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1.
Yeast pseudohyphal filamentation is a stress-responsive growth transition relevant to processes required for virulence in pathogenic fungi. Pseudohyphal growth is controlled through a regulatory network encompassing conserved MAPK (Ste20p, Ste11p, Ste7p, Kss1p, and Fus3p), protein kinase A (Tpk2p), Elm1p, and Snf1p kinase pathways; however, the scope of these pathways is not fully understood. Here, we implemented quantitative phosphoproteomics to identify each of these signaling networks, generating a kinase-dead mutant in filamentous S. cerevisiae and surveying for differential phosphorylation. By this approach, we identified 439 phosphoproteins dependent upon pseudohyphal growth kinases. We report novel phosphorylation sites in 543 peptides, including phosphorylated residues in Ras2p and Flo8p required for wild-type filamentous growth. Phosphoproteins in these kinase signaling networks were enriched for ribonucleoprotein (RNP) granule components, and we observe co-localization of Kss1p, Fus3p, Ste20p, and Tpk2p with the RNP component Igo1p. These kinases localize in puncta with GFP-visualized mRNA, and KSS1 is required for wild-type levels of mRNA localization in RNPs. Kss1p pathway activity is reduced in lsm1Δ/Δ and pat1Δ/Δ strains, and these genes encoding P-body proteins are epistatic to STE7. The P-body protein Dhh1p is also required for hyphal development in Candida albicans. Collectively, this study presents a wealth of data identifying the yeast phosphoproteome in pseudohyphal growth and regulatory interrelationships between pseudohyphal growth kinases and RNPs.  相似文献   

2.
The Snf1 protein kinase of Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been shown to have a role in regulating haploid invasive growth in response to glucose depletion. Cells contain three forms of the Snf1 kinase, each with a different beta-subunit isoform, either Gal83, Sip1, or Sip2. We present evidence that different Snf1 kinases play distinct roles in two aspects of invasive growth, namely, adherence to the agar substrate and filamentation. The Snf1-Gal83 form of the kinase is required for adherence, whereas either Snf1-Gal83 or Snf1-Sip2 is sufficient for filamentation. Genetic evidence indicates that Snf1-Gal83 affects adherence by antagonizing Nrg1- and Nrg2-mediated repression of the FLO11 flocculin and adhesin gene. In contrast, the mechanism(s) by which Snf1-Gal83 and Snf1-Sip2 affect filamentation is independent of FLO11. Thus, the Snf1 kinase regulates invasive growth by at least two distinct mechanisms.  相似文献   

