Pak. J. Bot., 41(3): 1285-1290, 2009. | Back to Contents | ||||
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Updated: 09-07-09 | ||||
Cadmium stress stimulates nitric oxide production by wheat roots
Tariq Mahmood1,2,*, Kapuganti J. Gupta1,3, Werner M. Kaiser1
Abstract: Study was conducted to elucidate the nitrite-dependent nitric oxide (NO) production by wheat roots grown in hydroponics under cadmium (Cd) stress. In a long-term Cd exposure experiment, plants were grown for 4 weeks under 1 µM Cd. The root Cd concentration in the Cd-stressed plants was 2.5 mM compared to 0.1 mM in the untreated plants. Most of the Cd taken up by plants was restricted to roots where its concentration was 9 times higher than that in shoots. Despite the high Cd concentration in roots and shoots, the plant growth was not affected. However, Cd stress caused a 1.7-fold decrease in the root respiration, whereas it produced a 2.4-fold increase in NO emission (detected by gas phase chemiluminescence). In a short-term Cd exposure experiment, freshly harvested Cd-free roots were exposed to 10 µM Cd for 3 h. Here also, the root respiration decreased by 42% and NO production increased by 73%, thus confirming the stimulatory effect of Cd stress on NO production by wheat roots.
1Julius-von-Sachs-Institut fϋr Biowissenschaften, Lehrstuhl Botanik 1, Julius-von-Sachs- Platz 2, D-97082 Wϋrzburg, Germany 2Present address: Nuclear Institute for Agriculture & Biology, PO Box 128, Jhang Road, Faisalabad-38000, Pakistan
3Present
address:
Department of Organelle
Biology, Max-Planck Institute of Molecular Plant Physiology, D-14476
Golm-Potsdam, Germany. |
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