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1.
During photosynthesis, triose-phosphates (trioseP) exported from the chloroplast to the cytosol are converted to sucrose via cytosolic fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (cFBPase). Expression analysis in rice suggests that OscFBP1 plays a major role in the cytosolic conversion of trioseP to sucrose in leaves during the day. The isolated OscFBP1 mutants exhibited markedly decreased photosynthetic rates and severe growth retardation with reduced chlorophyll content, which results in plant death. Analysis of primary carbon metabolites revealed both significantly reduced levels of sucrose, glucose, fructose and starch in leaves of these mutants, and a high accumulation of sucrose to starch in leaves of rice plants. In the oscfbp1 mutants, products of glycolysis and the TCA cycle were significantly increased. A partitioning experiment of (14)C-labelled photoassimilates revealed altered carbon distributions including a slight increase in the insoluble fraction representing transitory starch, a significant decrease in the neutral fraction corresponding to soluble sugars and a high accumulation of phosphorylated intermediates and carboxylic acid fractions in the oscfbp1 mutants. These results indicate that the impaired synthesis of sucrose in rice cannot be sufficiently compensated for by the transitory starch-mediated pathways that have been found to facilitate plant growth in the equivalent Arabidopsis mutants.  相似文献   

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

3.
Li B  Geiger DR  Shieh WJ 《Plant physiology》1992,99(4):1393-1399
Starch accumulation and sucrose synthesis and export were measured in leaves of sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L.) during a period of prolonged irradiance in which illumination was extended beyond the usual 14-hour day period. During much of the 14-hour day period, approximately 50% of the newly fixed carbon was distributed to sucrose, about 40% to starch, and less than 10% to hexose. Beginning about 2 hours before the end of the usual light period, the portion of newly fixed carbon allocated to sucrose gradually increased, and correspondingly less carbon went to starch. By the time the transition ended, about 4 hours into the extension of the light period, nearly 90% of newly fixed carbon was incorporated into sucrose and little or none into starch. Most of the additional sucrose was exported. Gradual cessation of starch accumulation was not the result of a futile cycle of simultaneous starch synthesis and degradation. Neither was it the result of a decrease in the extractable activity of adenosine diphosphoglucose pyrophosphorylase or phosphoglucose isomerase, enzymes important in starch synthesis. Nor was there a notable change in control metabolites considered to be important in regulating starch synthesis. Starch accumulation appeared to decrease markedly because of an endogenous circadian shift in carbon allocation, which occurred in preparation for the usual night period and which diverted carbon from the chloroplast to the cytosol and sucrose synthesis.  相似文献   

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

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

6.
7.
Water stress stimulates sucrose synthesis and inhibits starch synthesis in wild-type tubers. Antisense and co-suppression potato transformants with decreased expression of sucrose–phosphate synthase (SPS) have been used to analyse the importance of SPS for the regulation of this water-stress induced change in partitioning. (i) In the absence of water stress, a 70–80% decrease in SPS activity led to a 30–50% inhibition of sucrose synthesis and a slight (10–20%) increase of starch synthesis in tuber discs in short-term labelling experiments with low concentrations of labelled glucose. Similar changes were seen in short-term labelling experiments with intact tubers attached to well-watered plants. Provided plants were grown with ample light and water, transformant tubers had a slightly lower water and sucrose content and a similar or even marginally higher starch content than wild-type tubers. (ii) When wild-type tuber slices were incubated with labelled glucose in the presence of mannitol to generate a moderate water deficit (between –0.12 and –0.72 MPa), there was a marked stimulation of sucrose synthesis and inhibition of starch synthesis. A similar stimulation was seen in labelling experiments with wild-type tubers that were attached to water-stressed wild-type plants. These changes were almost completely suppressed in transformants with a 70–80% reduction of SPS activity. (iii) Decreased irrigation led to an increase in the fraction of the dry-matter allocated to tubers in wild-type plants. This shift in allocation was prevented in transformants with reduced expression of SPS. (iv) The results show that operation of SPS and the sucrose cycle in growing potato tubers may lead to a marginal decrease in starch accumulation in non-stressed plants. However, SPS becomes a crucial factor in water-stressed plants because it is required for adaptive changes in tuber metabolism and whole plant allocation.  相似文献   

