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1.
Maize (Zea mays L.) endosperm transfer cells are essential for kernel growth and development so they have a significant impact on grain yield. Although structural and ultrastructural studies have been published, little is known about the development of these cells, and prior to this study, there was a general consensus that they contain only flange ingrowths. We characterized the development of maize endosperm transfer cells by bright field microscopy, transmission electron microscopy, and confocal laser scanning microscopy. The most basal endosperm transfer cells (MBETC) have flange and reticulate ingrowths, whereas inner transfer cells only have flange ingrowths. Reticulate and flange ingrowths are mostly formed in different locations of the MBETC as early as 5 days after pollination, and they are distinguishable from each other at all stages of development. Ingrowth structure and ultrastructure and cellulose microfibril compaction and orientation patterns are discussed during transfer cell development. This study provides important insights into how both types of ingrowths are formed in maize endosperm transfer cells.  相似文献   

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《Plant science》1987,52(3):153-157
Sucrose synthase (EC 2.4.1.13) was purified to homogeneity from developing maize (Zea mays L.) endosperm. Substrate saturation and inhibitor kinetics were examined for the sucrose synthase reaction. The Km-values for fructose and uridine diphosphate glucose (UDPGlc) were estimated to be 7.8 mM and 76 μM, respectively. Fructose concentrations over 20 mM inhibited sucrose synthase in an uncompetitive manner with respect to UDPGlc. Glucose was also found to be an uncompetitive inhibitor with respect to both fructose and UDPGlc. At inhibitory concentrations of fructose, the apparent Ki for glucose increased linearly with increasing fructose concentration. The results suggest an ordered kinetic mechanism for sucrose synthase where UDPGlc binds first and UDP dissociates last. Fructose and glucose both inhibit by binding to the enzyme-UDP complex. Fructose and glucose, which are present in maize endosperm as the products of invertase, could inhibit sucrose synthase, especially in basal regions of the kernel where hexosesmay accumulate.  相似文献   

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Cobb BG  Hannah LC 《Plant physiology》1988,88(4):1219-1221
Kernels of wild-type maize (Zea mays L.) shrunken-1 (sh1), deficient in the predominant form of endosperm sucrose synthase and shrunken-2 (sh2), deficient in 95% of the endosperm ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase were grown in culture on sucrose, glucose, or fructose as the carbon source. Analysis of the endosperm extracts by gas-liquid chromatography revealed that sucrose was present in the endosperms of all genotypes, regardless of carbon supply, indicating that all three genotypes are capable of synthesizing sucrose from reducing sugars. The finding that sucrose was present in sh1 kernels grown on reducing sugars is evidence that shrunken-1 encoded sucrose synthase is not necessary for sucrose synthesis. Shrunken-1 kernels developed to maturity and produced viable seeds on all carbon sources, but unlike wild-type and sh2 kernels grown in vitro, sucrose was not the superior carbon source. This latter result provides further evidence that the role of sucrose synthase in maize endosperm is primarily that of sucrose degradation.  相似文献   

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1′-Fluorosucrose (FS), a sucrose analog resistant to hydrolysis by invertase, was transported from husk leaves into maize (Zea mays L., Pioneer Hybrid 3320) kernels with the same magnitude and kinetics as sucrose. 14C-Label from [14C]FS and [14C]sucrose in separate experiments was distributed similarly between the pedicel, endosperm, and embryo with time. FS passed through maternal tissue and was absorbed intact into the endosperm where it was metabolized and used in synthesis of sucrose and methanol-chloroform-water insolubles. Accumulation of [14C] sucrose from supplied [14C]glucosyl-FS indicated that the glucose moiety from the breakdown of sucrose (here FS), which normally occurs in the process of starch synthesis in maize endosperm, was available to the pool of substrates for resynthesis of sucrose. Uptake of FS into maize endosperm without hydrolysis suggests that despite the presence of invertase in maternal tissues and the hydrolysis of a large percentage of sucrose unloaded from the phloem, hexoses are not specifically needed for uptake into maize endosperm.  相似文献   

