Non-autotrophic CO2 Fixation during Shoot Formation in Tobacco Callus |
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Authors: | PLUMB-DHINDSA, PAMELA L. DHINDSA, RAJINDER S. THORPE, TREVOR A. |
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Abstract: | Non-autotrophic carbon fixation has been studied during growthof tobacco callus cultured in dark under shoot-forming (SF)and non-shoot-forming (NSF) conditions. The enzymes involvedin malate metabolismphosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase,malic dehydrogenase, glutamic-oxalacetic transaminase, and malicenzymeincreased sharply during the first 4 d of cultureparticularly in SF tissue. The activities of the enzymes studiedwere considerably greater in SF than in NSF tissue. There wasa dramatic increase in malate content in SF tissue during thefirst 4 d of culture. Subsequently malate was rapidly depletedduring the time of organogenesis. In NSF tissue there was acontinuous build-up of malate content throughout the cultureperiod. We suggest that malate derived from dark fixation ofCO2 plays differing roles in NSF (callus) and SF tissues. Inthe former, malate acts primarily as an osmotic solute regulating,at least in part, cell expansion between successive cell divisions.In shoot-forming tissue, on the other hand, malate preferentiallyprovides NADPH for reductive biosynthesis. |
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