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Plant Physiol. (1998) 117: 207-215
Estimating Photosynthesis and Concurrent Export Rates in
C3 and C4 Species at Ambient and Elevated
CO21,2
Bernard Grodzinski*,
Jirong Jiao, and
Evangelos D. Leonardos
Department of Plant Agriculture, University of Guelph, Ontario,
Canada N1G 2W1
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ABSTRACT |
The ability of 21 C3 and
C4 monocot and dicot species to rapidly export newly fixed
C in the light at both ambient and enriched CO2 levels was
compared. Photosynthesis and concurrent export rates were estimated
during isotopic equilibrium of the transport sugars using a
steady-state 14CO2-labeling procedure. At
ambient CO2 photosynthesis and export rates for
C3 species were 5 to 15 and 1 to 10 µmol C
m 2 s 1, respectively, and 20 to 30 and 15 to
22 µmol C m 2 s 1, respectively, for
C4 species. A linear regression plot of export on
photosynthesis rate of all species had a correlation coefficient of
0.87. When concurrent export was expressed as a percentage of
photosynthesis, several C3 dicots that produced transport
sugars other than Suc had high efflux rates relative to photosynthesis, comparable to those of C4 species. At high CO2
photosynthetic and export rates were only slightly altered in
C4 species, and photosynthesis increased but export rates
did not in all C3 species. The C3 species that
had high efflux rates relative to photosynthesis at ambient
CO2 exported at rates comparable to those of C4
species on both an absolute basis and as a percentage of
photosynthesis. At ambient CO2 there were strong linear
relationships between photosynthesis, sugar synthesis, and concurrent
export. However, at high CO2 the relationships between
photosynthesis and export rate and between sugar synthesis and export
rate were not as strong because sugars and starch were accumulated.
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INTRODUCTION |
Photosynthesis involves both the light-trapping reactions and the
dark reactions associated with C assimilation that are localized in
cells containing chloroplasts. However, it is clear that drawing any
correlation between photosynthesis and plant productivity depends on a
more complete understanding of C partitioning within the leaf and of
the subsequent translocation of assimilates via the phloem to sinks
(Gordon, 1986 ; Farrar, 1988 ; Wardlaw, 1990 ; Geiger and Servaites,
1994 ). C partitioning and allocation are processes that occur in both
the light and dark. What controls the initial partitioning of
photosynthates to temporary storage pools within the leaf (Lunn and
Hatch, 1995 ) or to immediate export remains unresolved (Gordon, 1986 ).
An important first step in answering this fundamental question is to
develop a reasonable measurement of the rate of immediate export.
Most researchers (Canny, 1973 ; Zimmermann and
Ziegler, 1975 ; Stitt et al., 1987 ; Van Bel, 1993 ; Geiger and Servaites,
1994 ; Turgeon, 1995 ) acknowledge that it is very difficult to quantify simultaneously C assimilation by the leaf, C recycling within the
leaf, temporary C storage within the leaf, and immediate C efflux
rate via the phloem. In the present study a steady-state 14CO2-feeding technique
originally developed by Geiger and Fondy (1979) and modified by Jiao
and Grodzinski (1996) was used to estimate concurrent (i.e. immediate)
export during photosynthesis. Our protocol is based on determining the
period in which the transport pools of sugars appear to be in isotopic
equilibrium before equating the photosynthetic rate with the concurrent
efflux of 14C from the leaf.
Using this protocol, errors associated with non-steady-state
labeling and pulse-chase experiments were reduced. For example, in a
study of bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) leaves, which export
primarily Suc, bacterial infection with Xanthamonas
campestris cv Phaseoli was observed to affect export from the host
leaves (Jiao et al., 1996 ). This conclusion was not evident from
pulse-chase experiments. Similarly, it was shown that when
photorespiration was suppressed by CO2
enrichment, both photosynthesis and concurrent export increased (Grodzinski et al., 1995 ; Jiao and Grodzinski, 1996 ; Leonardos et al.,
1996 ). Furthermore, warming the leaf reduced the concurrent export rate
more than photosynthesis. The measurements of concurrent export
obtained from our steady-state labeling procedure clearly demonstrated
that leaf warming resulted in a reduction in the export rate prior to
an inhibition of the operation of the photosystems and/or
C-fixation processes (Jiao and Grodzinski, 1996 ).
