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1.
Li B  Geiger DR  Shieh WJ 《Plant physiology》1992,99(4):1393-1399
Starch accumulation and sucrose synthesis and export were measured in leaves of sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L.) during a period of prolonged irradiance in which illumination was extended beyond the usual 14-hour day period. During much of the 14-hour day period, approximately 50% of the newly fixed carbon was distributed to sucrose, about 40% to starch, and less than 10% to hexose. Beginning about 2 hours before the end of the usual light period, the portion of newly fixed carbon allocated to sucrose gradually increased, and correspondingly less carbon went to starch. By the time the transition ended, about 4 hours into the extension of the light period, nearly 90% of newly fixed carbon was incorporated into sucrose and little or none into starch. Most of the additional sucrose was exported. Gradual cessation of starch accumulation was not the result of a futile cycle of simultaneous starch synthesis and degradation. Neither was it the result of a decrease in the extractable activity of adenosine diphosphoglucose pyrophosphorylase or phosphoglucose isomerase, enzymes important in starch synthesis. Nor was there a notable change in control metabolites considered to be important in regulating starch synthesis. Starch accumulation appeared to decrease markedly because of an endogenous circadian shift in carbon allocation, which occurred in preparation for the usual night period and which diverted carbon from the chloroplast to the cytosol and sucrose synthesis.  相似文献   

2.
Sources of Carbon for Export from Spinach Leaves throughout the Day   总被引:7,自引:3,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
Rates of net carbon exchange, export, starch, and sucrose synthesis were measured in leaves of spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) throughout a 14-hour period of sinusoidal light to determine the sources of carbon contributing to export. Net carbon exchange rate closely followed light level, but export remained relatively constant throughout the day. In the morning when photosynthesis was low, starch degradation provided most of the carbon for export, while accumulated sucrose was exported during the evening. At high photosynthesis rate, the regulatory metabolite fructose 2,6-bisphosphate was low, allowing more of the newly fixed carbon to flow to sucrose through cytosolic fructose bisphosphatase. When the rate of sucrose synthesis exceeded the rate of export from the leaf, sucrose accumulated and soon thereafter sucrose synthesis declined. A decreasing sucrose synthesis rate resulted in additional carbon moving to the synthesis of starch, which was maintained throughout the remainder of the day. The declining sucrose synthesis rate coincided with decreasing activity of sucrose phosphate synthase present in gel-filtered leaf extracts. A rise in the leaf levels of uridine diphosphoglucose and fructose 6-phosphate throughout the day was consistent with this declining activity.  相似文献   

3.
Rates of photosynthesis, sucrose synthesis, starch accumulation and degradation were measured in sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L.) and bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) plants under a square-wave light regime and under a sinusoidal regime that simulated the natural daylight period. Photosynthesis rate increased in a measured manner in direct proportion to the increasing light level. In contrast to this close correspondence between photosynthesis and light, a lag in photosynthesis rate was seen during the initial hour under square-wave illumination. The leaf appeared to be responding to limits set by carbon metabolism rather than by gas exchange or light reactions. Under the sinusoidal regime starch degradation occurred during the first and last 2 hours of the photoperiod, likely in response to photosynthesis rate rather than directly to light level. Starch broke down when photosynthesis was below a threshold rate and accumulated above this rate. Under square-wave illumination, accumulation of starch did not begin until irradiance was at full level for an hour or more and photosynthesis was at or near its maximum. Under a sinusoidal light regime, sucrose synthesis rate comprised carbon that was newly fixed throughout the day plus that from starch degradation at the beginning and end of the day. Synthesis of sucrose from recently fixed carbon increased with increasing net carbon fixation rate while its formation from degradation of starch decreased correspondingly. The complementary sources of carbon maintained a relatively steady rate of sucrose synthesis under the changing daytime irradiance.  相似文献   