3.
4.
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Snf1 protein kinase is important for growth on carbon sources that are less preferred than glucose. When glucose becomes limiting, Snf1 undergoes catalytic activation, which requires phosphorylation of its T-loop threonine (Thr210). Thr210 phosphorylation can be performed by any of three Snf1-activating kinases: Sak1, Tos3, and Elm1. These kinases are redundant in that all three must be eliminated to confer snf1Δ-like growth defects on nonpreferred carbon sources. We previously showed that in addition to glucose signaling, Snf1 also participates in nitrogen signaling and is required for diploid pseudohyphal differentiation, a filamentous-growth response to nitrogen limitation. Here, we addressed the roles of the Snf1-activating kinases in this process. Loss of Sak1 caused a defect in pseudohyphal differentiation, whereas Tos3 and Elm1 were dispensable. Sak1 was also required for increased Thr210 phosphorylation of Snf1 under nitrogen-limiting conditions. Expression of a catalytically hyperactive version of Snf1 restored pseudohyphal differentiation in the sak1Δ/sak1Δ mutant. Thus, while the Snf1-activating kinases exhibit redundancy for growth on nonpreferred carbon sources, the loss of Sak1 alone produced a significant defect in a nitrogen-regulated phenotype, and this defect resulted from deficient Snf1 activation rather than from disruption of another pathway. Our results suggest that Sak1 is involved in nitrogen signaling upstream of Snf1.Snf1 protein kinase of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae belongs to the conserved Snf1/AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) family; members of this family play central roles in responses to metabolic stress in eukaryotes (reviewed in references 17 and 18). Interest in Snf1/AMPK pathways is high due to their important functions. Deregulation of AMPK signaling in humans has been linked to type 2 diabetes, heart disease, and cancer (for a review, see reference 16). Snf1 homologs of pathogenic fungi have been implicated in virulence and drug resistance (23, 63, 64).Yeast Snf1 (Cat1, Ccr1) was first identified by its requirement for growth on carbon sources that are less preferred than glucose (5, 7, 65). Subsequent evidence indicated that Snf1 protein kinase (6) is directly involved in glucose signaling, since its activity is stimulated in response to glucose limitation (62). Catalytic activation of Snf1 occurs through phosphorylation of its conserved T-loop threonine (Thr210) (12) by upstream kinases (40, 62). Three protein kinases—Sak1, Tos3, and Elm1—have been identified that can phosphorylate Thr210 of Snf1 (22, 41, 55). These kinases are related to the mammalian kinases that activate AMPK by phosphorylating the equivalent T-loop threonine (Thr172) (reviewed in references 17 and 18). We recently presented evidence that Snf1 homologs of two pathogenic Candida species, Candida albicans and C. glabrata, also undergo T-loop phosphorylation (42).It is not entirely clear why S. cerevisiae has three different kinases that can activate Snf1. Judging by assays of Snf1 kinase activity, Sak1 makes the largest individual contribution to Snf1 activation in the cell (19, 22). However, deletion of SAK1 alone does not result in growth defects on alternative carbon sources, and all three Snf1-activating kinases must be eliminated to produce a phenotypic defect comparable to that of the snf1Δ mutant (22, 39, 55). Deletion of TOS3 was reported to moderately affect growth on nonfermentable carbon sources; this correlated with a reduction in Snf1 activity, although effects on another pathway(s) cannot be excluded (25). Mutation of ELM1 affects cell cycle progression and cell morphology, but this effect is unrelated to Elm1''s role as a Snf1-activating kinase and pertains to its role in the activation of Nim1-related protein kinases involved in morphogenesis checkpoint control (1, 56).While showing significant redundancy for growth on nonpreferred carbon sources, the Snf1-activating kinases could exhibit specialization in Snf1 signaling in response to stresses other than carbon stress. Evidence indicates that Snf1 is important for adaptation to a number of stress conditions (reviewed in reference 18). In some cases, such as genotoxic stress or exposure to hygromycin B, weak activity of unphosphorylated Snf1 appears to be sufficient for resistance (10, 48). In others, such as sodium ion stress and alkaline stress, Thr210 phosphorylation of Snf1 is required for adaptation, and Snf1 becomes activated upon stress exposure (21, 40). As with glucose limitation, however, in these latter cases Sak1 makes the largest contribution to Snf1 activation judging by biochemical assays, and yet it remains dispensable for wild-type levels of stress-resistant growth in phenotypic tests; loss of all three Snf1-activating kinases results in growth defects comparable to those of cells lacking Snf1 (21). Thus, investigation of these stresses provided no evidence for phenotypically relevant specialization of Sak1, Tos3, or Elm1 in Snf1 signaling.Diploid pseudohyphal differentiation is a developmental response to nitrogen limitation (15). When nitrogen becomes limiting, diploid cells adopt elongated morphology, alter their budding pattern, and generate filaments (pseudohyphae) consisting of chains of cells attached to one another. One of the key events in this process is activation of the FLO11 (MUC1) gene, which encodes a cell surface glycoprotein involved in cell-cell adhesion (29, 33, 34). Following up on an observation that Snf1 is important for FLO11 expression on low glucose, we previously found that diploids lacking Snf1 fail to undergo pseudohyphal differentiation on low nitrogen (27, 28). The requirement of Snf1 for a nitrogen-regulated process raised the possibility that Snf1 is directly involved in nitrogen signaling. In support of this notion, we subsequently showed that weak activity of nonphosphorylatable Snf1-T210A is not sufficient for pseudohyphal differentiation and that Thr210 phosphorylation of Snf1 increases in response to nitrogen limitation (43).Here, we have examined the roles of Sak1, Tos3, and Elm1 in pseudohyphal differentiation and Snf1 activation on low nitrogen. We show that elimination of Sak1 leads to a significant defect in nitrogen-regulated pseudohyphal differentiation, whereas Tos3 and Elm1 are dispensable. Sak1 is also required for normal Thr210 phosphorylation of Snf1 under nitrogen-limiting conditions. Our data strongly suggest that the loss of Sak1 affects pseudohyphal differentiation by affecting Snf1 activation and not by disruption of another pathway. Collectively, our findings implicate Sak1 in nitrogen signaling upstream of Snf1.  相似文献   

