Abstract

Seasonal alterations in the ultrastructure of the plasma membrane produced by slow freezing were examined in cortical parenchyma cells of mulberry twigs (Morus bombyciz Koidz. cv. Goroji) grown in northern Japan. In freezing-sensitive summer, freezing produced distinct aparticulate domains with accompanying inverted hexagonalII (HII) phase transitions in the plasma membrane. In autumn and spring, during cold acclimation and deacclimation, freezing produced aparticulate domains in the plasma membrane without accompanying Hii phase transitions. In winter, when the twigs were freezing-tolerant, freezing did not produce ultrastructural alterations in the plasma membrane. A significant relationship was recognized between the percentages of cells with aparticulate domains in the plasma membrane, regardless of the presence or absence of HII phase transitions, and the occurrence of freezing injury throughout all seasons and at all freezing temperatures tested in each season. The aparticulate domains in the plasma membranes were shown to be produced by the close apposition of membranes due to freezing-induced dehydration and deformation of cells. Although the precise mechanisms that cause injury as a result of the formation of aparticulate domains in the plasma membrane remain unclear, our results indicate that the development of cold acclimation paralleled the process whereby cells developed the ability to reduce and finally to prevent the formation of aparticulate domains in the plasma membrane that would otherwise result from freezing-induced cellular dehydration and deformation that brings membranes into close proximity with one another.

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