Abstract

The effects of heat shock on the chilling tolerance of mung bean [Vigna radiata (L.) Wilczek] seedling tissue were studied by using two measurements of chilling injury: increased 1‐aminocyclopropane‐1‐carboxylic acid (ACC) oxidase activity and solute leakage. ACC oxidase activity (measured as ACC‐induced ethylene production) of freshly excised mung bean hypocotyl segments was highly dependent on the temperature at which the seedlings were grown. However, this highly temperature‐dependent level of ACC oxidase activity was probably a wound response since it was almost entirely eliminated by incubating the excised segments at 20°C for 3 h. In contrast, heating of excised segments to 40°C for up to 4 h resulted in a time‐dependent increase in ACC oxidase activity which was sensitive to cycloheximide, indicating rapid protein synthesis during the heat treatment. ACC oxidase activity fell sharply during subsequent chilling at 2. 5°C. After 3 days of chilling, all treated segments, regardless of their initial ACC oxidase activity, showed a decline to the same low activity level and ACC oxidase activity continued to fall slowly for up to 9 days at 2. 5°C. Hypocotyl segments excised from seedlings held at 15°C showed no change in solute leakage, but leakage increased rapidly when seedlings were either chilled at 2. 5°C or heated to 32°C (just below the heat shock temperature). Chill‐induced leakage from non‐heat‐shocked segments increased steadily with chilling duration and was unaffected by cycloheximide concentration up to day 6. Within the elevated rate of leakage on day 9, however, leakage was lower from segments exposed to 10 and 50 μM cycloheximide. Solute leakage was markedly reduced for up to 9 days when segments were heat shocked at 40°C for 3 or 4 h with or without 10 M cycloheximide, but the presence of 50 μM cycloheximide caused an initial doubling of solute leakage and a 3‐fold increase after 3 days of chilling. Cycloheximide prevented formation of heat shock protection against chilling from the start at 50 μM and after 9 days at 10 μM. These results indicate that the protection afforded by heat shock against chilling damage is quantitative and probably involves protein synthesis.

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