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1.
To evaluate assimilate export from soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merrill) leaves at night, rates of respiratory CO2 loss, specific leaf weight loss, starch mobilization, and changes in sucrose concentration were measured during a 10-hour dark period in leaves of pod-bearing `Amsoy 71' and `Wells II' plants in a controlled environment. Lateral leaflets were removed at various times between 2200 hours (beginning dark period) and 0800 hours (ending dark period) for dry weight determination and carbohydrate analyses. Respiratory CO2 loss was measured throughout the 10-hour dark period. Rate of export was estimated from the rate of loss in specific leaf weight and rate of CO2 efflux. Rate of assimilate export was not constant. Rate of export was relatively low during the beginning of the dark period, peaked during the middle of the dark period, and then decreased to near zero by the end of darkness. Rate of assimilate export was associated with rate of starch mobilization and amount of starch reserves available for export. Leaves of Amsoy 71 had a higher maximum export rate in conjunction with a greater total change in starch concentration than did leaves of Wells II. Sucrose concentration rapidly declined during the first hour of darkness and then remained constant throughout the rest of the night in leaves of both cultivars. Rate of assimilate export was not associated with leaf sucrose concentration.  相似文献   

2.
To evaluate daytime and nighttime carbon balance and assimilate export in soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merrill) leaves at different photon flux densities, rates of CO2 exchange, specific leaf weights, and concentrations of sucrose and starch were measured at intervals in leaves of pod-bearing `Amsoy 71' and `Wells II' plants grown in a controlled environment room. Assimilate export was estimated from CO2 exchange and change in specific leaf weight. Total diurnal assimilate export was similar for both cultivars. Large cultivar differences existed, however, in the partitioning of carbon into starch reserves and the relative amounts of assimilate exported during the day and the night. Total amounts of both daytime and nighttime export increased with increasing photon flux density, as did sucrose and starch concentrations, specific leaf weight, and rate of respiratory carbohydrate loss at night. Cultivar differences in nighttime rate of export were more closely related to the differences in amount of assimilate available at the end of the day than to differences in daytime rate of net CO2 assimilation. Daytime rates of export, however, were closely related to daytime rates of net CO2 assimilation within each cultivar. The total amount of starch depleted during the 10-hour night increased as starch concentration at the beginning of the night increased.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of water stress and CO2 enrichment on photosynthesis, assimilate export, and sucrose-P synthase activity were examined in field grown soybean plants. In general, leaves of plants grown in CO2-enriched atmospheres (300 microliters per liter above unenriched control, which was 349 ± 12 microliters per liter between 0500 and 1900 hours EST over the entire season) had higher carbon exchange rates (CER) compared to plants grown at ambient CO2, but similar rates of export and similar activities of sucrose-P synthase. On most sample dates, essentially all of the extra carbon fixed as a result of CO2 enrichment was partitioned into starch. CO2-enriched plants had lower transpiration rates and therefore had a higher water use efficiency (milligrams CO2 fixed per gram H2O transpired) per unit leaf area compared to nonenriched plants. Water stress reduced CER in nonenriched plants to a greater extent than in CO2-enriched plants. As CER declined, stomatal resistance increased, but this was not the primary cause of the decrease in assimilation because internal CO2 concentration remained relatively constant. Export of assimilates was less affected by water stress than was CER. When CERs were low as a result of the imposed stress, export was supported by mobilization of reserves (mainly starch). Export rate and leaf sucrose concentration were related in a curvilinear manner. When sucrose concentration was above about 12 milligrams per square decimeter, obtained with nonstressed plants at high CO2, there was no significant increase in export rate. Assimilate export rate was also correlated positively with SPS activity and the quantitative relationship varied with CER. Thus, export rate was a function of both CER and carbon partitioning.  相似文献   