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The in vivo amounts of UDPG, UTP, UDP and UMP, metabolites known to influence the activity of sucrose phosphate synthase (SPS) and sucrose synthase (SS), were measured throughout 5 hr incubations of scutellum slices in fructose or water, i.e. under conditions of sucrose synthesis or breakdown. Cytosolic concentrations were estimated assuming that these metabolites were confined to the cytosol. Within the estimated in vivo concentration ranges, UDPG, UTP and UDP had little effect on the in vitro SS activity, but glucose (100 mM) inhibited SS in the synthesis direction by 63–70% and in the breakdown direction by 86–93%. Glucose inhibition of SS was considerably less when saturating levels of substrates were used. Sucrose did not inhibit SS. It is concluded that during germination the glucose produced from starch breakdown in the maize endosperm enters the scutellum and inhibits SS, preventing a futile cycle and limiting SS participation in sucrose synthesis.  相似文献   

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Sucrose synthase is usually localized by immunocytochemistry, but this method does not show the actual activity of the localized enzyme. A histochemical assay is presented here showing the activity of sucrose synthase by tetrazolium salt precipitation on sections of developing maize kernels. The advantages of the assay are a high sensitivity for low amounts of active sucrose synthase and the independence of specific antibodies.In this study the activity of endosperm sucrose synthase is shown to move gradually from the apical part of the endosperm to the basal endosperm during kernel development. This shift in sucrose synthase activity correlates well with the localization of starch synthesis during kernel development. The assay also shows the early loss of activity in the aleurone layer bordering the embryo, and a loss of activity in the apical aleurone during the final stage of kernel development while the enzyme was still found by immunocytochemistry. This is in contrast to a high sucrose synthase activity in the epithelium of the scutellum, where hardly any labelling was found with antibodies against maize sucrose synthase. Low sucrose synthase activities were found in the pericarp and pedicel parenchyma.Possible functions of the high and low activity patterns in the developing maize kernels and differences between the enzyme assay and immunocytochemistry are discussed.  相似文献   

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Apical kernels of maize (Zea mays L.) ears have smaller size and lower growth rates than basal kernels. To improve our understanding of this difference, the developmental patterns of starch-synthesis-pathway enzyme activities and accumulation of sugars and starch was determined in apical- and basal-kernel endosperm of greenhouse-grown maize (cultivar Cornell 175) plants. Plants were synchronously pollinated, kernels were sampled from apical and basal ear positions throughout kernel development, and enzyme activities were measured in crude preparations. Several factors were correlated with the higher dry matter accumulation rate and larger mature kernel size of basal-kernel endosperm. During the period of cell expansion (7 to 19 days after pollination), the activity of insoluble (acid) invertase and sucose concentration in endosperm of basal kernels exceeded that in apical kernels. Soluble (alkaline) invertase was also high during this stage but was the same in endosperm of basal and apical kernels, while glucose concentration was higher in apical-kernel endosperm. During the period of maximal starch synthesis, the activities of sucrose synthase, ADP-Glc-pyrophosphorylase, and insoluble (granule-bound) ADP-Glc-starch synthase were higher in endosperm of basal than apical kernels. Soluble ADP-Glc-starch synthase, which was maximal during the early stage before starch accumulated, was the same in endosperm from apical and basal kernels. It appeared that differences in metabolic potential between apical and basal kernels were established at an early stage in kernel development.  相似文献   

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To characterize the movement of sugars during kernel development in maize, a newly devised in vitro kernel development scheme was utilized. Viable seeds of wild type maize (Zea mays L.) as well as the mutant shrunken-2 (sh2) were found to mature when grown in culture with reducing sugars or sucrose as the carbon source. However, wild type and sh2 kernels had greater germination, starch content, and seed weight when sucrose, rather than reducing sugars, was the carbon source. By the use of labeled sucrose it was shown that sucrose can move into endosperm tissue without intervening degradation and resynthesis. These results show that when grown in vitro the maize seed can utilize reducing sugars for development, but it prefers sucrose.  相似文献   

