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1.
Cassava (Manihot esculenta, Crantz) is an important staple crop for tropical climates worldwide, including drought-prone environments where it is valued for its reliable yield. The extent to which stress tolerance involves regulation of growth and carbon balance aided by remobilization of carbohydrate from various plant parts was investigated. Plants were grown in 1-meter high pots to permit observation of deep rooting while they were subjected to four soil water regimes over a 30-d period. Transpiration declined abruptly in conjunction with leaf ABA accumulation and severe leaf abscission. In water stressed plants, growth of all plant parts decreased substantially; however, a basal rate of leaf growth continued to provide some new leaves, and although growth of fibrous lateral roots was reduced, main root elongation to deeper regions was only modestly decreased by stress. In leaf blades and petioles, sugars were the predominant form of nonstructural carbohydrate and about one third was in starch; these reserves were depleted rapidly during stress. In contrast, stems and storage roots maintained relatively high starch concentrations and contents per organ until final harvest. Stems gradually lost starch and had sufficient reserves to serve as a prolonged source of remobilized carbohydrate during stress. The amount of starch stored in stems represented about 35 % of the reserve carbohydrate in the plant at the onset of water stress (T0), and 6 % of total plant dry mass. We suggest that this pool of carbohydrate reserves is important in sustaining meristems, growing organs, and respiring organs during a prolonged stress and providing reserves for regrowth upon resumed rainfall.  相似文献   

2.
Nodulated soybean plants (Glycine max [L.] Merr. cv Ransom) in a growth-chamber study were subjected to a leaf water potential (psi w) of -2.0 megapascal during vegetative growth. Changes in nonstructural carbohydrate contents of leaves, stems, roots, and nodules, allocation of dry matter among plant parts, in situ specific nodule activity, and in situ canopy apparent photosynthetic rate were measured in stressed and nonstressed plants during a 7-day period following rewatering. Leaf and nodule psi w also were determined. At the time of maximum stress, concentration of nonstructural carbohydrates had declined in leaves of stressed, relative to nonstressed, plants, and the concentration of nonstructural carbohydrates had increased in stems, roots, and nodules. Sucrose concentrations in roots and nodules of stressed plants were 1.5 and 3 times greater, respectively, than those of nonstressed plants. Within 12 hours after rewatering, leaf and nodule psi w of stressed plants had returned to values of nonstressed plants. Canopy apparent photosynthesis and specific nodule activity of stressed plants recovered to levels for nonstressed plants within 2 days after rewatering. The elevated sucrose concentrations in roots and nodules of stressed plants also declined rapidly upon rehydration. The increase in sucrose concentration in nodules, as well as the increase of carbohydrates in roots and stems, during water stress and the rapid disappearance upon rewatering indicates that inhibition of carbohydrate utilization within the nodule may be associated with loss of nodule activity. Availability of carbohydrates within the nodules and from photosynthetic activity following rehydration of nodules may mediate the rate of recovery of N2-fixation activity.  相似文献   

3.
Nodulated soybean plants (Glycine max [L.] Merr. cv Ransom) in a growth-chamber study were subjected to a leaf water potential (Ψw) of −2.0 megapascal during vegetative growth. Changes in nonstructural carbohydrate contents of leaves, stems, roots, and nodules, allocation of dry matter among plant parts, in situ specific nodule activity, and in situ canopy apparent photosynthetic rate were measured in stressed and nonstressed plants during a 7-day period following rewatering. Leaf and nodule Ψw also were determined. At the time of maximum stress, concentration of nonstructural carbohydrates had declined in leaves of stressed, relative to nonstressed, plants, and the concentration of nonstructural carbohydrates had increased in stems, roots, and nodules. Sucrose concentrations in roots and nodules of stressed plants were 1.5 and 3 times greater, respectively, than those of nonstressed plants. Within 12 hours after rewatering, leaf and nodule Ψw of stressed plants had returned to values of nonstressed plants. Canopy apparent photosynthesis and specific nodule activity of stressed plants recovered to levels for nonstressed plants within 2 days after rewatering. The elevated sucrose concentrations in roots and nodules of stressed plants also declined rapidly upon rehydration. The increase in sucrose concentration in nodules, as well as the increase of carbohydrates in roots and stems, during water stress and the rapid disappearance upon rewatering indicates that inhibition of carbohydrate utilization within the nodule may be associated with loss of nodule activity. Availability of carbohydrates within the nodules and from photosynthetic activity following rehydration of nodules may mediate the rate of recovery of N2-fixation activity.  相似文献   