8.
Role of sucrose-phosphate synthase in sucrose metabolism in leaves   总被引:38,自引:10,他引:28       下载免费PDF全文
Huber SC  Huber JL 《Plant physiology》1992,99(4):1275-1278
Sucrose is formed in the cytoplasm of leaf cells from triose phosphates exported from the chloroplast. Flux control is shared among key enzymes of the pathway, one of which is sucrose-phosphate synthase (SPS). Regulation of SPS by protein phosphorylation is important in vivo and may explain diurnal changes in SPS activity and carbon partitioning. The signal transduction pathway mediating the light activation of SPS in vivo appears to involve metabolites and novel “coarse” control of the protein phosphatase that dephosphorylates and activates SPS. Regulation of the phosphorylation of SPS may provide a general mechanism whereby sucrose formation is coordinated with the rate of photosynthesis and the rate of nitrate assimilation. There are apparent differences among species in the properties of SPS that may reflect different strategies for the control of carbon partitioning. The SPS gene has recently been cloned from maize; results of preliminary studies with transgenic tomato plants expressing high levels of maize SPS support the postulate that SPS activity can influence the partitioning of carbon between starch and sucrose.  相似文献   

9.
The role of the demand for carbon assimilates (the 'sink') in regulating photosynthetic carbon assimilation (Pn: the 'source') in response to phosphate (P(i)) deficiency was examined in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.). P(i) supply was maintained or withdrawn from plants, and in both treatments the source/sink ratio was decreased in some plants by darkening all but two source leaves (partially darkened plants). The remaining plants were kept fully illuminated. P(i)-sufficient plants showed little variation in rate of Pn, amounts of P(i) or phosphorylated intermediates. Withdrawal of P(i) decreased Pn by 75% under the growing conditions and at both low and high internal CO2 concentration. Concomitantly, P(i), phosphorylated intermediates and ATP contents decreased and starch increased. RuBP and activity of phosphoribulokinase closely matched the changes in Pn, but Rubisco activity remained high. Partial darkening P(i)-deficient plants delayed the loss of photosynthetic activity; Rubisco and phosphoribulokinase activities and amounts of sucrose and metabolites, particularly RuBP and G6P, were higher than in fully illuminated Pi-deficient plants. Rates of sucrose export from leaves were more than 2-fold greater than in fully illuminated P(i)-deficient plants. Greater sucrose synthesis, facilitated by increased G6P content, an activator of SPS, would recycle P(i) from the cytosol back to the chloroplast, maintaining ATP, RuBP and hence Pn. It is concluded that low sink strength imposes the primary limitation on photosynthesis in P(i)-deficient plants which restricts sucrose export and sucrose synthesis imposing an end-product synthesis limitation of photosynthesis.  相似文献   

10.
Constitutive over-expression of a maize sucrose-phosphate synthase (SPS) gene in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) had major effects on leaf carbohydrate budgets with consequences for whole plant development. Transgenic tobacco plants flowered earlier and had greater flower numbers than wild-type plants. These changes were not linked to modified source leaf carbon assimilation or carbon export, although sucrose to starch ratios were significantly higher in leaves expressing the transgene. The youngest and oldest leaves of plants over-expressing SPS had up to 10-fold wild-type maximal extractable SPS activity, but source leaf SPS activities were only 2-3 times greater in these lines than in the wild type. In the oldest leaves, where the expression of the transgene led to the most marked enhancement in SPS activity, photosynthesis was also increased. It was concluded that these increases in the capacity for sucrose synthesis and carbon assimilation, particularly in older leaves, accelerate the whole plant development and increase the abundance of flowers without substantial changes in the overall shoot biomass.  相似文献   