4.
Two photosynthetic periods and photosynthetic photon flux densities (PPFD) were used to study the relationship between the rate of photosynthesis and starch accumulation in vegetative soybean leaves (Merr. cv Amsoy 71). Plants grown in short daily photosynthetic periods (7 hours) had higher rates of CO2 fixation per unit leaf dry weight and of leaf starch accumulation than plants grown in long daily photosynthetic periods (14 hours) irrespective of PPFD. CO2 fixation rates per unit leaf area were similar in 7-hour and 14-hour plants grown at low PPFD but were highest in 14-hour plants at the high PPFD. When single leaves of 14-hour plants were given 7-hour photosynthetic periods, their rates of starch accumulation remained unchanged. The programming of starch accumulation rate and possibly of photosynthetic rate by the length of the daily photosynthetic period is apparently a whole-plant, not an individual leaf, phenomenon. Programming of chloroplast starch accumulation rate by length of the daily photosynthetic and/or dark periods was independent of PPFD within the ranges used in this experiment.  相似文献   

5.
Experiments were conducted in controlled growth chambers to evaluate how increase in CO2 concentration affected sucrose metabolizing enzymes, especially sucrose phosphate synthase (SPS; EC 2.4.1.14) and sucrose synthase (SS; EC 2.4.1.13), as well as carbon metabolism and partitioning in a tropical epiphytic orchid species (Oncidium goldiana). Response of ribulose‐1,5‐bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco; EC 4.1.1.39) to elevated CO2 was determined along with dry mass production, photosynthesis rate, chlorophyll content, total nitrogen and total soluble protein content. After 60 days of growth, there was a 80% and 150% increase in dry mass production in plants grown at 750 and 1 100 μl l?1 CO2, respectively, compared with those grown at ambient CO2 (about 370 μl l?1). A similar increase in photosynthesis rate was detected throughout the growth period when measured under growth CO2 conditions. Concomitantly, there was a decline in leaf Rubisco activity in plants in elevated CO2 after 10 days of growth. Over the growth period, leaf SPS and SS activities were up‐regulated by an average of 20% and 40% for plants grown at 750 and 1100 μl l?1 CO2, respectively. Leaf sucrose content and starch content were significantly higher throughout the growth period in plants grown at elevated CO2 than those at ambient CO2. The partitioning of photosynthetically fixed carbon between sucrose and starch appeared to be unaffected by the 750 μl l?1 CO2 treatment, but it was favored into starch under the 1 100 μl l?1 CO2 condition. The activities of SPS and SS in leaf extracts were closely associated with photosynthetic rates and with partitioning of carbon between starch and sucrose in leaves. The data are consistent with the hypothesis that the up‐regulation of leaf SPS and SS might be an acclimation response to optimize the utilization and export of organic carbon with the increased rate of inorganic‐carbon fixation in elevated CO2 conditions.  相似文献   

6.
Phaseolus vulgaris L. leaves were subjected to various light, CO2, and O2 levels and abscisic acid, then given a 10 minute pulse of 14CO2 followed by a 5 minute chase with unlabeled CO2. After the chase period, very little label remained in the ionic fractions (presumed to be mostly carbon reduction and carbon oxidation cycle intermediates and amino acids) except at low CO2 partial pressure. Most label was found in the neutral, alcohol soluble fraction (presumed sucrose) or in the insoluble fraction digestable by amyloglucosidase. Sucrose formation was linearly related to assimilation rate (slope = 0.35). Starch formation increased linearly with assimilation rate (slope = 0.56) but did not occur if the assimilation rate was below 4 micromoles per square meter per second. Neither abscisic acid, nor high CO2 in combination with low O2 (thought to disrupt control of carbon metabolism) caused significant perturbations of the sucrose/starch formation ratio. These studies indicate that the pathways for starch and sucrose synthesis both are controlled by the rate of net CO2 assimilation, with sucrose the preferred product at very low assimilation rates.  相似文献   