4.
Qiu J  Israel DW 《Plant physiology》1992,98(1):316-323
The effects of phosphorus deficiency on carbohydrate accumulation and utilization in 34-day-old soybean (Glycine max L. Merr.) plants were characterized over a diurnal cycle to evaluate the mechanisms by which phosphorus deficiency restricts plant growth. Phosphorus deficiency decreased the net CO2 exchange rate throughout the light period. The decrease in the CO2 exhange rate was associated with a decrease in stomatal conductance and an increase in the internal CO2 concentration. These observations indicate that phosphorus deficiency increased mesophyll resistance. Assimilate export rate from the youngest fully expanded leaves was decreased by phosphorus deficiency, whereas starch concentrations in these leaves were increased. Higher starch concentrations in phosphorus-deficient youngest fully expanded leaves resulted from a longer period of net starch accumulation and a shorter period of net starch degradation relative to those for phosphorus-sufficient controls. Phosphorus deficiency decreased sucrose-P synthase activity by 27% (averaged over the diurnal cycle), and essentially eliminated diurnal variation in sucrose-P-synthase activity. Diurnal variations in nonstructural carbohydrate concentrations in leaves and stems were also less pronounced in phosphorus-deficient plants than in controls. In phosphorus-deficient plants, only 30% of the whole plant starch present at the end of a light phase was utilized during the subsequent 12-hour dark phase as compared with 68% for phosphorus-sufficient controls. Although phosphorus deficiency decreased the CO2 exchange rate and whole plant leaf area, accumulation of high starch concentrations in leaves and stems and restricted starch utilization in the dark indicate that growth processes (i.e. sink activities) were restricted to a greater extent than photosynthetic capacity. Further experimentation is required to determine whether decreased starch utilization in phosphorus-deficient plants is the cause or the result of restricted growth.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
During the period of most active leaf expansion, the foliar dark respiration rate of soybeans (Glycine max cv Williams), grown for 2 weeks in 1000 microliters CO2 per liter air, was 1.45 milligrams CO2 evolved per hour leaf density thickness, and this was twice the rate displayed by leaves of control plants (350 microliters CO2 per liter air). There was a higher foliar nonstructural carbohydrate level (e.g. sucrose and starch) in the CO2 enriched compared with CO2 normal plants. For example, leaves of enriched plants displayed levels of nonstructural carbohydrate equivalent to 174 milligrams glucose per gram dry weight compared to the 84 milligrams glucose per gram dry weight found in control plant leaves. As the leaves of CO2 enriched plants approached full expansion, both the foliar respiration rate and carbohydrate content of the CO2 enriched leaves decreased until they were equivalent with those same parameters in the leaves of control plants. A strong positive correlation between respiration rate and carbohydrate content was seen in high CO2 adapted plants, but not in the control plants.

Mitochondria, isolated simultaneously from the leaves of CO2 enriched and control plants, showed no difference in NADH or malate-glutamate dependent O2 uptake, and there were no observed differences in the specific activities of NAD+ linked isocitrate dehydrogenase and cytochrome c oxidase. Since the mitochondrial O2 uptake and total enzyme activities were not greater in young enriched leaves, the increase in leaf respiration rate was not caused by metabolic adaptations in the leaf mitochondria as a response to long term CO2 enrichment. It was concluded, that the higher respiration rate in the enriched plant's foliage was attributable, in part, to a higher carbohydrate status.

  相似文献   

7.
The aim of this work was to investigate the effects on carbohydrate metabolism of a reduction in the capacity to degrade leaf starch in Arabidopsis. The major roles of leaf starch are to provide carbon for sucrose synthesis, respiration and, in developing leaves, for biosynthesis and growth. Wild-type plants were compared with plants of a starch-excess mutant line (sex4) deficient in a chloroplastic isoform of endoamylase. This mutant has a reduced capacity for starch degradation, leading to an imbalance between starch synthesis and degradation and the gradual accretion of starch as the leaves age. During the night the conversion of starch into sucrose in the mutant is impaired; the leaves of the mutant contained less sucrose than those of the wild type and there was less movement of 14C-label from starch to sucrose in radio-labelling experiments. Furthermore, the rate of assimilate export to the roots during the night was reduced in the mutant compared with the wild type. During the day however, photosynthetic partitioning was altered in the mutant, with less photosynthate partitioned into starch and more into sugars. Although the sucrose content of the leaves of the mutant was similar to the wild type during the day, the rate of export of sucrose to the roots was increased more than two-fold. The changes in carbohydrate metabolism in the mutant leaves during the day compensate partly for its reduced capacity to synthesize sucrose from starch during the night.  相似文献   