11.
Prior data indicated that enhanced availability of sucrose, a major product of photosynthesis in source leaves and the carbon source for secondary wall cellulose synthesis in fiber sinks, might improve fiber quality under abiotic stress conditions. To test this hypothesis, a family of transgenic cotton plants (Gossypium hirsutum cv. Coker 312 elite) was produced that over-expressed spinach sucrose-phosphate synthase (SPS) because of its role in regulation of sucrose synthesis in photosynthetic and heterotrophic tissues. A family of 12 independent transgenic lines was characterized in terms of foreign gene insertion, expression of spinach SPS, production of spinach SPS protein, and development of enhanced extractable V max SPS activity in leaf and fiber. Lines with the highest V max SPS activity were further characterized in terms of carbon partitioning and fiber quality compared to wild-type and transgenic null controls. Leaves of transgenic SPS over-expressing lines showed higher sucrose:starch ratio and partitioning of 14C to sucrose in preference to starch. In two growth chamber experiments with cool nights, ambient CO2 concentration, and limited light below the canopy, the transgenic line with the highest SPS activity in leaf and fiber had higher fiber micronaire and maturity ratio associated with greater thickness of the cellulosic secondary wall.  相似文献   

12.
Rice (Oryza sativa L. cv. IR-30) was grown season-long in outdoor, controlled-environment chambers at 33 Pa CO2 with day/night/paddy-water temperatures of 28/21/25 °C, and at 66 Pa CO2 with five different day/night/paddy-water temperature regimes (25/18/21, 28/21/25, 31/24/28, 34/27/31 and 37/30/34 °C). Sucrose phosphate synthase (SPS) activities in leaf extracts at 21, 48 and 81 days after planting (DAP) were assayed under saturating and selective (limiting) conditions. Diel SPS activity data indicated that rice SPS was light regulated; with up to 2.2-fold higher rates during the day. Throughout the growth season, leaf SPS activities were up-regulated in the CO2-enriched plants, averaging 20 and 12% higher than in ambient-CO2 grown plants in selective and saturating assays, respectively. Similarly, SPS activities increased 2.4% for each 1 °C rise in growth temperature from 25 to 34 °C, but de creased 11.5% at 37 °C. Leaf sucrose content was higher, and mirrored SPS activity better, than starch, although starch was more responsive to CO2 treatment. Leaf sucrose and starch contents were significantly higher throughout the season in plants at elevated CO2, but the N content averaged 6.5% lower. Increasing growth temperatures from 25 to 37 °C caused a linear decrease (62%) in leaf starch content, but not in sucrose. Consequently, the starch:sucrose ratio declined with growth temperature. The data are consistent with the hypothesis that the up-regulation of leaf SPS may be an acclimation response of rice to optimize the utilization and export of organic-C with the increased rates of inorganic-C fixation in elevated CO2 or temperature growth regimes.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
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   