4.
Geiger DR  Shieh WJ  Yu XM 《Plant physiology》1995,107(2):507-514
A high rate of daytime export of assimilated carbon from leaves of a starch-deficient mutant tobacco (Nicotiana sylvestris L.) was found to be a key factor that enabled shoots to grow at rates comparable to those in wild-type plants under a 14-h light period. Much of the newly fixed carbon that would be used for starch synthesis in leaves of wild-type plants was used instead for sucrose synthesis in the mutant. As a result, export doubled and accumulation of sucrose and hexoses increased markedly during the day in leaves of the mutant plants. The increased rate of export to sink leaves appeared to be responsible for the increase in the proportion of their growth that occurred during the day compared to wild-type plants. Daytime growth of source leaves also increased, presumably as a result of the increased accumulation of recently assimilated soluble carbon in the leaves. Even though starch accumulation did not occur in the leaves of mutant plants, nearly all the sugar that accumulated during the day was exported in the period of decreasing irradiance at the end of the diurnal light period. Changes in carbon allocation that occurred in leaves of wild-type and mutant plants near the end of the light period appeared to result from endogenous diurnal regulation associated with the day-night transition.  相似文献   

5.
To gain a better understanding of the biochemical basis for partitioning of photosynthetically fixed carbon between leaf and grain, a 14CO2 labeling study was conducted with field-grown maize plants 4 weeks after flowering. The carbon flow was monitored by separation and identification of 14C assimilates and 14C storage components within each tissue during the chase period (from 4 to 96 hours) following a 5 minute 14CO2 pulse. In the labeled ear leaf, the radioactivity strongly decreased to reach, at the end of the experiment, about 12% of the total incorporated radioactivity, mostly associated with sucrose and proteins. Nevertheless, an unexpected reincorporation of radioactivity was observed either in leaf starch or proteins, the day following the pulse. Conversely, the radioactivity in the grain increased to attain 66% of the total incorporated 14C after a 96 hour chase. The photosynthates, mostly sucrose, organic and free amino acids, rapidly translocated towards the developing seeds, served as precursors for the synthesis of seed storage compounds, starch, and proteins. They accumulate in free form for 24 hours before being incorporated within polymerized storage components. This delay is interpreted as a necessary prerequisite for interconversions prior to the polycondensations. In the grain, the labeling of the storage molecules, either in starch or in storage protein groups (salt-soluble proteins, zein, and glutelin subgroups), was independent of their chemical nature but dependent on their pool size.  相似文献   

6.
Photosynthesis rate, internal CO2 concentration, starch, sucrose, and metabolite levels were measured in leaves of sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L.) during a 14-h period of sinusoidal light, which simulated a natural light period. Photosynthesis rate closely followed increasing and decreasing light level. Chloroplast metabolite levels changed in a manner indicating differential activation of enzymes at different light levels. Starch levels declined during the first and last 2 hours of the photoperiod, but increased when photosynthesis rate was greater than 50% of maximal. Sucrose and sucrose phosphate synthase levels were constant during the photoperiod, which is consistent with a relatively steady rate of sucrose synthesis during the day as observed previously (BR Fondy et al. [1989] Plant Physiol 89: 396-402). When starch was being degraded, glucose 1-phosphate level was high and there was a large amount of glucose 6-phosphate above that in equilibrium with fructose 6-phosphate, while fructose 6-phosphate and triose-phosphate levels were very low. Likewise, the regulatory metabolite, fructose, 2,6-bisphosphate was high, indicating that little carbon could move to sucrose from starch by the triose-phosphate pathway. These data cast doubt upon the feasibility of significant carbon flow through the triose-phosphate pathway during starch degradation and support the need for an additional pathway for mobilizing starch carbon to sucrose.  相似文献   