8.
There is evidence suggesting that in plants changes in the photosynthetic source/sink balance are an important factor that regulates leaf photosynthetic rate through affects on the leaf carbohydrate status. However, to resolve the regulatory mechanism of leaf photosynthetic rate associated with photosynthetic source/sink balance, information, particularly on mutual relationships of experimental data that are linked with a variety of photosynthetic source/sink balances, seems to be still limited. Thus, a variety of manipulations altering the plant source/sink ratio were carried out with soybean plants, and the mutual relationships of various characteristics such as leaf photosynthetic rate, carbohydrate content and the source/sink ratio were analyzed in manipulated and non-manipulated control plants. The manipulations were removal of one-half or all pods, removal of one-third or two-third leaves, and shading of one-third or one-half leaves with soybean plants grown for 8 weeks under 10 h light (24 degrees C) and 14 h darkness (17 degrees C). It was shown that there were significant negative correlations between source/sink ratio (dry weight ratio of attached leaves to other all organs) and leaf photosynthetic rate; source/sink ratio and activation ratio (percentage of initial activity to total activity) of Rubisco in leaf extract; leaf carbohydrate (sucrose or starch) content and photosynthetic rate; carbohydrate (sucrose or starch) content and activation ratio of Rubisco; amount of protein-bound ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) in leaf extract and leaf photosynthetic rate; and the amount of protein-bound RuBP and activation ratio of Rubisco. In addition, there were significant positive correlations between source/sink ratio and leaf carbohydrate (sucrose or starch) content; source/sink ratio and the amount of protein-bound RuBP; carbohydrate (sucrose or starch) content and amount of protein-bound RuBP and the activation ratio of Rubisco and leaf photosynthetic rate. The plant water content, leaf chlorophyll and Rubisco contents were not affected significantly by the manipulations. There is a previous report in Arabidopsis thaliana that the amount of protein-bound RuBP in leaf extract correlates negatively with the activation ratio of Rubisco in the leaf extract. Therefore, the results obtained from the manipulation experiments indicate that there is a regulatory mechanism for the leaf photosynthetic rate that correlates negatively with leaf carbohydrate (sucrose and starch) status and positively with the activation state of Rubisco under a variety of photosynthetic source/sink balances.  相似文献   

9.
The growth of the shoot and roots of seedling plants of cocoa (Theobroma cacao L.) under constant glasshouse conditions showed a rhythmic cycle, with the maximum growth stages of each alternating in a regular sequence. When the growth cycle of the shoot was upset by removing all new leaves immediately after unfolding, the roots showed a high constant growth rate during this period, suggesting that normally the rapidly expanding leaves exert an inhibitory influence on the roots. Conversely removal of portions of the root delayed the production of new leaves in the shoot. The level of soluble and starch carbohydrate in the mature leaves, roots and stem declined during the period of expansion of the flush leaves, but accumulated again at the end of the leaf expansion stage. It is likely that this reserve carbohydrate was remobilised and translocated to the flush leaves during their period of expansion. A large proportion of newly formed photoassimilate, as shown by the distribution of 14C radioactivity from different source leaves, was also translocated to the young leaves during expansion. The large sink created by these leaves may cause photoassimilate and reserve carbohydrate to be diverted from the roots, thereby inhibiting root growth during the stage of leaf expansion. It is suggested that the rhythmic leaf production at the apex may control the growth cycle of the roots.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Tomasz Wyka 《Oecologia》1999,120(2):198-208
I tested hypotheses for ecological roles of storage carbohydrates in perennating organs (roots and branches) of alpine Oxytropis sericea, a leguminous herb. In naturally growing plants, total nonstructural carbohydrates achieved their maximal concentration in the fall, declined during winter, and reached minimal levels immediately after growth initiation in the spring. Experimental manipulation of carbon sink-source relations through shading of leaves of reproductive plants revealed that the normally unused portion of these carbohydrates is largely available for withdrawal. In another experiment, plants subjected to carbohydrate depletion through shading suffered decreased leaf growth after winter dormancy and had a lower probability of flowering and decreased inflorescence biomass. The dependence of reproductive growth on stored carbohydrates, however, was limited to its initial stages, because accumulation of storage carbohydrates occurred simultaneously with inflorescence expansion, flowering, and fruiting. Moreover, the whole-plant photosynthetic rate, estimated from gas exchange measurements also peaked at the time of inflorescence growth. To address whether stored reserves allow compensatory regrowth following defoliation, plants were subjected to experimental removal of leaves and inflorescences. Defoliated O. sericea partly regrew the lost leaves but withdrawal of stored carbohydrates was limited. Similarly, in a second defoliation experiment where infructescences were left intact, the plants used little stored carbohydrate and only partly compensated for fruit growth. However, carbohydrate accumulation was negatively affected by defoliation. While the ecological importance of stored nonstructural carbohydrates cannot be attributed to any function in isolation, winter respiration, leaf regrowth after winter, and early reproductive growth in O. sericea all depend to a significant extent on stored reserves. Maintaining a large storage pool may protect these functions in years when carbon status is less favorable than during this study. Received: 13 May 1998 / Accepted: 24 November 1998  相似文献   

