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PLANT PHYSIOLOGY , Vol 102, Issue 2 521-527, Copyright © 1993 by American Society of Plant Biologists
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METABOLISM AND ENZYMOLOGY |
Identification of Catabolites of Chlorophyll-Porphyrin in Senescent Rape Cotyledons
S. Ginsburg and P. Matile
Department of Plant Biology, University of Zurich, Zollikerstrasse 107, CH-8008 Zurich, Switzerland
Developing shoots of rape seedlings (Brassica napus L.) were excised and
fed with 4-[14C]5-aminolevulinic acid to label the pyrroles in chlorophyll
(Chl) synthesized during the final phase of expansion and greening of the
cotyledons. About 80% of 14C taken up into the cotyledons was incorporated
into Chl. The subsequent incubation of labeled shoots in permanent darkness
caused the rapid loss of labeled Chl while increasing proportions of 14C
appeared in the fraction of water-soluble compounds. Reversed-phase high
performance liquid chromatography resolved three nonfluorescent polar
catabolites of Chl-porphyrin that were progressively accumulated as
senescence advanced. At intermediate stages of senescence, the cotyledons
contained a fluorescent radio-active derivative of Chl that was also
detectable, together with traces of other putative fluorescent catabolites,
in isolated senescent chloroplasts. The nonfluorescent catabolites,
identified by means of radiolabeling, were also found to accumulate in
attached cotyledons senescing under photoperiod; under these conditions,
one of the compounds, NCC-1, was particularly abundant. The catabolites of
rape exhibited the same ultraviolet spectra, characterized by a maximum at
320 nm, as a previously reported secoporphinoid catabolite from barley (B.
Krautler, B. Jaun, W. Amrein, K. Bortlik, M. Schellenberg, P. Matile [1992]
Plant Physiol Biochem 30: 333-346). Different polarities suggest, however,
that the structures may be different. A terminology for Chl catabolites is
proposed because present knowledge suggests that a large number of
different structures results from species-specific processing of breakdown
products and may require a suitable nomenclature.
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