7.
Diurnal carbohydrate metabolism of barley primary leaves   总被引:20,自引:11,他引:9       下载免费PDF全文
The carbohydrate content of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) leaves was measured over a 24-hour cycle. Nonstructural carbohydrate accumulation was linear after the 1st hour of light, whereas utilization in the dark was fast initially and slowed as stored reserves were depleted. Sucrose was the most abundant storage form of carbohydrate in the primary leaf. Lesser amounts of starch, fructans, and hexoses were also present. Leaf reserves were almost completely remobilized by the end of the dark period. There was a lag in starch degradation following a light to dark transition. Lower rates of starch accumulation were observed at the beginning and at the end of the day. Fructan synthesis occurred primarily towards the end of the light period as rates of sucrose and starch synthesis decreased. The above results suggested that carbohydrate metabolism in primary barley leaves was controlled by light and by endogenous factors such as foliar sucrose levels. Measurements of specific [14C]sucrose activity in steady state labeled 7-day-old barley primary leaves suggested the presence of at least two kinetically separate pools. Sucrose levels were higher and apparent turnover rates were lower in barley leaves in comparison to previous studies with other species.  相似文献   

8.
Application of glyphosate (N-[phosphonomethyl] glycine) to exporting leaves of sugar beet (Beta vulgaris, L.) during the day lowered stomatal conductance and carbon fixation. Allocation of newly fixed carbon to foliar starch accumulation was nearly completely inhibited, being decreased by the same amount as net carbon fixation. In contrast, decreasing net carbon fixation in untreated leaves by lowering CO2 concentration caused starch accumulation to decrease, but only in the same proportion as net carbon fixation. Shikimate level increased 50-fold in treated leaves but the elevated rate of carbon accumulation in shikimate was only 4% of the decrease in the rate of starch accumulation. Application of steady state labeling with 14CO2 to exporting leaves confirmed the above changes in carbon metabolism, but revealed no other major daytime differences in the 14C-content of amino acids or other compounds between treated and control leaves. Less 14C accumulated in treated leaves because of decreased fixation, not increased export. The proportion of newly fixed carbon allocated to sucrose increased, maintaining export at the level in control leaves. Returning net carbon exchange to the rate before treatment restored starch accumulation fully and prevented a decrease in export during the subsequent dark period.  相似文献   

9.
Intracellular Carbon Partitioning in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Klein U 《Plant physiology》1987,85(4):892-897
Using enzymic and isotope techniques the intracellular partitioning of newly fixed carbon was studied in synchronized cells of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Starch and growth metabolism, i.e. the use of carbon in biosynthesis, were found to be the major sinks for photosynthetically fixed carbon in the alga. Sucrose does not accumulate in significant quantities. The amount of carbon partitioned either into starch or growth varies during the 12 hour light/12 hour dark cell cycle. Starch is accumulated at the beginning and at the end of the light period while a net breakdown is observed in the middle of the light period and in the dark. In contrast, nonsynchronized cells accumulate starch all the time in the light which suggests that carbon partitioning is controlled by the cell cycle. Labeled bicarbonate is incorporated into starch even at times when the total intracellular level of starch is decreasing. This indicates a turnover of the starch pool in the light with synthesis and degradation occurring simultaneously and at different rates.  相似文献   

10.
Sulphite at concentrations from 0.05 to 5.0 mM was supplied to illuminated, detached poplar (Populus deltoides Bart. ex Marsh) leaves via the transpiration stream. The rate of CO2 fixation and partitioning of newly fixed carbon between sucrose and starch were measured and compared with the contents of selected phosphorylated intermediates, the contents of fructose-2,6-bisphosphate (Fru2,6BP) and the activation of sucrose-phosphate synthase (SPS). Supplying leaves with 0.5 mM sulphite led to an increase in the sucrose/starch partitioning ratio without altering the rate of 14CO2 fixation. The increase in sucrose synthesis compared to starch synthesis was accompanied by relatively small changes of 3-phosphoglyceric acid (PGA), fructose-1,6-bisphosphate (Fru1,6BP), hexose phosphates (hexose-)), uridine 5'-diphosphoglucose (UDPGlc), an accumulation of triose phosphates (triose-P), an activation of SPS, and decreased Fru2,6BP contents. Supplying leaves with 1.0 mM sulphite decreased 14CO2 assimilation and increased partitioning of fixed carbon into starch. A selective inhibition of sucrose synthesis was accompanied by an accumulation of triose-P, Fru1,6BP, hexose-P, and a decrease of PGA contents. There was also a large increase of Fru2,6BP contents and a decline in the activation of SPS. It could be argued that sulphite affects the allocation of photosynthetic carbon to sucrose and that sulphite can inhibit photosynthesis via a selective inhibition of sucrose synthesis.  相似文献   

