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Plant Physiology 77:183-189 (1985)
© 1985 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Articles

Maintenance Carbon Cycle in Crassulacean Acid Metabolism Plant Leaves 1

Source and Compartmentation of Carbon for Nocturnal Malate Synthesis

William H. Kenyon2, Ray F. Severson3 and Clanton C. Black, Jr.

Biochemistry Department, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602

The reciprocal relationship between diurnal changes in organic acid and storage carbohydrate was examined in the leaves of three Crassulacean acid metabolism plants. It was found that depletion of leaf hexoses at night was sufficient to account quantitatively for increase in malate in Ananas comosus but not in Sedum telephium or Kalanchoë daigremontiana. Fructose and to a lesser extent glucose underwent the largest changes. Glucose levels in S. telephium leaves oscillated diurnally but were not reciprocally related to malate fluctuations.

Analysis of isolated protoplasts and vacuoles from leaves of A. comosus and S. telephium revealed that vacuoles contain a large percentage (>50%) of the protoplast glucose, fructose and malate, citrate, isocitrate, ascorbate and succinate. Sucrose, a major constituent of intact leaves, was not detectable or was at extremely low levels in protoplasts and vacuoles from both plants.

In isolated vacuoles from both A. comosus and S. telephium, hexose levels decreased at night at the same time malate increased. Only in A. comosus, however, could hexose metabolism account for a significant amount of the nocturnal increase in malate. We conclude that, in A. comosus, soluble sugars are part of the daily maintenance carbon cycle and that the vacuole plays a dynamic role in the diurnal carbon assimilation cycle of this Crassulacean acid metabolism plant.


2 Present address: Southern Weed Science Laboratory, USDA-ARS, P. O. Box 225, Stoneville, MS 38776.

3 Tobacco Safety Research Unit, USDA-ARS, P. O. Box 5677, Athens, GA 30613.

1 Supported graciously by National Science Foundation Grant PCM 8023949.




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