Abstract

Ice nucleation activity (INA) of plant intrinsic origins is considered to play important roles in plant cold hardiness mechanisms. Yet, only a few studies have addressed the spatial and temporal localization of plant INA, how it is regulated and what its functional roles are. In our previous study (Kishimoto et al., 2014), we revised a test tube method and developed a highly reproducible assay for measuring INA of plant specimens and demonstrated that high INA occurred in the cell wall fraction of wintering bark tissues of blueberry stems and corresponded well to the freezing behavior (extracellular freezing) of the stem bark. Here, we followed precisely seasonal changes in the stem INA of two blueberry cultivars and alterations in the stem INA caused by artificial incubation at various low temperatures. INA of newly developed shoots was low but increased rapidly by July when the stem became seemingly matured, then gradually increased with the maximum in October or early November just before the first autumnal frost. Following the subsequent recurrent frosts, the stem INA gradually decreased. This tendency was consistent between the two cultivars differing in the level of cold hardiness. INA in the stems of September until February was increased by incubation at 0-7°C whilst decreased by freezing to lower temperatures. The in vitro results corroborate the seasonal changes in the stem INA in the field but the mechanisms remain to be investigated. The highest level of INA (expressed as the median ice nucleation temperature) observed with current year stems (7.5 mm-long) of Woodard in October of 2010-2013 was -0.9 ∼ -1.0°C when determined with 2mL assay system (-1.1 ∼ -1.3°C with 0.5mL system). This may likely be one of the highest INA of biological origins ever reported.

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