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In maize, two paralogous genes, Sh1 and Sus1, encode two biochemically similar isozymes of sucrose synthase, SS1 and SS2, respectively. Previous studies have attributed the mild starch deficiency of the shrunken1 (sh1) endosperm to the loss of the SS1 isozyme in the mutant. Here we describe the first mutation in the sucrose synthase1 (Sus1) gene, sus1-1, and the isolation of a double recessive genotype, sh1 sus1-1. Combined data from diverse studies, including Northern and Western analyses, RT-PCR and genomic PCR, cloning and sequencing data for the 3′ region, show that the mutant sus1-1 gene has a complex pattern of expression, albeit at much reduced levels as compared to the Sus1 gene. Endosperm sucrose synthase activity in sh1 sus1-1 was barely 0.5% of the total activity in the Sh1 Sus1 genotype. Significantly, comparative analyses of Sh1 Sus1, sh1 Sus1 and sh1 sus1-1 genotypes have, for the first time, allowed us to dissect the relative contributions of each isozyme to endosperm development. Starch contents in endosperm of the three related genotypes were 100, 78 and 53%, respectively. Anatomical analyses, which confirmed the previously described early cell degeneration phenotype unique to the sh1 Sus1 endosperm, revealed no detectable difference between the two sh1 genotypes. We conclude that the SS1 isozyme plays the dominant role in providing the substrate for cellulose biosynthesis, whereas the SS2 protein is needed mainly for generating precursors for starch biosynthesis.  相似文献   

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Summary The localization of the two known sucrose synthase isoenzymes of Zea mays L., sucrose synthase 1 and sucrose synthase 2, was studied during kernel development by indirect immunohistochemistry. These enzymes are encoded by the Sh and Sus genes, respectively. Since the antiserum used cross-reacts with both enzymes, tissue sections of Sh and sh kernels were compared. In the latter tissue no sucrose synthase 1 is expressed and thus the signal obtained was ascribed to sucrose synthase 2. We found that the isoenzymes are differentially expressed. While sucrose synthase 1 is expressed only in the endosperm, sucrose synthase 2 is found in almost all tissues of the kernel with cxpression levels specific for cell type and developmental stage. Sucrose synthase 2 is expressed strongly in the aleurone and subaleurone cell layers, where the signal detected is as strong as or even stronger than the sucrose synthase 1 signal in the inner endosperm. The distribution of the enzymes changes characteristically during development.  相似文献   

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The evolutionary history of maize (Zea mays subsp. mays) is of general interest because of its economic and scientific importance. Here we show that many cellular traits described previously in developing caryopses of maize are also seen in its wild progenitor teosinte (Zea mays subsp. parviglumis). These features, each with a possible role in development, include (1) an early programmed cell death in the maternal placento-chalazal (P-C) layer that may lead to increased hydrolytic conductance to the developing seed; (2) accumulation of phenolics and flavonoids in the P-C layer that may be related to antimicrobial activity; (3) formation of wall ingrowths in the basal endosperm transfer layer (BETL); (4) localization of cell wall invertase in the BETL, which is attributed to the increased transport capacity of photosynthates to the sink; and (5) endoreduplication in endosperm nuclei suggested to contribute to increased gene expression and greater sink capacity of the developing seed. In maize caryopsis, these cellular traits have been previously attributed to domestication and selection for larger seed size and vigor. Given the conservation of the entire cellular program in developing teosinte caryopses described here, we suggest that these traits evolved independently of domestication and predate human selection pressure.  相似文献   

