Cell Wall Profiling of the Resurrection Plants Craterostigma plantagineum and Lindernia brevidens and Their Desiccation-Sensitive Relative, Lindernia subracemosa

Vegetative desiccation tolerance has evolved within the genera and . A centre of endemism and diversification for these plants appears to occur in ancient tropical montane rainforests of east Africa in Kenya and Tanzania. , a desiccation-sensitive relative of , occurs in these rainforests and experi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Plants (Basel) 2024-08, Vol.13 (16), p.2235
Hauptverfasser: Moore, John P, Kuhlman, Brock, Hansen, Jeanett, Gomez, Leonardo, JØrgensen, Bodil, Bartels, Dorothea
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Vegetative desiccation tolerance has evolved within the genera and . A centre of endemism and diversification for these plants appears to occur in ancient tropical montane rainforests of east Africa in Kenya and Tanzania. , a desiccation-sensitive relative of , occurs in these rainforests and experiences adequate rainfall and thus does not require desiccation tolerance. However, sharing this inselberg habitat, another species, , does retain vegetative desiccation tolerance and is also related to the resurrection plant found in South Africa. Leaf material was collected from all three species at different stages of hydration: fully hydrated (ca. 90% relative water content), half-dry (ca. 45% relative water content) and fully desiccated (ca. 5% relative water content). Cell wall monosaccharide datasets were collected from all three species. Comprehensive microarray polymer profiling (CoMPP) was performed using ca. 27 plant cell-wall-specific antibodies and carbohydrate-binding module probes. Some differences in pectin, xyloglucan and extension epitopes were observed between the selected species. Overall, cell wall compositions were similar, suggesting that wall modifications in response to vegetative desiccation involve subtle cell wall remodelling that is not reflected by the compositional analysis and that the plants and their walls are constitutively protected against desiccation.
ISSN:2223-7747
2223-7747
DOI:10.3390/plants13162235