Chamaegigas intrepidus Dinter (syn. Lindernia
intrepidus (Dinter) Oberm.) is a poikilohydric aquatic plant that
lives in rock pools on granitic outcrops in Central Namibia.
The pools are only filled intermittently during the
summer rains, and the plants can pass through 15–20
rehydration/dehydration cycles during a single wet season.
Rehydrated plants also have to cope with substantial diurnal
fluctuations in the pool pH as a result of
photosynthetic CO2 uptake. We have used in vivo31P NMR spectroscopy to investigate the effect of external pH
and dehydration (low water potential) on intracellular pH
in the roots and submerged leaves of C. intrepidus.
Increasing the external pH from 6 to 10 had no effect on
the steady state cytoplasmic and vacuolar pH values of
submerged leaves, but caused a slight alkalinization of the
root cytoplasm. Similarly dehydration with PEG-600
at either pH 6 or pH 10 had no effect on the cytoplasmic pH
of the leaves, but it did cause a small alkalinization
of the leaf vacuoles at pH 10. These results imply an
unusually effective regulation of intracellular pH, consistent
with the adaptation of C. intrepidus to the extreme environmental
conditions of its habitat. The NMR analysis also
showed that dehydration had no effect on the inorganic phosphate
and phosphocholine pools, and this was taken
to indicate that the cell membranes were well protected from the
effects of the low water potential.