7.
Effects of low‐temperature stress, cold acclimation and growth at high irradiance in a spring (Triticum aestivum L. cv. Katepwa) and a winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv. Monopol) were examined in leaves and crowns with respect to the sucrose utilisation and carbon allocation. Light‐saturated and carbon dioxide (CO2)‐saturated rates of CO2 assimilation were decreased by 50% in cold‐stressed spring and winter wheat cultivars. Cold‐ or high light‐acclimated Katepwa spring wheat maintained light‐saturated rates of CO2 assimilation comparable to those of control spring wheat. In contrast, cold‐ or high light‐acclimated winter wheat maintained higher light and CO2‐saturated rates of CO2 assimilation than non‐acclimated controls. In leaves, during either cold stress, cold acclimation or acclimation to high irradiance, the sucrose/starch ratio increased by 5‐ to 10‐fold and neutral invertase activity increased by 2‐ to 2.5‐fold in both the spring and the winter wheat. In contrast, Monopol winter wheat, but not Katepwa spring wheat, exhibited a 3‐fold increase in leaf sucrose phosphate synthase (SPS) activity, a 4‐fold increase in sucrose:sucrose fructosyl transferase activity and a 6.6‐fold increase in acid invertase upon cold acclimation. Although leaves of cold‐stressed and high light‐grown spring and winter wheat showed 2.3‐ to 7‐fold higher sucrose levels than controls, these plants exhibited a limited capacity to adjust either sucrose phosphate synthase or sucrose synthase activity (SS[s]). In addition, the acclimation to high light resulted in a 23–31% lower starch abundance and no changes at the level of fructan accumulation in leaves of either winter or spring wheat when compared with controls. However, high light‐acclimated winter wheat exhibited a 1.8‐fold higher neutral invertase activity and high light‐acclimated spring wheat exhibited an induction of SS(d) activity when compared with controls. Crowns of Monopol showed higher fructan accumulation than Katepwa upon cold and high light acclimation. We suggest that the differential adjustment of CO2‐saturated rates of CO2 assimilation upon cold acclimation in Monopol winter wheat, as compared with Katepwa spring wheat, is associated with the increased capacity of Monopol for sucrose utilisation through the biosynthesis of fructans in the leaves and subsequent export to the crowns. In contrast, the differential adjustment of CO2‐saturated rates of CO2 assimilation upon high light acclimation of Monopol appears to be associated with both increased fructan and starch accumulation in the crowns.  相似文献   

8.
Wild-type Arabidopsis plants, the starch-deficient mutant TL46, and the near-starchless mutant TL25 were evaluated by noninvasive in situ methods for their capacity for net CO2 assimilation, true rates of photosynthetic O2 evolution (determined from chlorophyll fluorescence measurements of photosystem II), partitioning of photosynthate into sucrose and starch, and plant growth. Compared with wild-type plants, the starch mutants showed reduced photosynthetic capacity, with the largest reduction occurring in mutant TL25 subjected to high light and increased CO2 partial pressure. The extent of stimulation of CO2 assimilation by increasing CO2 or by reducing O2 partial pressure was significantly less for the starch mutants than for wild-type plants. Under high light and moderate to high levels of CO2, the rates of CO2 assimilation and O2 evolution and the percentage inhibition of photosynthesis by low O2 were higher for the wild type than for the mutants. The relative rates of 14CO2 incorporation into starch under high light and high CO2 followed the patterns of photosynthetic capacity, with TL46 showing 31% to 40% of the starch-labeling rates of the wild type and TL25 showing less than 14% incorporation. Overall, there were significant correlations between the rates of starch synthesis and CO2 assimilation and between the rates of starch synthesis and cumulative leaf area. These results indicate that leaf starch plays an important role as a transient reserve, the synthesis of which can ameliorate any potential reduction in photosynthesis caused by feedback regulation.  相似文献   

9.
Long-term carbon dioxide enrichment, 14CO2 feeding, and partial defoliation were employed as probes to investigate source/sink limitations of photosynthesis during the development of symbiotically grown alfalfa. In the mature crop, long-term CO2 enrichment does not affect the rates of net photosynthesis, relative growth, 14C export to nonphotosynthetic organs, or the rates of 14C label incorporation into leaf sucrose, starch, or malate. The rate of glycolate labeling is, however, substantially reduced under these conditions. When the mature crop was partially defoliated, a considerable increase in net photosynthesis occurred in the remaining leaves. In the seedling crop, long-term CO2 enrichment increased dry matter accumulation, primarily as a result of increases in leaf starch content. Although the higher rates of starch synthesis are not maintained, the growth enhancement of the enriched plants persisted throughout the experimental period. These results imply a source limitation of seedling photosynthesis and a sink limitation of photosynthesis in more mature plants. Consequently, both the supply and the utilization of photosynthate may limit seasonal photosynthesis in alfalfa.  相似文献   