11.
In fully expanded leaves of greenhouse-grown cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L., cv Coker 100) plants, carbon export, starch accumulation rate, and carbon exchange rate exhibited different behavior during the light period. Starch accumulation rates were relatively constant during the light period, whereas carbon export rate was greater in the afternoon than in the morning even though the carbon exchange rate peaked about noon. Sucrose levels increased throughout the light period and dropped sharply with the onset of darkness; hexose levels were relatively constant except for a slight peak in the early morning. Sucrose synthase, usually thought to be a degradative enzyme, was found in unusually high activities in cotton leaf. Both sucrose synthase and sucrose phosphate synthetase activities were found to fluctuate diurnally in cotton leaves but with different rhythms. Diurnal fluctuations in the rate of sucrose export were generally aligned with sucrose phosphate synthase activity during the light period but not with sucrose synthase activity; neither enzyme activity correlated with carbon export during the dark. Cotton leaf sucrose phosphate synthase activity was sufficient to account for the observed carbon export rates; there is no need to invoke sucrose synthase as a synthetic enzyme in mature cotton leaves. During the dark a significant correlation was found between starch degradation rate and leaf carbon export. These results indicate that carbon partitioning in cotton leaf is somewhat independent of the carbon exchange rate and that leaf carbon export rate may be linked to sucrose formation and content during the light period and to starch breakdown in the dark.  相似文献   

12.
A procedure involving pulse labelling of leaves with 14CO2 was developed to measure the primary (initial) partitioning of photosynthate between sucrose and starch. Partitioning of photosynthate into sucrose and starch was determined in leaves of C4 plants and compared with the patterns of storage of carbon in these products during the light period. The ratio of primary partitioning into sucrose and starch varied from about 0.5 in those species that accumulated mostly starch in the leaves (Amaranthus edulis L., Atriplex spongiosa F. Muell. and Flaveria trinervia (Spreng.) C. Mohr) to about 8 in Eleusine indica (L.) Gaertn., which accumulated mostly sucrose. No label was detected in free glucose or fructose. Generally there was a reasonable link between the primary partitioning of photosynthate and the type of carbohydrate stored in the leaf during the day. However, the ratio of carbon initially partitioned into sucrose versus starch was about 3 to 4 times higher in leaves of NADP-malic enzyme-type monocotyledonous species compared with phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase-type species, although the ratio of sucrose to starch accumulated in leaves during the day was very similar in the two groups. Sucrose and starch were the principal carbohydrates accumulated in leaves during the day. None of the species examined contained significant amounts of fructan and only one species, Atriplex spongiosa, contained substantial amounts of hexose sugars. In most of the species studied, the proportion of photosynthate partitioned into starch was greater at the end of the day than at the beginning. With the exception of Flaveria trinervia, the rate of CO2 assimilation did not decline during the day, showing that, under our conditions, accumulation of carbohydrate in the leaves did not lead to feedback inhibition of photosynthesis in these C4 species.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - NAD-ME NAD-malic enzyme - NADP-ME NADP-malic enzyme - PCK phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase We thank Prof. H.W. Heldt (Pflanzenphysiologisches Institut, Universität Göttingen) for discussions and advice during the course of this work.  相似文献   

