Sixty seven-days-old plants of Ammi majus L. were subjected for 46 d to sand culture at varying concentrations of NaCl, i.e. 0 (control), 40, 80, 120, and 160 mM. Increasing salt concentrations caused a significant reduction in fresh and dry masses of both shoots and roots as well as seed yield. However, the adverse effect of salt was more pronounced on seed yield than biomass production at the vegetative stage. Calculated 50 % reduction in shoot dry mass occurred at 156 mM (ca.15.6 mS cm-1), whereas that in seed yield was at 104 mM (ca.10.4 mS cm-1). As in most glycophytes, Na+ and Cl- in both shoots and roots increased, whereas K+ and Ca2+ decreased consistently with the successive increase in salt level of the growth medium. Plants of A. majusmaintained markedly higher K+/Na+ ratios in the shoots than those in the roots, and the ratio remained more than 1 even at the highest external salt level (160 mM). Net photosynthetic (PN) and transpiration (E) rates remained unaffected at increasing NaCl, and thus these attributes had a negative association with salt tolerance of A. majus. Proline content in the shoots increased markedly at the higher concentrations of salt. Essential oil content in the seed decreased consistently with increase in external salt level. Overall, A. majusis a moderately salt tolerant crop whose response to salinity is associated with maintenance of high shoot K+/Na+ ratio and accumulation of proline in shoots, but PN had a negative association with the salt tolerance of this crop. and M. Ashraf ... [et al.].
The oligomeric state of photosystem 2 (PS2) complex in soybean leaves treated with saturating irradiance was studied by non-denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) and gel filtration chromatography. PS2 dimers resolved by non-denaturing PAGE accounted for about 75 % of total PS2 complex and there was no significant difference in the ratio of PS2 dimer to monomer between samples from saturating irradiance-treated and fully dark-adapted leaves. Furthermore, BBY particles were resolved into four chlorophyll-enriched fractions by gel filtration chromatography. From their molecular masses and protein components, these fractions were deduced to be PS2 dimer, PS2 monomer, oligomeric light-harvesting complex 2 (LHC2), and monomeric LHC2. Also, no change in the proportion of PS2 dimer in total PS2 was observed in the granal region of thylakoid membranes from soybean leaves after saturating irradiation. Hence the dimer is the predominant natural form of PS2 in vivo and no monomerisation of PS2 dimer occurs during saturating irradiance-induced photoinhibition in soybean leaves. and Shi-Qing Cai ... [et al.].
Count von Manderscheid-Blankenheim´s library at Blankenheim Castle was closed after Napoleon´s army invaded the Rhineland in 1794. The last owner of the castle, Augusta and Filip Krisitan von Sterrnberg-Manderscheid took some of the books to Prague where they became parts of the Sternberg Library, which itself was incorporated into Prince Lobkowicz´s library, with which it was transferred in 1928 to the Czech National Library collection. This study provides information on the discovery of the uniquely preserved catalogue of the Blankenheim Castle library, compiled sometime between 1789 and 1794. It has been used to successfully identify a total of 29 manuscripts in the National Library collection. The study concludes with an edition of the Blankenheim manuscript catalogue and brief descriptions of the discovered codices.