10.
Carbon partitioning and export from mature cotton leaves   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
The partitioning of carbon in intact, mature cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) leaves was examined by steady-state 14CO2 labeling. Plants were exposed to dark periods of varying lengths, followed by similar illuminated labeling periods. These treatments produced leaves with a range of starch and soluble sugar contents, carbon exchange, and carbon export rates. Export during the illuminated periods was neither highly correlated with photosynthesis nor was export during the illuminated periods significantly different among the treatments. In contrast, the rate of subsequent nocturnal carbon export from these leaves varied widely and was found to be highly correlated with leaf starch content at the end of the illumination period (r = 0.934) and with nocturnal leaf respiration (r = 0.954). Leaves which had accumulated the highest levels of starch (about 275 micrograms per square centimeter) by the end of the illumination period exhibited nocturnal export rates very similar to those during the daylight hours. Leaves which accumulated starch to only 50 to 75 micrograms per square centimeter virtually ceased nocturnal carbon export. For leaves with starch accumulations of between 50 and 275 micrograms per square centimeter, nocturnal export was directly proportional to leaf starch at the end of the illumination period. After the nocturnal export rate was established, it continued at a constant rate throughout the night even though leaf starch and sucrose contents declined.  相似文献   

11.
Fox TC  Geiger DR 《Plant physiology》1984,76(3):763-768
The relationship between CO2 concentration and starch synthesis and degradation was studied by measuring leaf starch content and disappearance of 14C-starch. At a concentration of 340 microliters CO2 per liter, starch accumulated without degradation of previously synthesized starch. Degradation of starch began when CO2 concentration was lowered, but its synthesis continued. At 120 microliters CO2 per liter rates of synthesis and degradation were equal. Even at the CO2 compensation point, synthesis of starch continued. Concomitant starch synthesis and mobilization supported export from the leaf. Changes in starch metabolism that occur when photosynthesis is CO2-limited provide a means to study regulation of starch metabolism and carbon allocation in translocating leaves.  相似文献   

12.
Hanson KR 《Plant physiology》1992,99(1):276-283
Mutant NS458 of Nicotiana sylvestris (Speg. et Comes) contains a defective plastid phosphoglucomutase and accumulates only trace amounts of starch. Determinations of carbon partitioning using tracer d-[3-14C]glyceric acid showed that the maximal CO2 assimilation by mature leaves of the mutant at saturating [CO2] and light and low [O2] was close to the flux for sucrose formation in the wild type. The mutant is characterized by exceptionally slow oscillations in maximal CO2 assimilation. The postulate that these slow oscillations follow changes in the cytosolic rate of sucrose phosphate synthesis has been investigated. Studies with wild-type and mutant leaf discs subjected to various treatments failed to indicate that any significant activation-inactivation cycle in sucrose-P synthase activity can occur. The rate of sucrose phosphate synthesis, however, might be altered by variations in the supply of uridine UDP-glucose which is controlled by the rate of ATP regeneration (via UTP regeneration). Treating mutant leaf protoplasts and young leaves with oligomycin, an inhibitor of mitochondrial ATP regeneration, reduced photosynthesis by as much as 25 and 40%, respectively. The wild type failed to show inhibition by oligomycin, i.e. its effect is masked when starch and sucrose synthesis can interact. It is concluded that maximal CO2 assimilation in the mutant is fine tuned by mitochondrial metabolism such that interactions between sucrose synthesis and mitochondrial processes may generate the observed oscillations.  相似文献   

