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Cold Accelimation and Freezing Stress Tolerance: Role of Protein Metabolism

Cold Accelimation and Freezing Stress Tolerance: Role of Protein Metabolism Research interest in the effects of low temperature (LT) stress on crop plant productivity has produced an avalanche of information. In 1984, Steponkus ( 1 89) noted that much of the existing knowledge had not been adequately 1 040-2519/90/0601 -0187$02.00 GUY integrated, a state of affairs that still holds true for a literature that has grown by a few thousand citations. Since the only efforts to integrate completely the existing information on plants at LT required entire books (109, 1 1 1 , 1 1 2, 138, 1 7 1 ) , such a synthesis is not attempted here. Many aspects of plant responses to LT have been reviewed elsewhere ( 1 10, 1 14, 1 38 , 140, 1 79, 1 94, 207, 2 1 8) . Treatments in this series include an examination of frost resistance in reference to other environmental stresses (l08), stresses of water redistribution during freezing and histological and molecular effects ( 1 37), physical events and mechanisms of cell injury during freezing ( 1 23), chilling injury ( 1 20) , factors affecting the freezing process and supercooling (12), cold acclimation and chilling injury (53), and the influence of cold acclima­ tion http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Annual Review of Plant Biology Annual Reviews

Cold Accelimation and Freezing Stress Tolerance: Role of Protein Metabolism

Annual Review of Plant Biology , Volume 41 (1) – Jun 1, 1990

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References (27)

Publisher
Annual Reviews
Copyright
Copyright 1990 Annual Reviews. All rights reserved
Subject
Review Articles
ISSN
1040-2519
DOI
10.1146/annurev.pp.41.060190.001155
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Research interest in the effects of low temperature (LT) stress on crop plant productivity has produced an avalanche of information. In 1984, Steponkus ( 1 89) noted that much of the existing knowledge had not been adequately 1 040-2519/90/0601 -0187$02.00 GUY integrated, a state of affairs that still holds true for a literature that has grown by a few thousand citations. Since the only efforts to integrate completely the existing information on plants at LT required entire books (109, 1 1 1 , 1 1 2, 138, 1 7 1 ) , such a synthesis is not attempted here. Many aspects of plant responses to LT have been reviewed elsewhere ( 1 10, 1 14, 1 38 , 140, 1 79, 1 94, 207, 2 1 8) . Treatments in this series include an examination of frost resistance in reference to other environmental stresses (l08), stresses of water redistribution during freezing and histological and molecular effects ( 1 37), physical events and mechanisms of cell injury during freezing ( 1 23), chilling injury ( 1 20) , factors affecting the freezing process and supercooling (12), cold acclimation and chilling injury (53), and the influence of cold acclima­ tion

Journal

Annual Review of Plant BiologyAnnual Reviews

Published: Jun 1, 1990

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