15.
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   

16.
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   

17.
Starch and sucrose metabolism of one- and two-year-old needles of Norway spruce (Picea abies [L.] Karst., about 30 years old) was investigated from three months before until three months after bud break at a natural site. We distinguish different metabolic states according to the extractable activities of enzymes (α-amylase [EC 3.2.1.1], ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase [AGP, EC 2.7.7.27], D-enzyme [EC 2.4.1.25], starch phosphorylase [STP. EC 2.4.1.1]), sucrose phosphate synthase [SPS, EC 2.4.1.14], sucrose syntbase [SS, EC 2.4.1.13]. acid invertase [AI, EC 3.2.1.261) and pool sizes of related metabolites (starch, glucose, fructose, sucrose, raffinose, stachyose, fructose 6-phosphate [F6P], glucose 6-phosphate [G6P], fructose 2,6-bisphosphate [F26BP], and inorganic phosphate [P1]). The period ending with bud break was characterized by high rates of net photosynthesis, a pronounced decrease in the amount of soluble sugars, and a steep rise in starch (from the detection limit to approximately 600 nmol glycosyl units [mg dry weight]-1). In parallel, the extractable activity of AGP increased, while D-enzyme was on a relative high level when compared with the period after bud break. With respect to sucrose metabolism, F26BP, an inhibitor of sucrose synthesis, decreased from 1 to 0.4 pmol (mg dry weight)-1. This was complemented by SPS activity, which was due to both increased protein levels shown by immunoblotting and activation under metabolite control (high levels of G6P and a low Pi/G6P ratio). This indicates a high capacity of synthesis of starch and sucrose in the period before bud break. These observations are in accordance with estimates of photosynthetic carbon gain, which indicate that in early spring large amounts of carbon from current photosynthesis are exported out of the needles. In addition, the content of nonstructural carbohydrates (expressed as hexoses) increased in the bark of the stem. This could also be a consequence of an enhanced carbon export from the needles. After the onset of bud break, starch concentration decreased in all tissues under investigation. In contrast, the level of total nonstructural carbohydrates in the outermost sapwood nearly doubled from bud break until the end of sampling. In the needles, net photosynthesis was reduced by about 75% and a decrease in SPS activity and protein level were found together with lower G6P concentration, and an increased Pi/G6P ratio. These results suggest that during that period sucrose synthesis was reduced in the older needles. In addition, under conditions of reduced photosynthesis, carbon demand of current year needles was in part ensured by the mobilization of starch in the older needles. Taken together our data show that before bud break carbon metabolism of mature leaves is related with the sink demands of storage organs. After bud break the accumulated assimilate pools in needles and stem, mainly the bark, are mobilized and support carbon supply to new tissues.  相似文献   

18.
Essentially all plants store starch in their leaves during the day and break it down the following night. This transitory starch accumulation acts as an overflow mechanism when the sucrose synthesis capacity is limiting, and transitory starch also acts as a carbon store to provide sugar at night. Transitory starch breakdown can occur by either of two pathways; significant progress has been made in understanding these pathways in C(3) plants. The hydrolytic (amylolytic) pathway generating maltose appears to be the primary source of sugar for export from C(3) chloroplasts at night, whereas the phosphorolytic pathway supplies carbon for chloroplast reactions, in particular in the light. In crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) plants, the hydrolytic pathway predominates when plants operate in C(3) mode, but the phosphorolytic pathway predominates when they operate in CAM mode. Information on transitory starch metabolism in C(4) plants has now become available as a result of combined microscopy and proteome studies. Starch accumulates in all cell types in immature maize leaf tissue, but in mature leaf tissues starch accumulation ceases in mesophyll cells except when sugar export from leaves is blocked. Proper regulation of the amount of carbon that goes into starch, the pathway of starch breakdown, and the location of starch accumulation could help ensure that engineering of C(4) metabolism is coordinated with the downstream reactions required for efficient photosynthesis.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Rates of photosynthesis, sucrose synthesis, starch accumulation and degradation were measured in sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L.) and bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) plants under a square-wave light regime and under a sinusoidal regime that simulated the natural daylight period. Photosynthesis rate increased in a measured manner in direct proportion to the increasing light level. In contrast to this close correspondence between photosynthesis and light, a lag in photosynthesis rate was seen during the initial hour under square-wave illumination. The leaf appeared to be responding to limits set by carbon metabolism rather than by gas exchange or light reactions. Under the sinusoidal regime starch degradation occurred during the first and last 2 hours of the photoperiod, likely in response to photosynthesis rate rather than directly to light level. Starch broke down when photosynthesis was below a threshold rate and accumulated above this rate. Under square-wave illumination, accumulation of starch did not begin until irradiance was at full level for an hour or more and photosynthesis was at or near its maximum. Under a sinusoidal light regime, sucrose synthesis rate comprised carbon that was newly fixed throughout the day plus that from starch degradation at the beginning and end of the day. Synthesis of sucrose from recently fixed carbon increased with increasing net carbon fixation rate while its formation from degradation of starch decreased correspondingly. The complementary sources of carbon maintained a relatively steady rate of sucrose synthesis under the changing daytime irradiance.  相似文献   

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