5.
6.
The ability to form hyphae in the human pathogenic fungus Candida albicans is a prerequisite for virulence. It contributes to tissue infection, biofilm formation, as well as escape from phagocytes. Cell elongation triggered by human body temperature involves the essential heat shock protein Hsp90, which negatively governs a filamentation program dependent upon the Ras-protein kinase A (PKA) pathway. Tight regulation of Hsp90 function is required to ensure fast appropriate response and maintenance of a wide range of regulatory and signaling proteins. Client protein activation by Hsp90 relies on a conformational change of the chaperone, whose ATPase activity is competitively inhibited by geldanamycin. We demonstrate a novel regulatory mechanism of heat- and Hsp90-dependent induced morphogenesis, whereby the nonreducing disaccharide trehalose acts as a negative regulator of Hsp90 release. By means of a mutant strain deleted for Gpr1, the G protein-coupled receptor upstream of PKA, we demonstrate that elevated trehalose content in that strain, resulting from misregulation of enzymatic activities involved in trehalose metabolism, disrupts the filamentation program in response to heat. Addition of geldanamycin does not result in hyphal extensions at 30 °C in the gpr1Δ/gpr1Δ mutant as it does in wild type cells. In addition, validamycin, a specific inhibitor of trehalase, the trehalose-degrading enzyme, inhibits cell elongation in response to heat and geldanamycin. These results place Gpr1 as a regulator of trehalose metabolism in C. albicans and illustrate that trehalose modulates Hsp90-dependent activation of client proteins and signaling pathways leading to filamentation in the human fungal pathogen.  相似文献   

7.
8.
In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the Snf1 protein kinase of the Snf1/AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) family regulates a wide range of responses to stress caused by glucose deprivation. The stress signal is relayed via upregulation of Snf1, which depends on phosphorylation of its activation loop Thr210 residue by upstream kinases. Although Snf1 is also required for coping with various stresses unrelated to glucose deprivation, some evidence suggests a role for low-level basal activity of unphosphorylated Snf1, rather than a specific signaling function. We previously found that Snf1 is required for diploid pseudohyphal differentiation, a developmental response to nitrogen limitation. Here, we present evidence that Snf1 is directly involved in nitrogen signaling. First, genetic analyses suggest that pseudohyphal differentiation depends on the stimulatory phosphorylation of Snf1 at Thr210. Second, immunochemical data indicate that nitrogen limitation improves Thr210 phosphorylation. Analyses of pseudohyphal differentiation in cells with catalytically inactive and hyperactive Snf1 support the role of Snf1 activity. Finally, we show that Snf1 is negatively regulated by the rapamycin-sensitive TOR kinase which plays essential roles in signaling nitrogen and amino acid availability. This and other evidence implicate Snf1 in the integration of signals regarding nitrogen and carbon stress. TOR and Snf1/AMPK are highly conserved in evolution, and their novel functional interaction in yeast suggests similar mechanisms in other eukaryotes.  相似文献   

9.
alpha-Glucosides are the most abundant fermentable sugars in the industrial applications of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and the active transport across the plasma membrane is the rate-limiting step for their metabolism. In this report we performed a detailed kinetic analysis of the active alpha-glucoside transport system(s) present in a wild-type strain, and in strains with defined alpha-glucoside permeases. Our results indicate that the wild-type strain harbors active transporters with high and low affinity for maltose and trehalose, and low-affinity transport systems for maltotriose and alpha-methylglucoside. The maltose permease encoded by the MAL21 gene showed a high affinity (K(m) approximately 5 mM) for maltose, and a low affinity (K(m) approximately 90 mM) for trehalose. On the other hand, the alpha-glucoside permease encoded by the AGT1 gene had a high affinity (K(m) approximately 7 mM) for trehalose, a low affinity (K(m) approximately 18 mM) for maltose and maltotriose, and a very low affinity (K(m) approximately 35 mM) for alpha-methylglucoside.  相似文献   