Using a pulse-chase procedure, Hofstra and Nelson (1969) compared the
rate of disappearance of label (14C) during a 6-h
chase period for leaves of six C3 dicots: castor bean (Ricinus communis), radish (Raphanus
sativus), soybean (Glycine max), sunflower
(Helianthus annuus), tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum), and tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) and four
C4 monocots: maize (Zea mays), millet
(Panicum miliaceum), sorghum (Sorghum bicolor), and sugarcane (Saccharum officinarum). Although no
C4 dicots were examined, this early study of
export provided a comparison among C3- and
C4-fixation types. Gordon (1986) observed that
maize and sorghum, two C4 plants, accumulated Suc
during the photoperiod at lower rates than C3
plants of the same family that also had parallel venation patterns.
In the present study, steady-state photosynthesis rates were
established and concurrent export rates from mature, attached leaves of
21 species were measured. Initially, we attempted to address two
questions: First, what is the probable maximum rate of export of the
newly formed photoassimilates (i.e. efflux of C) in leaves of species
with different capacities to fix the C (e.g. C3
and C4 species)? Second, what happens to the rate
of export during photosynthesis in response to
CO2 enrichment of the leaf atmosphere? After
addressing these questions it was possible to pose a new set of
questions relating to the existence of any general relationship between
the capacity to export C during photosynthesis and either the
mechanisms of CO2 assimilation (i.e.
C3 and C4 species) or of
the leaf anatomy (e.g. the venation patterns of monocots and dicots),
or the type of sugars being formed in the leaf and translocated.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Four C4 species, including two monocots,
maize (Zea mays) and sorghum (Sorghum bicolor cv
Sudan), and two dicots, pigweed (Amaranthus retroflexus) and
gomphrena (Gomphrena globosa), were grown from seeds. Three
C3 monocots, oat (Avena sativa L. cv
Elgin), barley (Hordeum vulgare L.), and wheat
(Triticum aestivum L. cv Karat), were also grown from seeds.
Two other monocots, alstroemeria (Alstroemeria sp. cv
Jacqueline) and sandersonia (Sandersonia aurantiaca), were
grown from rhizomes and tubers, respectively.
The current survey also included 12 C3 dicots.
Seven of these transport primarily Suc: sweet pepper (Capsicum
annuum cv Cubico), chrysanthemum (Chrysanthemum
morifolium), sunflower (Helianthus annuus), tobacco
(Nicotiana tabacum), bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.), pea (Pisum sativum cv Improved Laxton's Progress), and
rose (Rosa hybrida cv Samantha). All were grown from seed
except chrysanthemum and rose, which were grown from rooted cuttings.
The following C3 dicots that transport Suc and
other sugars were also examined: celery (Apium graveolens
L.), which translocates mannitol (Everard et al., 1994 ; Loescher and
Everard, 1996 ); cucumber (Cucumis sativus cv Revenue); and
several representative species of the mint family (Labiatae), including
coleus (Coleus blumei), catnip (Nepeta
faassenii), and salvia (Salvia splendens cv Bonfire), which translocate raffinose series sugars (Zimmermann and Ziegler, 1975 ; Madore and Grodzinski, 1984 , 1985 ; Turgeon and Wimmers, 1988 ).
All C3 and C4 plants were
grown in a similar manner in our greenhouse in an attempt to avoid
differences in photosynthesis, Suc synthesis, and export attributable
to growing plants in different conditions (Huber et al., 1985 ). Plants
were grown in Promix-BX (Les tourbières Premier LTÉE,
Rivière du Loup, Quebec, Canada) in 14-cm (1.4-L) pots in a
research greenhouse maintained at 25 ± 3°C day and 18 ± 1°C night temperatures. Plants were watered and fertilized regularly.