13.
A series of experiments was conducted to characterize alterations in carbohydrate utilization in leaves of nitrogen stressed plants. Two-week-old, nonnodulated soybean plants (Glycine max [L.] Merrill, `Ransom'), grown previously on complete nutrient solutions with 1.0 millimolar NO3, were transferred to solutions without a nitrogen source at the beginning of a dark period. Daily changes in starch and sucrose levels of leaves were monitored over the following 5 to 8 days in three experiments. Starch accumulation increased relative to controls throughout the leaf canopy during the initial two light periods after plant exposure to N-free solutions, but not after that time as photosynthesis declined. The additional increments of carbon incorporated into starch appeared to be quantitatively similar to the amounts of carbon diverted from amino acid synthesis in the same tissues. Since additional accumulated starch was not degraded in darkness, starch levels at the beginning of light periods also were elevated. In contrast to the starch effects, leaf sucrose concentration was markedly higher than controls at the beginning of the first light period after the N-limitation was imposed. In the days which followed, diurnal turnover patterns were similar to controls. In source leaves, the activity of sucrose-P synthase did not decrease until after day 3 of the N-limitation treatment, whereas the concentration of fructose-2,6-bisphosphate was decreased on day 2. Restricted growth of sink leaves was evident with N-limited plants within 2 days, having been preceeded by a sharp decline in levels of fructose-2,6 bisphosphate on the first day of treatment. The results suggest that changes in photosynthate partitioning in source leaves of N-stressed plants resulted largely from a stable but limited capacity for sucrose formation, and that decreased sucrose utilization in sink leaves contributed to the whole-plant diversion of carbohydrate from the shoot to the root.  相似文献   

14.
Single attached leaves of tobacco, depleted of starch, wereallowed to assimilate a fixed amount of 14CO2. About 50 percent. of the 14Carbon assimilated was translocated from thelamina concurrently with assimilation. Of that remaining inthe lamina 80 per cent. was incorporated into starch and sugar.Plants were then placed in air and continuous light of differentintensities as a means of controlling further starch synthesis.At about 500 f.c. there was no change in amount of starch after72 hours, but half the radioactivity was lost. At light intensitieslower than 500 f.c. percentage activity lost was greater thanthe percentage amount lost. In sunlight, where new starch synthesiswas very rapid, loss in activity from the radioactive portionwas prevented. In all circumstances activity virtually disappearedfrom both hexose and sucrose. It is concluded that starch dissolutionproceeded in light even when the amount was increasing. It isfurther suggested that the loss was mainly from outer layersof the starch grains which were replaced by newly synthesizedmaterial. Loss of sugar was by direct translocation rather thanpassage to starch, and complete replacement by new photosynthateoccurred in 24 hours.  相似文献   

15.
In Vitis vinifera L. cv. Chardonnay maintained in a greenhouse,the maximum rate of photosynthesis, the measured rates of denovo sucrose and starch synthesis and the total leaf sucroseand starch contents were relatively constant throughout theperiod from April to July although the partitioning of newlyfixed carbon was modified in favour of sucrose synthesis half-waythrough the growing period. In these experimental conditions,no significant differences in these parameters were observedin plants from which the fruit had been removed in comparisonto the controls. In field-grown vines, photosynthesis rose toa maximum in the early morning consistent with the increasein ambient irradiance and then subsequently progressively decreased.This occurred every day. On clear days the mid-morning depressionin the rate of CO2 assimilation was closely linked to decreasein stomatal conductance, but there was no correlation betweenthese parameters on days when the sun was overcast. There wasno correlation between leaf sucrose content and the depressionin photosynthesis. The calculated rate of non-cyclic electronflow did not decline in parallel with the mid-morning depression and the quantum efficiency of photosystem II was constantfor the whole of the period when the CO2 assimilation was decreasing.The mid-morning depression of photosynthetic CO2 assimilationwas related to both stomatal and non-stomatal effects. In neithersituation did it have any measurable feedback effect on theelectron transport rate or on the carbo hydrate contents ofthe leaves. Key words: Vitis vinifera L., source-sink interactions, sucrose, starch, photosynthesis  相似文献   