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Ketose reductase activity in developing maize endosperm   总被引:5,自引:5,他引:0  
Ketose reductase (NAD-dependent polyol dehydrogenase EC 1.1.1.14) activity, which catalyzes the NADH-dependent reduction of fructose to sorbitol (d-glucitol), was detected in developing maize (Zea mays L.) endosperm, purified 104-fold from this tissue, and partially characterized. Product analysis by high performance liquid chromatography confirmed that the enzyme-catalyzed reaction was freely reversible. In maize endosperm, 15 days after pollination, ketose reductase activity was of the same order of magnitude as sucrose synthase activity, which produces fructose during sucrose degradation. Other enzymes of hexose metabolism detected in maize endosperm were present in activities of only 1 to 3% of the sucrose synthase activity. CaCl2, MgCl2, and MnCl2 stimulated ketose reductase activity 7-, 6-, and 2-fold, respectively, but had little effect on NAD-dependent polyol dehydrogenation (the reverse reaction). The pH optimums for ketose reductase and polyol dehydrogenase reactions were 6.0 and 9.0, respectively. Km values were 136 millimolar fructose and 8.4 millimolar sorbitol. The molecular mass of ketose reductase was estimated to be 78 kilodaltons by gel filtration. It is postulated that ketose reductase may function to metabolize some of the fructose produced during sucrose degradation in maize endosperm, but the metabolic fate of sorbitol produced by this reaction is not known.  相似文献   

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Past research on kernel growth in wheat (Triticum aestivum) has shown that the kernel itself largely regulates the influx of sucrose for consequent starch synthesis in the endosperm of the grain. The first step in the conversion of sucrose to starch is catalyzed by sucrose synthase (EC 2.4.13). Sucrose synthase activity was assayed in developing endosperms from kernels differing in growth rate and in maximum dry weight accumulation. From 10 to 22 days after anthesis, sucrose synthase activity per wheat endosperm remained constant with respect to time in all grains. However, kernels which had higher rates of kernel growth and which achieved greatest maximum weight had consistently and significantly higher sucrose synthase activities at any point in time than did kernels with slower rates of dry matter accumulation and lower maximum weight. In addition, larger kernels had a significantly greater amount of water in which this activity could be expressed. Although the results do not implicate sucrose synthase as the “rate limiting” enzyme in wheat kernel growth, they do emphasize the importance of sucrose synthase activity in larger or more rapidly growing kernels, as compared to smaller slower growing kernels.  相似文献   

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Sucrose and Nitrogen Supplies Regulate Growth of Maize Kernels   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
The growth of maize (Zea mays L.) kernels depends on the availabilityof carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) assimilates supplied by the motherplant and the capacity of the kernel to use them. Our objectiveswere to study the effects of N and sucrose supply levels ongrowth and metabolism of maize kernels. Kernel explants of Pioneer34RO6 were culturedin vitro with varying combinations of N (5to 30 m M) and sucrose (117 to 467 m M). Maximum kernel growthwas obtained with 10 m M N and 292 m M sucrose in the medium,and a deficiency of one assimilate could not be overcome bya sufficiency of the other. Increasing the N supply led to increasesin the kernel sink capacity (number of cells and starch granulesin the endosperm), activity of certain enzymes (soluble andbound invertases, sucrose synthase, and aspartate aminotransaminase),starch, and the levels of N compounds (total-N, soluble protein,and free amino acids), and decreased the levels of C metabolites(sucrose and reducing sugars). Conversely, increasing the sucrosesupply increased the level of endosperm C metabolites, freeamino acids, and ADPG-PPase and alanine transaminase activities,but decreased the activity of soluble invertase and concentrationsof soluble protein and total-N. Thus, while C and N are interdependentand essential for accumulation of maximum kernel weight, theyappear to regulate growth by different means. Nitrogen supplyaids the establishment of kernel sink capacity, and promotesactivity of enzymes relating to sucrose and nitrogen uptake,while sucrose regulates the activities of invertase and ADPG-PPase.Copyright 1999 Annals of Botany Company Zea mays, maize,, invertase, ADPG-PPase, media composition, sucrose, nitrogen, C/N.  相似文献   

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