Gas-exchange and C-export studies were conducted on a recently expanded
mature leaf or leaflet. All plants were studied intact. No attempt was
made to remove other source leaves or to manipulate sink number.
Generally, the plants used were about 8 to 12 weeks old and flowering,
thus providing active sinks for the source leaf, which was the object
of our measurements.
Steady-State 14CO2 Labeling and
Export of 14C Photoassimilates
Steady-state gas exchange of leaves was measured using an
open-flow, steady-state,
14CO2-labeling gas-analysis
system described previously (Jiao and Grodzinski, 1996 ). The specific
activity of the 14CO2,
which was supplied by a precision syringe pump, was constant during a
single experiment but varied among experiments from 1 to 5 kBq
µg 1 C, depending on the photosynthetic rate
and the CO2 concentration. A GM detector (window
area 6.8 cm2, model EWGM, Bicron, Newbury, OH)
positioned under the leaf surface was used to monitor the radioactivity
accumulated in the source leaf during the 2-h feeding period. The GM
tube output through a ratemeter (model 8731-32, Nuclear Chicago, Des
Plaines, IL) was recorded, and the counts were corrected for the total
radioactivity recovered in the leaf fed with
14CO2 at the end of the
feeding period.
Export was calculated as the difference between the C-assimilation rate
measured continuously by the IRGA, and the
14C-retention rate estimated by the GM trace
after correcting for the CE for that leaf. Calculations of
14CO2 losses during
photorespiration and dark respiration were not needed to estimate the
rate of export, since the IRGA, only measured net
CO2 exchange by the leaf (Geiger and Fondy, 1979 ;
Jiao and Grodzinski, 1996 ). If the rate of net photosynthesis at a high light level (i.e. 1200 µmol m 2
s 1 PAR, 400-700 nm) was not constant for a
period of 2 to 3 h, we did not attempt to evaluate the concurrent
export flux. With each of the species used in this study, we confirmed
that the light-saturated photosynthesis rate and the concurrent export
rate did not vary significantly for labeling studies conducted between
10 am and 4 pm EST. Within 90 min, isotopic
equilibrium of the transport sugars was obtained (see data below).
Partitioning of 14C Photoassimilates
Partitioning of the recently fixed
14C in the source leaf was determined in a manner
similar to that described previously (Jiao and Grodzinski, 1996 ). After
rapid extraction of the leaf tissue in boiling ethanol (80%), the leaf
extract was vacuum dried, rehydrated, and partitioned against
chloroform (chloroform:water, 2:1; v/v). Ion-exchange chromatography
(AG50-X8 and AG1-X8, Bio-Rad) was used to separate the aqueous phase
into neutral (sugars), acidic (organic acids), and basic (amino acids)
fractions. Individual sugars were separated by HPLC (Beckman) using a
µ-Spherogel carbohydrate (7.5% cross-linked) column at 85°C, and
quantified using a refractive index detector (model 156, Beckman). Each
peak was calculated using an integrator (model HP3390A,
Hewlett-Packard). Fractions of each sugar were pooled and radioactivity
was determined by liquid-scintillation counting (model LS-6800,
Beckman). The radioactivity remaining in the ethanol-insoluble fraction
(95% starch) was counted by liquid scintillation in a gel suspension
(1 mL water:1.5 mL Cytoscint [ICN]) of the oven-dried tissue.
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RESULTS |
Estimating Steady-State Photosynthesis and the Concurrent
Export Rate
Figure 1 shows typical
estimates of the CE of the GM tubes in leaves of four species. Because
of the differences in leaf characteristics (i.e. leaf thickness and
venation pattern) among the species, CE varied between 0.1 and 0.4%.
