Cargando…

Non‐chlorophyllous and crypto‐chlorophyllous fern spores differ in their mobilisation of fatty acids during priming

During fern spore germination, lipid hydrolysis primarily provides the energy to activate their metabolism. In this research, fatty acids (linoleic, oleic, palmitic and stearic) were quantified in the spores exposed or not to priming (hydration–dehydration treatments). Five fern species were investi...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Pedrero‐López, Luis V., Flores‐Ortiz, César M., Pérez‐García, Blanca, Cruz‐Ortega, Rocío, Mehltreter, Klaus, Sánchez‐Coronado, María E., Hernández‐Portilla, Luis Barbo, Contreras‐Jiménez, Gastón, Orozco‐Segovia, Alma
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10107703/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36628548
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ppl.13848
_version_ 1785026663725137920
author Pedrero‐López, Luis V.
Flores‐Ortiz, César M.
Pérez‐García, Blanca
Cruz‐Ortega, Rocío
Mehltreter, Klaus
Sánchez‐Coronado, María E.
Hernández‐Portilla, Luis Barbo
Contreras‐Jiménez, Gastón
Orozco‐Segovia, Alma
author_facet Pedrero‐López, Luis V.
Flores‐Ortiz, César M.
Pérez‐García, Blanca
Cruz‐Ortega, Rocío
Mehltreter, Klaus
Sánchez‐Coronado, María E.
Hernández‐Portilla, Luis Barbo
Contreras‐Jiménez, Gastón
Orozco‐Segovia, Alma
author_sort Pedrero‐López, Luis V.
collection PubMed
description During fern spore germination, lipid hydrolysis primarily provides the energy to activate their metabolism. In this research, fatty acids (linoleic, oleic, palmitic and stearic) were quantified in the spores exposed or not to priming (hydration–dehydration treatments). Five fern species were investigated, two from xerophilous shrubland and three from a cloud forest. We hypothesised that during the priming hydration phase, the fatty acids profile would change in concentration, depending on the spore type (non‐chlorophyllous and crypto‐chlorophyllous). The fatty acid concentration was determined by gas chromatograph–mass spectrometer. Chlorophyll in spores was vizualised by epifluorescence microscopy and quantified by high‐resolution liquid chromatography with a DAD‐UV/Vis detector. Considering all five species and all the treatments, the oleic acid was the most catabolised. After priming, we identified two patterns in the fatty acid metabolism: (1) in non‐chlorophyllous species, oleic, palmitic, and linoleic acids were catabolised during imbibition and (2) in crypto‐chlorophyllous species, these fatty acids increased in concentration. These patterns suggest that crypto‐chlorophyllous spores with homoiochlorophylly (chlorophyll retained after drying) might not require the assembly of new photosynthetic apparatus during dark imbibition. Thus, these spores might require less energy from pre‐existing lipids and less fatty acids as ‘building blocks’ for cell membranes than non‐chlorophyllous spores, which require de novo synthesis and structuring of the photosynthetic apparatus.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10107703
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Blackwell Publishing Ltd
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-101077032023-04-18 Non‐chlorophyllous and crypto‐chlorophyllous fern spores differ in their mobilisation of fatty acids during priming Pedrero‐López, Luis V. Flores‐Ortiz, César M. Pérez‐García, Blanca Cruz‐Ortega, Rocío Mehltreter, Klaus Sánchez‐Coronado, María E. Hernández‐Portilla, Luis Barbo Contreras‐Jiménez, Gastón Orozco‐Segovia, Alma Physiol Plant Original Research During fern spore germination, lipid hydrolysis primarily provides the energy to activate their metabolism. In this research, fatty acids (linoleic, oleic, palmitic and stearic) were quantified in the spores exposed or not to priming (hydration–dehydration treatments). Five fern species were investigated, two from xerophilous shrubland and three from a cloud forest. We hypothesised that during the