analyzed by gel filtration and gas chromatography, and also by Infrared Spectrum with Fourrier Transformation (FTIR). The hypoxia period lasting three days or longer caused cell lysis and in advanced stages plant death. The gelic profile from pectic, hemicellulose 2M and 4M fractions from samples with translucid and constriction zone showed the appearance of low molecular weight compounds, similar to glucose. The main neutral sugars in pectic and hemicellulose fractions were arabinose, xilose and mannose. The FTIR spectrum showed a gradual decrease in pectic substances from mesocotyl with normal to translucid and constriction appearance respectively.

Published

2001-08-01

How to Cite

Vitorino, P. G., Alves, J. D., Magalhães, P. C., Magalhães, M. M., Lima, L. C. O., & Oliveira, L. E. M. de. (2001). Flooding tolerance and cell wall alterations in maize mesocotyl during hypoxia. Pesquisa Agropecuaria Brasileira, 36(8), 1027–1035. https://doi.org/10.1590/S1678-3921.pab2001.v36.6226

Issue

Section

PLANT PHYSIOLOGY