Isolation and sugar uptake characteristics of protoplasts from maize endosperm suspension cultures |
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Authors: | Frederick C. Felker Paul A. Thomas C. Gerald Crawford |
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Affiliation: | USDA, ARS, Northern Regional Research Center, 1815 N. University St., Peoria, IL 61604, USA;Dept of Extension Horticulture, Univ. of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602, USA. |
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Abstract: | The isolation and sugar uptake characteristics of protoplasts from maize ( Zea mays L.) endosperm-derived suspension cultures are described. In contrast with protoplasts from intact developing endosperm, which by virtue of their large size and high starch content are too fragile for sugar uptake experiments, suspension cultures yielded protoplasts capable of withstanding the necessary handling and centrifugations. Intactness of the protoplasts was demonstrated by dye exclusion or accumulation and latency of malate dehydrogenase activity. Uptake of radioactivity from [3H]-inulin did not increase with time, but that from [14C]-sugars increased over a wide range of external concentrations. Kinetics of fructose, glucose and sucrose uptake were biphasic, and the saturable components of uptake were eliminated by p -chloromercuribenzene sulfonate (PCMBS). Rates of uptake of sucrose and 1'-fluorosucrose were similar, confirming that hydrolysis by cell wall invertase contributes to sucrose uptake by the suspension cultures. The isolation of protoplasts from this tissue source will enable experimental access to plasma membrane sugar carriers which may exist in the intact maize endosperm. |
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Keywords: | Corn endosperm cultures maize protoplasts sugar transport Zea mays |
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