13.
While flux balance analysis (FBA) provides a framework for predicting steady-state leaf metabolic network fluxes, it does not readily capture the response to environmental variables without being coupled to other modelling formulations. To address this, we coupled an FBA model of 903 reactions of soybean (Glycine max) leaf metabolism with e-photosynthesis, a dynamic model that captures the kinetics of 126 reactions of photosynthesis and associated chloroplast carbon metabolism. Successful coupling was achieved in an iterative formulation in which fluxes from e-photosynthesis were used to constrain the FBA model and then, in turn, fluxes computed from the FBA model used to update parameters in e-photosynthesis. This process was repeated until common fluxes in the two models converged. Coupling did not hamper the ability of the kinetic module to accurately predict the carbon assimilation rate, photosystem II electron flux, and starch accumulation of field-grown soybean at two CO2 concentrations. The coupled model also allowed accurate predictions of additional parameters such as nocturnal respiration, as well as analysis of the effect of light intensity and elevated CO2 on leaf metabolism. Predictions included an unexpected decrease in the rate of export of sucrose from the leaf at high light, due to altered starch–sucrose partitioning, and altered daytime flux modes in the tricarboxylic acid cycle at elevated CO2. Mitochondrial fluxes were notably different between growing and mature leaves, with greater anaplerotic, tricarboxylic acid cycle and mitochondrial ATP synthase fluxes predicted in the former, primarily to provide carbon skeletons and energy for protein synthesis.  相似文献   

14.
The control of photosynthetic starch/sucrose formation in leaves of soybean (Glycine max L. Merr.) cultivars was studied in relation to stage of plant development, photosynthetic photoperiod, and nitrogen source. At each sampling, leaf tissue was analyzed for starch content, activities of sucrose-metabolizing enzymes, and labeling of starch and sucrose (by 14CO2 assimilation) in isolated cells. In three of the four varieties tested, nodulated plants had lower leaf starch levels and higher activities of sucrose phosphate synthetase (SPS), and isolated mesophyll cells incorporated more carbon (percentage of total 14CO2 fixed) into sucrose and less into starch as compared to nonnodulated (nitrate-dependent) plants. The variation among cultivars and nitrogen treatments observed in the activity of SPS in leaf extracts was positively correlated with labeling of sucrose in isolated cells (r = 0.81) and negatively correlated with whole leaf starch content (r = −0.66). The results suggested that increased demand for assimilates by nodulated roots may be accommodated by greater partitioning of carbon into sucrose in the mesophyll cells. We have also confirmed the earlier report (Chatterton, Silvius 1979 Plant Physiol 64: 749-753) that photoperiod affects partitioning of fixed carbon into starch. Within two days of transfer of nodulated soybean Ransom plants from a 14-hour to a 7-hour photoperiod, leaf starch accumulation rates doubled, and this effect was associated with increased labeling of starch and decreased labeling of sucrose in isolated cells. Concurrently, activities of SPS, sucrose synthase, and uridine diphosphatase in leaves were decreased.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Potter JR 《Plant physiology》1980,66(3):528-531
Sunflower (cv. “Mammoth Greystripe”) and soybean (Merr. cv. “Amsoy 71”) leaves were exposed to continuous light for at least 52 hours in an attempt to determine the relationship between leaf starch levels and photosynthetic rates. Immature rapidly expanding and relatively mature slowly expanding sunflower leaves were studied. After 52 hours continuous light, the rapidly expanding leaves accumulated high starch levels (3.3 milligrams per square centimeter, 43% of dry weight) with only about a 10% decline from the initial photosynthetic rate of 42 milligrams CO2 per square decimeter per hour. Under the same conditions, the slowly expanding leaves accumulated less starch, but the photosynthetic rate declined 30%. Soybean leaves, which were slowly expanding, accumulated less starch than sunflower leaves (2.1 milligrams per square centimeter, 34% of dry weight), and their photosynthetic rates declined only about 10% after 54 hours continuous light.  相似文献   

17.
Soybean (Glycine max L. Merr.) germplasm, essentially isogenic except for loci controlling male sterility (ms1) and nodulation (rj1), were developed to study the effects of reproductive development and nitrogen source on certain aspects of photosynthesis. Plants were sampled from flowering (77 days after transplanting) until maturity (150 days after transplanting). With all four genotypes, net carbon exchange rates were highest at flowering and declined thereafter. Photosynthetic rates of the sterile genotypes (nodulated and non-nodulated) declined more rapidly than the fertile genotypes, and after 105 days, both sterile genotypes maintained low but relatively constant carbon exchange rates (<3 milligrams CO2/gram fresh weight per hour). Photosynthetic rates and starch accumulation (difference between afternoon and morning levels) declined with time. The sterile genotypes attained the highest morning starch levels, which reflected reduced starch mobilization. After 92 days, the proportion of photosynthetically fixed carbon that was partitioning into starch (relative leaf starch accumulation) in the sterile genotypes increased dramatically. In contrast, relative leaf starch accumulation in the fertile genotypes remained relatively constant with time. Throughout the test period, all four genotypes maintained leaf sucrose levels between 5 and 15 micromoles glucose equivalents per gram fresh weight.

