Possible interactions of two synthetic plant-growth retardants
during
the short-term response of Brassica rapa L.
ssp. oleifera (DC.) Metzger plants to low root-zone temperature
were
investigated by pretreating with mefluidide
or paclobutrazol. Water and solute transfers were studied by measuring
xylem sap volume flow (under root
pressure exudation) and ion flow from the roots. Relations with nitrate
uptake rate were also considered. Root
pretreatment with paclobutrazol strongly restricted the cold-inducible
processes which normally restore water and
solute flow from the root xylem. Paclobutrazol decreased the rates of
nitrate uptake and exudation flow from the
root xylem (principally by reducing root hydraulic conductivity) with
dramatic consequences for ion flow, especially that of nitrate.
The effects of root ABA pretreatment on plant response to root
cooling were then studied separately or in
association with a pretreatment with paclobutrazol. Despite a slight
decrease in nitrate uptake rate, ABA
pretreatment of the roots enabled the plant to develop rapid mechanisms
for adaptation to cold constraint at the
root level. Moreover, this action of exogenous ABA greatly reduced
the effect of a simultaneous paclobutrazol
pretreatment and partly restored water and solute flows.
Thus, the improvement of plant resistance to cold conditions brought
about by treatments with mefluidide and
paclobutrazol (previously shown in long-term experiments) cannot
simply be explained by their short-term effects.