12.
White clover plants were grown from stolon tips in growth cabinetsand then defoliated. Thereafter, changes in the contents ofnon-structural carbohydrates such as starch, sucrose, glucose,fructose, maltose, and pinitol in stolons and roots were monitored.Initial contents of carbohydrate reserves, photosynthetic supplyof new carbohydrates and carbohydrate demand after defoliationwere varied by growing the plants at various CO2 partial pressures,by varying the extent of defoliation and by removing eitherroots or stolon tips at the time of defoliation. Remobilization of carbohydrate reserves in stolons increasedproportionally to their initial contents and was greater whenplants had been severely defoliated, suggesting that carbohydrateswere remobilized according to availability and demand. Starchwas the predominant reserve carbohydrate. Starch degradationwas associated with decreased contents of sucrose, glucose andfructose in young stolon parts and roots but not in old stolonparts suggesting that starch degradation was not strictly controlledby the contents of these sugars. A decrease in the demand forcarbohydrates by removal of roots did not decrease starch degradationbut increased the contents of sucrose, glucose, and fructose.Removal of stolon tips decreased starch degradation and contentsof sucrose, glucose, and fructose. The results suggest thatstarch degradation was controlled by a factor other than sucrose,glucose, and fructose which was exported from stolon tips, e.g.gibberellin. Key words: White clover, storage carbohydrates, remobilization, regrowth  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
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   

15.
The single rooted leaf of soybean (Glycine max L. Merr.) wasused to study source-sink relationships in photosynthesis. Whenthe leaves were kept under a regime of 10 h light (410–480µmol photons m–2, 400–700 nm)–14 h dark,they did not expand, the increase in leaf dry weight almoststopped, and photosynthetic activity remained at a high andconstant level for 8 d while the dry weight of the roots increasedat a constant rate throughout the period. Thus, under this conditionthe leaf and the root system served as the only source and sinkorgans, respectively. When leaves grown for 7 d under this conditionwere placed under continuous light to alter the source/sinkbalance in photosynthate, the root dry weight increased at aconstant rate equal to that found under the 10 h light–14h dark condition. The leaf dry weight markedly increased andby day 5 of continuous light had increased 1.6-fold, mainlyas a consequence of accumulation of starch and sucrose, whichwere not translocated for root growth. The continuous lightcaused an abrupt decrease in the photosynthetic activity (40%of initial value by day 5). However, the activity recoveredalmost completely after a 32-h transfer to darkness. Significantnegative correlations existed between photosynthetic activityand the sucrose and starch contents in the rooted leaves placedunder continuous light. When the plants were treated with variouslight conditions, there was no significant difference (p<0.01)among the regression line slopes for photosynthetic activityon the sucrose content, but there was some deviation among thosefor the photosynthetic activity on the starch content. Thisresult suggests that sucrose accumulated in the leaf has a moredirect influence on photosynthetic activity when the source/sinkbalance was altered. (Received September 9, 1985; Accepted February 21, 1986)  相似文献   

