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Plant Physiology 44:1499-1510 (1969)
© 1969 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Articles

Acid-Soluble Nucleotides of Pinto Bean Leaves at Different Stages of Development 1

L. H. Weinstein, D. C. McCune, Jill F. Mancini and P. van Leuken

a Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research, Yonkers, New York 10701

Acid-soluble nucleotides of unifoliate leaves of Pinto bean plants (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) were determined at young, mature, and senescent stages of development. At least 25 components could be distinguished on the basis of inorganic phosphorus determinations and 37 or more fractions on the basis of 32P labeling, with adenosine di- and triphosphates accounting for 60% of the total moles of nucleotide. The total nucleotide P and inorganic P, on a fresh weight basis, decreased about 44% between each stage of leaf development, but decrements in the levels of individual nucleotides varied from this over-all pattern.

Minor changes in the relative abundance of the individual nucleotides accompanied aging although the percentage of purine-containing nucleotides decreased with age. Total 32P activity per leaf in the nucleotide pool increased about 3-fold between the young and mature leaves and decreased slightly as leaves became senescent. In general, the specific activities of the nucleotides increased with increased age and adenosine-, guanosine-, uridine-, and cytidine triphosphates and adenosine diphosphate accounted for approximately 90% of the total activity. The changes in the relative sizes and energy status of the nucleotide pools were not so obvious as the changes in other metabolites that have been reported to accompany aging in leaf tissue.


1 Supported in part by grant AP-00189 from the National Air Pollution Control Administration, Consumer Protection and Environmental Health Service, United States Public Health Service.







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Copyright © 1969 by the American Society of Plant Biologists