priming hydration phase, the fatty acids profile would change in concentration, depending on the spore type (non‐chlorophyllous and crypto‐chlorophyllous). The fatty acid concentration was determined by gas chromatograph–mass spectrometer. Chlorophyll in spores was vizualised by epifluorescence microscopy and quantified by high‐resolution liquid chromatography with a DAD‐UV/Vis detector. Considering all five species and all the treatments, the oleic acid was the most catabolised. After priming, we identified two patterns in the fatty acid metabolism: (1) in non‐chlorophyllous species, oleic, palmitic, and linoleic acids were catabolised during imbibition and (2) in crypto‐chlorophyllous species, these fatty acids increased in concentration. These patterns suggest that crypto‐chlorophyllous spores with homoiochlorophylly (chlorophyll retained after drying) might not require the assembly of new photosynthetic apparatus during dark imbibition. Thus, these spores might require less energy from pre‐existing lipids and less fatty acids as ‘building blocks’ for cell membranes than non‐chlorophyllous spores, which require de novo synthesis and structuring of the photosynthetic apparatus. Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2023-01-24 2023 /pmc/articles/PMC10107703/ /pubmed/36628548 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ppl.13848 Text en © 2023 The Authors. Physiologia Plantarum published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Scandinavian Plant Physiology Society. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Pedrero‐López, Luis V.
Flores‐Ortiz, César M.
Pérez‐García, Blanca
Cruz‐Ortega, Rocío
Mehltreter, Klaus
Sánchez‐Coronado, María E.
Hernández‐Portilla, Luis Barbo
Contreras‐Jiménez, Gastón
Orozco‐Segovia, Alma
Non‐chlorophyllous and crypto‐chlorophyllous fern spores differ in their mobilisation of fatty acids during priming
title Non‐chlorophyllous and crypto‐chlorophyllous fern spores differ in their mobilisation of fatty acids during priming
title_full Non‐chlorophyllous and crypto‐chlorophyllous fern spores differ in their mobilisation of fatty acids during priming
title_fullStr Non‐chlorophyllous and crypto‐chlorophyllous fern spores differ in their mobilisation of fatty acids during priming
title_full_unstemmed Non‐chlorophyllous and crypto‐chlorophyllous fern spores differ in their mobilisation of fatty acids during priming
title_short Non‐chlorophyllous and crypto‐chlorophyllous fern spores differ in their mobilisation of fatty acids during priming
title_sort non‐chlorophyllous and crypto‐chlorophyllous fern spores differ in their mobilisation of fatty acids during priming
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10107703/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36628548
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ppl.13848
work_keys_str_mv AT pedrerolopezluisv nonchlorophyllousandcryptochlorophyllousfernsporesdifferintheirmobilisationoffattyacidsduringpriming
AT floresortizcesarm nonchlorophyllousandcryptochlorophyllousfernsporesdifferintheirmobilisationoffattyacidsduringpriming
AT perezgarciablanca nonchlorophyllousandcryptochlorophyllousfernsporesdifferintheirmobilisationoffattyacidsduringpriming
AT cruzortegarocio nonchlorophyllousandcryptochlorophyllousfernsporesdifferintheirmobilisationoffattyacidsduringpriming
AT mehltreterklaus nonchlorophyllousandcryptochlorophyllousfernsporesdifferintheirmobilisationoffattyacidsduringpriming
AT sanchezcoronadomariae nonchlorophyllousandcryptochlorophyllousfernsporesdifferintheirmobilisationoffattyacidsduringpriming
AT hernandezportillaluisbarbo nonchlorophyllousandcryptochlorophyllousfernsporesdifferintheirmobilisationoffattyacidsduringpriming
AT contrerasjimenezgaston nonchlorophyllousandcryptochlorophyllousfernsporesdifferintheirmobilisationoffattyacidsduringpriming
AT orozcosegoviaalma nonchlorophyllousandcryptochlorophyllousfernsporesdifferintheirmobilisationoffattyacidsduringpriming