Crop Science Journal of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Education
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Published in Crop Sci 24:835-838 (1984)
© 1984 Crop Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Solute Leakage from Artificially Aged Soybean Seeds after Imbibition1

Anna W. Schoettle and A. Carl Leopold2

It is known that aged seeds release more solutes upon hydration than unaged seeds. Previous studies of this response have utilized measurements of leakage during imbibition, which combine changes in leakage due to imbibitional stress with changes due to the aging response. We have examined the leakage characteristics in response to accelerated aging after virtual completion of a gentle hydration. Solute leakage from imbibed soybean cotyledons increased with accelerated aging in a linear manner in the range over which vigor was depressed. The UV absorbing solutes that leaked from these seeds included a group with a molecular weight (MW) of over 2000 and another group of MW less than 500. The MW profile of leaked compounds reflected changes in butanol-extractable solutes with accelerated aging. The decline in seed vigor was associated with the lowering of the level of low molecular weight compounds in the cotyledonary cells. Increases in leakage with accelerated aging were closely associated with increases in areas containing damaged cells as evidenced by staining with Evans Blue. These findings indicate that even when hydration stress is minimized, a major contribution of the A260 detected solutes leaking from soybeans after accelerated aging is from cells which had experienced massive membrane damage.

Key Words: Evans Blue • Vigor • Glycine max (L.) Merr. • Cellular rupture


1 Supported by USDA grant no. 801-15-49.

2 Graduate assistant, Dep. of Agronomy, Cornell Univ. (current address: Boyce Thompson Inst.) and W.C.Crocker Scientist, Boyce Thompson Inst., Ithaca, NY 14853.

Received for publication June 23, 1983.


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C. F.J. Rutzke, A. G. Taylor, and R. L. Obendorf
Influence of Aging, Oxygen, and Moisture on Ethanol Production from Cabbage Seeds
J. Amer. Soc. Hort. Sci., January 1, 2008; 133(1): 158 - 164.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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Copyright © 1984 by the Crop Science Society of America.