10.
A transglucosylase of Streptococcus bovis   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
1. A transglucosylase has been separated from the α-amylase of Streptococcus bovis by chromatography of the cell extract on DEAE-cellulose. 2. The transglucosylase can synthesize higher maltodextrins from maltotriose, but maltose, isomaltose and panose do not function as donors. 3. Iodine-staining polysaccharide may be synthesized from maltotriose provided that glucose is removed. Synthesis from maltohexaose results in dextrins of sufficient chain length to stain with iodine, but again maltodextrins of longer chain length are formed when glucose is removed from the system. 4. The transglucosylase degrades amylose in the presence of a suitable acceptor, transferring one or more glucosyl residues from the non-reducing end of the donor to the non-reducing end of the acceptor. With [14C]glucose as acceptor the maltodextrins produced were labelled in the reducing glucose unit only. 5. The acceptor activities of 25 sugars have been compared with that of glucose. Maltose has 50%, methyl α-glucoside has 15%, isomaltose and panose each has 8% and sucrose has 6% of the accepting efficiency of glucose. Mannose and sorbose also had detectable activity. With the exception of maltose all these sugars produced a different series of dextrins from that obtained with glucose. 6. It was concluded that S. bovis transglucosylase transfers α-(1→4)-glucosidic linkages in the same manner as D-enzyme, but some differences in specificity distinguish the two enzymes. Unlike D-enzyme, S. bovis transglucosylase can transfer glucosyl units, producing appreciable amounts of maltose both during synthesis from maltotriose and during transfer from amylose to glucose. 7. No evidence was found that the transglucosylase was extracellular. The enzyme is cell-bound, and is released by treatment of the cells with lysozyme and by suspension of the spheroplasts in dilute buffer. 8. The transglucosylase may be responsible for the storage of intracellular iodophilic polysaccharide that occurs when the cells are grown in the presence of suitable carbohydrate sources.  相似文献   

11.
Pseudohyphal differentiation in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is induced in diploid cells in response to nitrogen starvation and abundant fermentable carbon source. Filamentous growth requires at least two signaling pathways: the pheromone responsive MAP kinase cascade and the Gpa2p-cAMP-PKA signaling pathway. Recent studies have established a physical and functional link between the Galpha protein Gpa2 and the G protein-coupled receptor homolog Gpr1. We report here that the Gpr1 receptor is required for filamentous and haploid invasive growth and regulates expression of the cell surface flocculin Flo11. Epistasis analysis supports a model in which the Gpr1 receptor regulates pseudohyphal growth via the Gpa2p-cAMP-PKA pathway and independently of both the MAP kinase cascade and the PKA related kinase Sch9. Genetic and physiological studies indicate that the Gpr1 receptor is activated by glucose and other structurally related sugars. Because expression of the GPR1 gene is known to be induced by nitrogen starvation, the Gpr1 receptor may serve as a dual sensor of abundant carbon source (sugar ligand) and nitrogen starvation. In summary, our studies reveal a novel G protein-coupled receptor senses nutrients and regulates the dimorphic transition to filamentous growth via a Galpha protein-cAMP-PKA signal transduction cascade.  相似文献   

12.
The SNF1/AMP-activated protein kinases (AMPKs) function in energy regulation in eukaryotic cells. SNF1/AMPKs are αβγ heterotrimers that are activated by phosphorylation of the activation loop Thr on the catalytic subunit. Protein kinases that activate SNF1/AMPK have been identified, but the protein phosphatases responsible for dephosphorylation of the activation loop are less well defined. For Saccharomyces cerevisiae SNF1/AMPK, Reg1-Glc7 protein phosphatase 1 and Sit4 type 2A-related phosphatase function together to dephosphorylate Thr-210 on the Snf1 catalytic subunit during growth on high concentrations of glucose; reg1Δ and sit4Δ single mutations do not impair dephosphorylation when inappropriate glycogen synthesis, also caused by these mutations, is blocked. We here present evidence that Ptc1 protein phosphatase 2C also has a role in dephosphorylation of Snf1 Thr-210 in vivo. The sit4Δ ptc1Δ mutant exhibited partial defects in regulation of the phosphorylation state of Snf1. The reg1Δ ptc1Δ mutant was viable only when expressing mutant Snf1 proteins with reduced kinase activity, and Thr-210 phosphorylation of the mutant SNF1 heterotrimers was substantially elevated during growth on high glucose. This evidence, together with findings on the reg1Δ sit4Δ mutant, indicates that although Reg1-Glc7 plays the major role, all three phosphatases contribute to maintenance of the Snf1 activation loop in the dephosphorylated state during growth on high glucose. Ptc1 has overlapping functions with Reg1-Glc7 and Sit4 in glucose regulation of SNF1/AMPK and cell viability.  相似文献   