Nevertheless, for each species and for each leaf type there was a
linear correlation between the radioactivity determined by destructive
analysis and that counted by the GM tube. Figure
2, A through C, shows that a constant photosynthetic rate was recorded with the IRGA throughout the feeding
period for each species. In each case the photosynthetic rate was
constant for at least 30 min before
14CO2 was supplied at a
constant specific activity throughout the feeding period. Although the
CE of the GM detector was low and varied with species (Fig. 1), the
retention of 14C measured nondestructively with
the GM detector was in close agreement with measurements of
radioactivity made by destructive sampling (Fig. 2, A-C). Export was
calculated as the difference between the data derived from the IRGA and
from the GM detector; however, we were very selective in choosing the
appropriate time to calculate the concurrent export rate.

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| Figure 1.
A comparison of radioactivity measured
nondestructively by monitoring 14C accumulation in the leaf
with a GM detector and by scintillation counting after destructive
sampling of the leaf of salvia (A), gomphrena (B), alstroemeria (C),
and maize (D). Measurements were made in leaf cuvettes as described in
``Materials and Methods''. Each point is the measurement of one leaf
under different environmental conditions. Values on the x
axis were multiplied by 10 3 (i.e. a value of 5000 dpm is
5 × 106 dpm). CE is the value of radioactivity
obtained by the GM detector divided by the radioactivity determined
after destructive analysis of the leaf tissue multiplied by 100.
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| Figure 2.
Total C fixation and 14C retention,
export, and partitioning in major intermediates during a 2-h
14CO2 feeding of the source leaf of pea (A, D,
G, and J), cucumber (B, E, H, and K), and maize (C, F, I, and L) under
35 Pa CO2, 21 kPa O2, and 25°C. Cumulative
net C fixation (dashed line in A, B, and C) was calculated from IRGA
data, whereas 14C retention in the leaf was measured both
nondestructively by monitoring 14C with a GM detector
continuously (solid line in A, B, and C) and in a parallel set of
leaves by destructive analysis ( ). Export (dotted line in A, B, and
C) was estimated as the difference between total fixation (dashed line)
and 14C retention in the leaf (solid line). D, E, and F
show partitioning of total 14C in the ethanol-soluble
fraction ( ), the total sugar fraction ( ), and in starch ( ). G,
H, and I, Partitioning of total 14C. J, K and L, Specific
activity of the major sugars: Suc ( ), raffinose (Raf, ), and
stachyose (Stac, ). Each point is the average of at least four
leaves on four different plants, and each error bar represents the
se of the mean.
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When the leaf was sampled during a typical 2-h feeding period, the
pattern of 14C-partitioning in the transport
sugars indicated that isotopic equilibrium between the
14CO2 in the air stream and
the major 14C translocates was generally not
achieved in the 1st h (Fig. 2, J-L). For example, in pea, a
C3 dicot (Fig. 2J), and in maize, a
C4 monocot (Fig. 2L), 60 to 90 min was required
before the specific activity of the major sugars reached a steady
level. Data for leaves of other species are not shown here, but the
labeling patterns were similar to those in pea (Fig. 2, G and J), maize
(Fig. 2, I and L), and bean (Jiao et al., 1996 ).
We used data between 90 and 120 min to calculate values for
photosynthesis and the corresponding concurrent export rate. During this period there appeared to be steady-state labeling of the sugar
pools. The labeling patterns in species that transport sugars other
than Suc confirm the value of using an estimate of the concurrent export rate calculated from data obtained after at least 90 min of
labeling under steady-state photosynthetic conditions. Figure 2K shows
that in cucumber, for example, the specific activity of the stachyose
pool was essentially unchanged after 30 min. Labeling was similar in
leaves of coleus, catnip, and salvia, all members of the mint family,
which also export sugars of the raffinose series (Jiao and
Grodzinski, 1996 ). We assumed that these sugars are produced in the
phloem (see Turgeon, 1995 ) and therefore are suitable endogenous
markers of export.