16.
The role of the mature leaf in supplying carbon for growth inother parts of the plant was examined using a steady-rate 14CO2labelling technique. The pattern of events occurring in theleaf during one complete 24 h cycle was compared in plants grownin, and adapted to long and short photoperiods. The rates ofleaf photosynthesis, night respiration and daytime loss of carbonfrom the growing regions of the plant Were similar in long orshort photoperiods. As a percentage of the total carbon fixedduring the photoperiod, total respiration was c. 50% for shortday plants but only 25% for long day plants. Thirty to forty per cent of the carbon fixed during the photoperiodwas retained in the leaf for export during darkness—therest was exported immediately. In leaves of short day plantssucrose and starch were the main form of the stored carbon.By the end of the dark period these compounds had been almostcompletely depleted. In leaves of long day plants there weremuch larger basal levels of sucrose and starch, upon which thediurnal variations were superimposed. These leaves also accumulatedfructosans. The delay in starch remobilization previously foundin leaves of short day plants was also evident in leaves oflong day plants even though large concentrations of sucroseand fructosans were present This suggests the presence of distinctpools of sucrose in the leaf.  相似文献   

17.
In the future, plants will have additional CO(2) for photosynthesis. However, plants do not take maximal advantage of this additional CO(2) and it has been hypothesized that end product synthesis limitations and sugar sensing mechanisms are important in regulating plant responses to increasing CO(2). Attempts to increase end product synthesis capacity by engineering increased sucrose-phosphate synthase activity have been generally, but not universally, successful. It was found that plants benefited from a two- to three-fold increase in SPS activity but a 10-fold increase did not increase yield. Despite the success in increasing yield, increasing SPS did not increase photosynthesis. However, carbon export from chloroplasts was increased during the day and reduced at night (when starch provides carbon for sucrose synthesis. We develop here a hypothesis that starch degradation is closely sensed by hexokinase because a newly discovered pathway required for starch to sucrose conversion that involves maltose is one of few metabolic pathways that requires hexokinase activity.  相似文献   

18.
Sucrose synthesis rate in an exporting sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L.) leaf was calculated from simultaneous measurements of export and changes in leaf sucrose level. The amount of recently fixed carbon exported was determined from net carbon assimilated minus the tracer carbon accumulated in the leaf. The relative amount of 14C accumulated in the leaf supplied with 14CO2 throughout an entire light period was recorded continuously with a Geiger-Mueller detector. To produce a continuous time course for tracer carbon accumulated in the leaf during the light period, the latter curve was superimposed on values for tracer carbon accumulated in leaves sampled at hourly intervals. Validity of the method requires that nearly all of the carbon that is exported be sucrose and that nearly all of the sucrose that is synthesized be either exported or accumulated as sucrose in the exporting leaves. These conditions appeared to be fulfilled in the situations where the method was applied. The method was used to study the effect of increasing atmospheric CO2 concentration on the rate of sucrose synthesis. Further, the method can be used in conjunction with the gathering of other data such as gas exchange, metabolite levels, and enzyme activities in a set of leaves of a similar age on the same plant. This assemblage of data was found to be useful for understanding how rates of photosynthesis, sucrose synthesis, and translocation are regulated in relation to each other in an intact plant.  相似文献   

19.
20.
The flow of carbon into sucrose and starch was investigated in fully expanded primary leaves of spinach using the long to short day transition and partial defoliation as tools to manipulate sucrose/starch synthesis. Transfer from 12 hour to 7 hour photosynthetic periods resulted in a 4-fold increase in the initial rate of starch synthesis, a 50% increase in the initial rate of sucrose synthesis, a 30% increase in leaf sucrose, and a 40% decrease in fructose, 2,6-biphosphate. In addition, sucrose synthesis rates in cells isolated from shortened daylength plants are 80% higher than in cells isolated from control plants. These results show that, in spinach, an increase in the rates of both sucrose and starch synthesis can occur under short day conditions. In contrast, when short day plants are partially defoliated, starch levels remain high, fructose 2,6-biphosphate levels remain low, but the level of leaf sucrose drops by 50%. Thus, when demand exceeds supply, starch synthesis has priority over filling of leaf sucrose pools in the short day plant.  相似文献   

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