The activities of sucrose phosphate synthase (SPS) in leaf extracts of the four genotypes declined from 77 to 147 days. Nodulated genotypes tended to maintain higher activities (leaf fresh weight basis) than did the non-nodulated genotypes. In general, relative leaf starch accumulation was correlated negatively with the activity of SPS (normalized with leaf net carbon exchange rate) in leaf extracts for all four genotypes during early reproductive development, and for the fertile genotypes at all sampling dates. In contrast, leaf sucrose content was correlated positively with SPS activity during early reproductive development. These results suggested that a direct relation existed between the activity of SPS and starch/sucrose levels in soybean leaves. However, the interaction between these processes also may be influenced by other factors, particularly when leaf photosynthetic rates and plant demand for assimilates is low, as in the sterile genotypes.

  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.
Small birch plants (Betula pendula Roth.) were grown from seed for periods of up to 70d in a climate chamber at optimal nutrition and at present (350 μmol mol?1) or elevated (700 μmol mol?1) concentrations of atmospheric CO2. Nutrients were sprayed over the roots in Ingestad-type units. Relative growth rate and net assimilation rate were slightly higher at elevated CO2, whereas leaf area ratio was slightly lower. Smaller leaf area ratio was associated with lower values of specific leaf area. Leaves grown at elevated CO2 had higher starch concentrations (dry weight basis) than leaves grown at present levels of CO2. Biomass allocation showed no change with CO2, and no large effects on stem height, number of side shoots and number of leaves were found. However, the specific root length of fine roots was higher at elevated CO2. No large difference in the response of carbon assimilation to intercellular CO2 concentration (A/Ci curves) were found between CO2 treatments. When measured at the growth environments, the rates of photosynthesis were higher in plants grown at elevated CO2 than in plants grown at present CO2. Water use efficiency of single leaves was higher in the elevated treatment. This was mainly attributable to higher carbon assimilation rate at elevated CO2. The difference in water use efficiency diminished with leaf age. The small treatment difference in relative growth rate was maintained throughout the experiment, which meant that the difference in plant size became progressively greater. Thus, where plant nutrition is sufficient to maintain maximum growth, small birch plants may potentially increase in size more rapidly at elevated CO2.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of low phosphate supply (low P) was determined on the diurnal changes in the rate of carbon export, and on the contents of starch, sucrose, glucose, and fructose 2,6-bisphosphate (F2,6BP) in leaves. Low-P effects on the activities of a number of enzymes involved in starch and sucrose metabolism were also measured. Sugar beets (Beta vulgaris L. cv. F58-554H1) were cultured hydroponically in growth chambers and the low-P treatment induced nutritionally. Low-P treatment decreased carbon export from the leaf much more than it decreased photosynthesis. At growth chamber photon flux density, low P decreased carbon export by 34% in light; in darkness, export rates fell but more so in the control so that the average rate in darkness was higher in low-P leaves. Low P increased starch, sucrose, and glucose contents per leaf area, and decreased F2, 6BP. The total extractable activities of enzymes involved in starch and sucrose synthesis were increased markedly by low P, e.g. adenosine 5-diphosphoglucose pyrophosphorylase, cytoplasmic fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase, uridine 5-diphosphoglucose pyrophosphorylase, and sucrose-phosphate synthase. The activities of some enzymes involved in starch and sucrose breakdown were also increased by low P. We propose that plants adapt to low-P environments by increasing the total activities of several phosphatases and by increasing the concentrations of phosphate-free carbon compounds at the expense of sugar phosphates, thereby conserving Pi. The partitioning of carbon among the various carbon pools in low-P adapted leaves appears to be determined in part by the relative capacities of the enzymes for starch and sucrose metabolism.  相似文献   

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