Abstract

Effects of polyethylene glycol (PEG)-induced water stress on the activities of total leaf superoxide dismutase (SOD) and chloroplast SOD (including thylakoid-bound SOD and stroma SOD) are described in white clover (Trifolium repens L.) grown in solution culture from rooted cuttings. Both leaf SOD and chloroplast SOD activities were markedly enhanced with increasing concentration of PEG stress, generating osmotic potentials around the roots 0, −0.5, −1.0, −1.5 MPa. The effects increased with time up to 72 h. Chloroplast Fe-containing SOD represented about 30% of the total leaf SOD activity in the control plants and a significant increase in chloroplast SOD activity was found during the stress period. This accounted for about 35.5–71.1% of the total leaf SOD activity. The proportion of chloroplast SOD in total leaf SOD not only increased with the decreasing of osmotic potential, but also increased with incubation time. Furthermore, the increase in thylakoid-bound SOD activity was much higher than that of stroma SOD in chloroplast of plants under water stress. The enhanced chloroplastic SOD activity, especially thylakoid-bound SOD activity, demonstrated in Trifolium repens suggests that Fe-SOD located in chloroplasts play a more important role than cytosolic Cu/Zn-containing SODs in scavenging O2−.

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