13.
14.
In Fusarium fujikuroi, the production of gibberellins and bikaverin is repressed by nitrogen sources such as glutamine or ammonium. Sensing and uptake of ammonium by specific permeases play key roles in nitrogen metabolism. Here, we describe the cloning of three ammonium permease genes, mepA, mepB, and mepC, and their participation in ammonium uptake and signal transduction in F. fujikuroi. The expression of all three genes is strictly regulated by the nitrogen regulator AreA. Severe growth defects of ΔmepB mutants on low-ammonium medium and methylamine uptake studies suggest that MepB functions as the main ammonium permease in F. fujikuroi. In ΔmepB mutants, nitrogen-regulated genes such as the gibberellin and bikaverin biosynthetic genes are derepressed in spite of high extracellular ammonium concentrations. mepA mepB and mepC mepB double mutants show a similar phenotype as ΔmepB mutants. All three F. fujikuroi mep genes fully complemented the Saccharomyces cerevisiae mep1 mep2 mep3 triple mutant to restore growth on low-ammonium medium, whereas only MepA and MepC restored pseudohyphal growth in the mep2/mep2 mutant. Overexpression of mepC in the ΔmepB mutants partially suppressed the growth defect but did not prevent derepression of AreA-regulated genes. These studies provide evidence that MepB functions as a regulatory element in a nitrogen sensing system in F. fujikuroi yet does not provide the sensor activity of Mep2 in yeast, indicating differences in the mechanisms by which nitrogen is sensed in S. cerevisiae and F. fujikuroi.  相似文献   

15.
Haploid Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells growing on media lacking glucose but containing high concentrations of carbon sources such as fructose, galactose, raffinose, and ethanol exhibit enhanced agar invasion. These carbon sources also promote diploid filamentous growth in response to nitrogen starvation. The enhanced invasive and filamentous growth phenotypes are suppressed by the addition of glucose to the media and require the Snf1 kinase. Mutations in the PGI1 and GND1 genes encoding carbon source utilization enzymes confer enhanced invasive growth that is unaffected by glucose but requires active Snf1. Carbon source does not modulate FLO11 flocculin expression, but enhanced polarized bud site selection is necessary for invasion on certain carbon sources. Interestingly, deletion of SNF1 blocks invasion without affecting bud site selection. Snf1 is also required for formation of spokes and hubs in multicellular mats. To examine glucose repression of invasive growth more broadly, we performed genome-wide microarray expression analysis in wild-type cells growing on glucose and galactose, and snf1 Delta cells on galactose. SNF1 probably mediates glucose repression of multiple genes potentially involved in invasive and filamentous growth. FLO11-independent cell-cell attachment, cell wall integrity, and/or polarized growth are affected by carbon source metabolism. In addition, derepression of cell cycle genes and signalling via the cAMP-PKA pathway appears to depend upon SNF1 activity during growth on galactose.  相似文献   

16.
Activation of the Snf1 kinase requires at least two events, phosphorylation of the activation loop on threonine 210 and an Snf4-dependent process that is not completely defined. Snf4 directly interacts with a region of the regulatory domain of Snf1 that may otherwise act as an autoinhibitory domain. In order to gain insight into the regulation of Snf1 kinase by Snf4, deletions in the regulatory domain of the catalytic subunit were engineered and tested for their effect on Snf1 function in the absence of Snf4. Deletion of residues 381 to 488 from the Snf1 protein resulted in a kinase that was activated by glucose limitation even in the absence of the Snf4 protein. A larger deletion (amino acids 381 to 608) encompassing virtually the entire regulatory domain resulted in complete inactivation of the Snf1 kinase even in the presence of Snf4. A genetic screen for amino acid substitutions that conferred an Snf4-independent phenotype identified four point mutations in the Snf1 catalytic domain. One very conservative mutation, leucine 183 to isoleucine, conferred nearly wild-type levels of Snf1 kinase function in the absence of the Snf4 protein. Purified Snf1 kinase was inactive when isolated from snf4Δ cells, whereas the Snf1-L183I kinase exhibited significant activity in the absence of Snf4. Our data support the idea that Snf1 kinase activity is constrained in cis by an autoinhibitory domain and that the Snf4-mediated activation of Snf1 can be bypassed by subtle conformational changes in the catalytic domain of the Snf1 kinase.  相似文献   

