Plant Physiol. Drug Metab Dispos
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Plant Physiology 99:1105-1117 (1992)
© 1992 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Metabolism and Enzymology

Photosynthate Metabolism in the Source Leaves of N2-Fixing Soybean Plants

Edward J. I. de Veau1, J. Michael Robinson, Robert D. Warmbrodt and Diane F. Kremer

U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, BARC-West, Natural Resources Institute, Climate Stress Laboratory, Beltsville, Maryland 20705-2350

Soybean plants (Glycine max [L.] Merr. cv Williams), which were symbiotic with Bradyrhizobium japonicum, and which grew well upon reduced nitrogen supplied solely through N2 fixation processes, often exhibited excess accumulation of starch and sucrose and diminished soluble protein in their source leaves. Nitrate and ammonia, when supplied to the nodulated roots of N2-fixing plants, mediated a reduction of foliar starch accumulation and a corresponding increase in soluble protein in the source leaves. This provided an opportunity to examine the potential metabolic adjustments by which NO3 and NH4+ (N) sufficiency or deficiency exerted an influence upon soybean leaf starch synthesis. When compared with soybean plants supplied with N, elevated starch accumulation was focused in leaf palisade parenchyma tissue of N2-fixing plants. Foliar activities of starch synthesis pathway enzymes including fructose-1,6-bisphosphate phosphatase, phosphohexoisomerase, phosphoglucomutase (PGM), as well as adenosine diphosphate glucose pyrophosphorylase (in some leaves) exhibited highest activities in leaf extracts of N2-fixing plants when expressed on a leaf protein basis. This was interpreted to mean that there was an adaptation of these enzyme activities in the leaves of N2-fixing plants, and this contributed to an increase in starch accumulation. Another major causal factor associated with increased starch accumulation was the elevation in foliar levels of fructose-6-phosphate, glucose-6-phosphate, and glucose-1-phosphate (G1P), which had risen to chloroplast concentrations considerably in excess of the Km values for their respective target enzymes associated with starch synthesis, e.g. elevated G1P with respect to adenosine diphosphate glucose pyrophosphorylase (ADPG-PPiase) binding sites. The cofactor glucose-1,6-bisphosphate (G1,6BP) was found to be obligate for maximal PGM activity in soybean leaf extracts of N2-fixing as well as N-supplemented plants, and G1,6BP levels in N2-fixing plant leaves was twice that of levels in N-supplied treatments. However the concentration of chloroplastic G1,6BP in illuminated leaves was computed to be saturating with respect to PGM in both N2-fixing and N-supplemented plants. This suggested that the higher level of this cofactor in N2-fixing plant leaves did not confer any higher PGM activation and was not a factor in higher starch synthesis rates. Relative to plants supplied with NO3 and NH4+, the source leaf glycerate-3-phosphate (3-PGA) and orthophosphate (Pi) concentrations in leaves of N2-fixing plants were two to four times higher. Although Pi is a physiological competitive inhibitor of leaf chloroplast ADPG-PPiase, and hence, starch synthesis, elevated chloroplast 3-PGA levels in N2-fixing plant leaves apparently prevented interference of Pi with ADPG-PPiase catalysis and starch synthesis.


1 Present address: USDA, ARS, BARC-West, Horticultural Crops Quality Laboratory, Room 113, Building 002, Beltsville, MD 20705-2350.




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T. Mitchell-Olds and D. Pedersen
The Molecular Basis of Quantitative Genetic Variation in Central and Secondary Metabolism in Arabidopsis
Genetics, June 1, 1998; 149(2): 739 - 747.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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