16.
The expression of a sucrose-phosphate synthase (SPS) gene from maize (Zea mays, a monocotyledon) in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum, a dicotyledon) resulted in marked increases in extractable SPS activity in the light and the dark. Diurnal modulation of the native tomato SPS activity was found. However, when the maize enzyme was present the tomato leaf cells were unable to regulate its activation state. No detrimental effects were observed and total dry matter production was unchanged. However, carbon allocation within the plants was modified such that in shoots it increased, whereas in roots it decreased. There was, therefore, a change in the shoot:root dry weight ratio favoring the shoot. This was positively correlated with increased SPS activity in leaves. SPS was a major determinant of the amount of starch in leaves as well as sucrose. There was a strong positive correlation between the ratio of sucrose to starch and SPS activity in leaves. Therefore, SPS activity is a major determinant of the partitioning of photosynthetically fixed carbon in the leaf and in the whole plant. The photosynthetic rate in air was not significantly increased as a result of elevated leaf SPS activity. However, the light- and CO2-saturated rate of photosynthesis was increased by about 20% in leaves expressing high SPS. In addition, the temporary enhancement of the photosynthetic rate following brief exposures to low light was increased in the high SPS plants relative to controls. We conclude that the level of SPS in the leaves plays a pivotal role in carbon partitioning. Furthermore, high SPS levels have the potential to boost photosynthetic rates under favorable conditions.  相似文献   

17.
Soybeans (Glycine max [L.] Merr. cv. NC 69-2774) were used to study the nonstructural carbohydrate and nitrogen content of plant tissues, and nitrogenase activity throughout the development of male-sterile and male-fertile plants. Male-sterile plants set approximately 85% fewer pods plus seed than the male-fertile siblings and retained green leaves until a killing frost at 145 days after emergence. Reduced pod set caused increased carbohydrate accumulation in the leaf and root systems of male-sterile plants. Total carbohydrate in roots of male-sterile plants increased from 1.7 to 7.6 times that in the male-fertile roots. A high proportion (60 to 70%) of the male-sterile root carbohydrate was starch. Apparently, root starch was not metabolized by the male-sterile plants. Late in plant development per cent nitrogen was higher in the male-sterile soybean tissues. However, no difference was found in the ability of the nodulated root systems from either genotype to fix nitrogen.  相似文献   

18.
Photosynthesis, photosynthate partitioning into foliar starch, and translocation were investigated in soybean plants (Glycine max (L.) Merr. cv. Amsoy 71), grown under different photoperiods and photosynthetic periods to determine the controls of leaf starch accumulation. Starch accumulation rates in soybean leaves were inversely related to the length of the daily photosynthetic period under which the plants were grown. Photosynthetic period and not photoperiod per se appears to be the important factor. Plants grown in a 14-hour photosynthetic period partitioned approximately 60% of the daily foliar accumulation into starch whereas 7-hour plants partitioned about 90% of their daily foliar accumulation into starch. The difference in starch accumulation resulted from a change in photosynthate partitioning between starch and leaf residual dry weight. Residual dry weight is defined as leaf dry weight minus the weight of total nonstructural carbohydrates. Differences in photosynthate partitioning into starch were also associated with changes in photosynthetic and translocation rates, as well as with leaf and whole plant morphology. It is concluded that leaf starch accumulation is a programmed process and not simply the result of a limitation in translocation.  相似文献   

19.
Regulation of carbohydrate metabolism and compartmentation were studied during the acclimatization of tissue cultured Calathea plantlets. At transplantation plants were characterised by a heterotrophic metabolism with roots and stems as the main storage organs for carbohydrates. As acclimatization proceeded, a switch to autotrophic growth was observed: leaves became source organs, which was among others reflected by significant increases of invertase, sucrose synthase and sucrose-P synthase activities. Mobilization of reserves in roots and stems was also observed during the same period. Sucrose and starch accumulation in leaves was positively correlated with increasing light intensity.  相似文献   

20.
Experiments were conducted with vegetative soybean plants (Glycine max [L.] Merr., `Ransom') to determine whether the activities in leaf extracts of key enzymes in sucrose metabolism changed during the daily light/dark cycle. The activity of sucrose-phosphate synthase (SPS) exhibited a distinct diurnal rhythm, whereas the activities of UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase, cytoplasmic fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase, and sucrose synthase did not. The changes in extractable SPS activity were not related directly to photosynthetic rates or light/dark changes. Hence, it was postulated that the oscillations were under the control of an endogenous clock. During the light period, the activity of SPS was similar to the estimated rate of sucrose formation. In the dark, however, SPS activity declined sharply and then increased even though degradation of starch was linear. The activity of SPS always exceeded the estimated maximum rate of sucrose formation in the dark. Transfer of plants into light during the normal dark period (when SPS activity was low) resulted in increased partitioning of photosynthate into starch compared to partitioning observed during the normal light period. These results were consistent with the hypothesis that SPS activity in situ was a factor regulating the rate of sucrose synthesis and partitioning of fixed carbon between starch and sucrose in the light.  相似文献   

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