Membrane Lipids in Senescing Flower Tissue of Ipomoea tricolor

Abstract
Rib segments excised from flower buds of Ipomoea tricolor Cav. pass through the same phases of senescence as the respective tissue on the intact plant. Such segments were used to correlate changes in lipid content with known symptoms of aging, such as rolling up of the ribs and ethylene formation. It was found that the level of phospholipid had already started to decline before visible signs of senescence were evident. As the segments began to roll up and to produce ethylene, the rate of phospholipid loss accelerated sharply. During the same period, the level of fatty acids esterified to phospholipids also fell by 40%. No qualitative changes in any lipid component could be detected during senescence. Labeling experiments using 33P as marker showed that the rate at which radioactivity was lost from phospholipids during aging was parallel to the rate at which the level of total phospholipids declined. Exogenously applied ethylene accelerated the loss of phospholipid and the senescence of rib segments while benzyladenine retarded both of these processes.