17.
Maltotriose utilization by Saccharomyces cerevisiae and closely related yeasts is important to industrial processes based on starch hydrolysates, where the trisaccharide is present in significant concentrations and often is not completely consumed. We undertook an integrated study to better understand maltotriose metabolism in a mixture with glucose and maltose. Physiological data obtained for a particularly fast-growing distiller's strain (PYCC 5297) showed that, in contrast to what has been previously reported for other strains, maltotriose is essentially fermented. The respiratory quotient was, however, considerably higher for maltotriose (0.36) than for maltose (0.16) or glucose (0.11). To assess the role of transport in the sequential utilization of maltose and maltotriose, we investigated the presence of genes involved in maltotriose uptake in the type strain of Saccharomyces carlsbergensis (PYCC 4457). To this end, a previously constructed genomic library was used to identify maltotriose transporter genes by functional complementation of a strain devoid of known maltose transporters. One gene, clearly belonging to the MAL transporter family, was repeatedly isolated from the library. Sequence comparison showed that the novel gene (designated MTY1) shares 90% and 54% identity with MAL31 and AGT1, respectively. However, expression of Mty1p restores growth of the S. cerevisiae receptor strain on both maltose and maltotriose, whereas the closely related Mal31p supports growth on maltose only and Agt1p supports growth on a wider range of substrates, including maltose and maltotriose. Interestingly, Mty1p displays higher affinity for maltotriose than for maltose, a new feature among all the α-glucoside transporters described so far.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Various sugars were introduced by electroporation into perennial ryegrass protoplasts, and the involvement of intracellular functional groups of the sugars in salt tolerance was investigated. The protoplasts were prepared from the young leaves of perennial ryegrass, and those into which sugars were introduced were treated with NaCl solution (250 mM, pH 7.0) for 6 h at 10°C. The survival rate of the protoplasts increased when xylitol, cellobiose, 1-kestose, maltose, maltotriose, raffinose and trehalose were introduced, while no changes occurred when fructose, fucose, galactose, glucose, inositol, mannitol, mannose, rhamnose, sorbitol, sorbose, fructobiose, lactose and sucrose were introduced. Cellobiose, 1-kestose, maltose, maltotriose, raffinose and trehalose possess a number of equatorial OH (e-OH) groups that promote the structuration of H2O. Xylitol, however, structures H2O even though it does not possess the e-OH groups. Hence, it is suggested that under conditions of NaCl stress, structured H2O protects the structure of cell membranes and the activity of enzymes, and that e-OH groups are involved in enhancing salt tolerance.  相似文献   

20.
Unimbibed Amaranthus caudatus seeds were found to contain stachyose, raffinose, verbascose, sucrose, galactinol, myo-inositol, glucose and fructose, while no galactose, maltose and maltotriose was detected. During imbibition, seed concentrations of verbascose, stachyose, raffinose, galactinol, myo-inositol (temporary) and fructose (transient) were observed to decrease; concentrations of galactose and maltose remained fairly constant, while those of sucrose, glucose and maltotriose increased, the increase in sucrose concentration was only temporary. Effects of gibberellin A3 (GA3) at 3 × 10−4 M and ethephon at 3 × 10−4 M alone or in the presence of methyl jasmonate (Me-JA) at 10−3 M on concentrations of soluble sugars during germination of A. caudatus seeds were examined. Me-JA was found to inhibit seed germination and fresh weight of the seeds, but did not affect sucrose, myo-inositol, galactose and maltose concentrations during imbibition for up to 20 h. The exogenously applied GA3 was observed to enhance germination, stachyose breakdown and glucose concentration after 20 h of incubation. Ethephon stimulated seed germination as well as utilisation of stachyose, galactinol (both after 14 and 20 h) and raffinose (after 14 h of incubation). Although the stimulatory effect of either GA3 or ethephon on seed germination was blocked by Me-JA; these stimulators increased mobilisation of raffinose and stachyose, but only ethephon enhanced both glucose and fructose after 14 and/or 20 h of incubation in the presence of Me-JA. The maltose concentration was increased by both GA3 and ethephon alone and in the presence of Me-JA. Of the growth regulators studied, ethephon alone and/or in combination with Me-JA significantly increased the concentrations of glucose, fructose, galactose, maltose and maltotriose. The differences in sugar metabolism appear to be linked to ethylene or GA3 applied simultaneously with Me-JA.  相似文献   

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