10-5 M methyl jasmonate (JA-Me) treatment itself did not considerably change the 14CO2 fixation, parameters of room temperature chlorophyll fluorescence induction, proline content, and Na+ as well as Cl- accumulation. Salt stress (30 mM NaCl) lead to a decrease of both 14CO2 fixation and relative water content, and to an increase of proline content. Immediate nonvariable fluorescence (F0) also increased and the variable to maximal fluorescence ratio (Fv/Fm) decreased. Pretreatment with JA-Me for 3 d before salt treatment diminished the inhibitory effect of NaCl on the rate of 14CO2 fixation, protein content, and activity and content of ribulose-1,5-bisophosphate carboxylase/oxygenase. The Na+ and Cl- contents in leaves decreased in JA-Me pretreated plants. The JA-Me pretreatment prevented the increase of F0 level and restored the values of Fv/Fm. and M. Velitchkova, I. Fedina.
The structural reorganization of pea thylakoid systems in response to osmotic shock in a wide range of temperatures (36-70°C) was studied. At temperatures 40-46°C, the configuration of thylakoid systems changed from a flattened to a nearly round, whereas thylakoids themselves remained compressed. The percentage of thylakoids stacked into grana at 44°C decreased from 71 % in the control to 40 % in experimental samples, reaching 59 % at 48°C. At 44°C and above, thylakoid systems ceased to respond to the osmotic shock by disordering, in contrast to what happened at lower temperatures (36-43°C) and in the control, and retained the configuration inherent in thylakoid systems at these temperatures. At 50°C and above, the packing of thylakoids in grana systems changed, and thylakoids formed extended strands of pseudograna. Simultaneously, single thylakoids formed a network of anastomoses through local fusions. At temperatures of 60-70°C, thylakoid systems appeared as spherical clusters of membrane vesicles with different degree of separation.
The thermoluminescence signals from leaflets of the same pea plant varied gradually according to their developmental stage. The AG emission, due to a back flow of electrons towards photosystem 2 (PS2) along a cyclic/chlororespiratory pathway, was stronger in mature leaves than in the growing ones. These age-related variations could be explained by a higher capacity of cyclic electron flow in mature leaves.