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Temperature-Induced Water Stress in Chilling-Sensitive Plants

Australian Journal of Plant Physiology, 1982
Cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) and bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) seedlings wilted when entire plants or roots alone were chilled in the light. The water relations and gas exchange characteristics of these chilling-sensitive species have been compared with a chilling-resistant species, collard (Brassica oleracea), following exposure to a chilling temperature ...
JR Mcwilliam, PJ Kramer, RL Musser
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Salicylic Acid and Chilling Stress – A Review

LS: International Journal of Life Sciences, 2017
Chilling stress or low-temperature result in reduced seed germination and vigour by influencing various physiological and biochemical processes in plants. It also leads to other types of stresses like osmotic and oxidative stress, causing an increase in reactive oxygen species and hence damage to the membrane lipids and other biomolecules.
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Transcriptomic analysis of chilling stress in Phaseolus spp.

Environmental and Experimental Botany, 2010
The wild bean species Phaseolus angustissimus has shown a greater ability to survive chilling temperatures than the cultivated bean Phaseolus vulgaris. Arrays of cDNA clones from cold acclimated crowns of Medicago sativa were used to measure low temperature-induced changes in the expression profiles of both bean species and compare them to each other ...
Grant Woronuk   +4 more
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OXIDATIVE STRESS AND CHILLING INJURY OF MUNGBEAN SEEDLINGS

Acta Horticulturae, 2005
Mungbean (Vigna radiata (L.) Wilczek 'AC Harosprout') seedlings were used to test the hypothesis that moderate oxidative stress offers protection against chilling injury. Chilling inhibits subsequent radicle growth. Decreased radicle elongation at 25°C after 1 to 4 days of chilling at 2.5°C was used as a measure of chilling injury.
W.C. Lin, M.E. Saltveit
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GENE DISCOVERY FOR CHILLING STRESS DETERMINANTS IN ARABIDOPSIS

Acta Horticulturae, 2010
It has now been demonstrated that treatment of Arabidopsis plants with glycine betaine (GB) can improve tolerance to chilling stress by causing gene expression changes that are required for GB's effect. Several lines of evidence also directly implicate reactive oxygen species (ROS) signaling with chilling effects.
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Chilling stress

1994
Bryan D. Mckersie, Ya’acov Y. Leshem
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Chilling stress.

2012
E. Ruelland, S. Collin
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Cold Stress Responses in Amorphophallus muelleri Seedlings under Chilling Stress

This study examined the physiological and morphological responses of both its roots and leaves to sustained chilling stress at 4°C for seven days. By integrating metabolomic and transcriptomic analyses, we characterized organ-specific alterations in secondary metabolism and identified key molecular pathways activated in response to low temperature, to ...
openaire   +1 more source

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