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Plant Physiology 58:744-748 (1976)
© 1976 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Articles

Acylated Steryl Glycoside Synthesis in Seedlings of Nicotiana tabacum L. 1

Wayne Frasch2 and Claus Grunwald3

a Department of Agronomy, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506

In tobacco seedlings (Nicotiana tabacum L.), glucose from supplied uridine diphosphate-[U-14C]glucose was first incorporated into steryl glycosides and later into acylated steryl glycosides. However, when [14C]cholesterol was used as substrate, the acylated steryl glycosides became labeled earlier than the steryl glycosides. With [14C]cholesteryl glucoside as substrate, most of the radioactive label was recovered as free sterol, and the acylated steryl glycosides were not readily labeled; however, palmitoyl [14C]cholesteryl glucoside was rapidly converted to steryl glycoside. In feeding experiments with free sterol, an unknown, highly radioactive steroid component was isolated. Incorporation of radioactivity into the unknown occurred before the acylated steryl glycosides were labeled.

It is postulated that two pathways exist for the biosynthesis of acylated steryl glycoside: one through steryl glycosides, and the other through an unidentified steroid component. It is the latter pathway which appears to be dominant in the in vivo tobacco system.


2 This work is part of M.S. thesis.

3 Present address: Botany and Plant Pathology, Illinois Natural History Survey, Urbana, Illinois 61801.

1 This paper (No. 76-3-95) is part of a project of the Kentucky Agricultural Experiment Station and is published with approval of the Director.




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S. DeBolt, W.-R. Scheible, K. Schrick, M. Auer, F. Beisson, V. Bischoff, P. Bouvier-Nave, A. Carroll, K. Hematy, Y. Li, et al.
Mutations in UDP-Glucose:Sterol Glucosyltransferase in Arabidopsis Cause Transparent Testa Phenotype and Suberization Defect in Seeds
Plant Physiology, September 1, 2009; 151(1): 78 - 87.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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Copyright © 1976 by the American Society of Plant Biologists