Photosynthesis versus Concurrent Export at Ambient CO2
Figure 3A shows photosynthetic and
concurrent export rates for all 21 species expressed as micromoles of C
(fixed and exported) on a leaf-area basis. Among the very different
C3 and C4 species studied,
a general pattern of export during photosynthesis clearly existed. A
linear regression line using all of the values in Figure 3A produced a
high correlation coefficient of 0.87. At ambient CO2, the greater the rate of photosynthesis, the
greater the rate of concurrent export. The species with the highest
rates of photosynthesis and export on a leaf-area basis were the
C4 species maize, sorghum, pigweed, and gomphrena
(Fig. 3A). Leaves of all C3 species had much
lower rates of both photosynthesis and export.

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| Figure 3.
Net photosynthesis of leaves of 21 species plotted
against their concurrent export rates, expressed as absolute values (A) and as relative C-efflux rate calculated as a percentage of the net
CO2-influx rate (B). A and B were each divided into four
quadrants labeled i, ii, iii, and iv, so that the data could be
compared easily with those in Figure 4. The exact intersection point of the vertical and horizontal lines on the axes (i.e. relative to specific values of photosynthesis and export rates) must be viewed as
arbitrary. The division of the graphs into quadrants was strictly for
convenience in developing an overview of the relationships among the
following species: 1, alstroemeria; 2, barley; 3, oat; 4, sandersonia;
5, wheat; 6, bean; 7, catnip; 8, celery; 9, chrysanthemum; 10, coleus;
11, cucumber; 12, pea; 13, pepper; 14, rose; 15, salvia; 16, sunflower;
17, tobacco; 18, maize; 19, sorghum; 20, pigweed; and 21, gomphrena.
The C3 and C4 species are indicated by circular and square symbols, respectively. Photosynthesis and export rates were
determined as outlined in ``Materials and Methods'' using mature
leaves of each species exposed to light-saturating conditions, ambient
CO2 concentrations (inlet air of 35 Pa CO2),
and 25°C (the daytime growth temperature). Each point is an average
of at least four leaves on four different plants. The se of
the means are not shown for graphical clarity.
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In Figure 3B concurrent export is expressed as a percentage of the
CO2 uptake rate rather than as an absolute value.
When this relative C-flux rate through the leaf was plotted against the
photosynthesis rate, a slightly different picture of the ability of a
source leaf to export C emerges (Fig. 3B). First, the strong linear
relationship between the fixation rate and the concurrent export rate
offered in Figure 3A was not obtained. Both A and B in Figure 3 are
divided by vertical and horizontal dotted lines to help compare the
distribution of the data obtained under both ambient (Fig. 3) and
enriched CO2 (Fig.
4) conditions. All
C3 species had lower photosynthetic rates than
did the C4 species. The values for the
C4 plants were in quadrant ii. Most of the data
for the C3 plants remained in quadrant iii in
Figure 3B, but six of the C3 species (i.e.
catnip, celery, coleus, cucumber, salvia, and sunflower) were
segregated into quadrant i in Figure 3B. These six species displayed a
relatively high capacity for exporting newly fixed C. For example,
compared with the monocot and dicot C4 species,
which exported approximately 75 to 80% of newly fixed C when exposed
to ambient CO2, salvia, a
C3 dicot, exported over 75% of the C being
assimilated (Fig. 3B). Salvia, catnip, coleus, and cucumber
translocated sugars of the raffinose series in addition to Suc (Fig. 2,
H and K); celery also translocated mannitol, whereas sunflower
translocated primarily Suc (data not shown).

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| Figure 4.
The effect of short-term exposure of the source
leaves to CO2 enrichment on net photosynthesis and
concurrent export rates expressed as absolute values (A) and as a
percentage of photosynthesis (B). The species tested and assay
conditions were those outlined in Figure 3, except that the source leaf
was exposed to high CO2 concentrations (inlet air of 90 Pa
CO2). Each point is an average of at least four leaves on
four different plants. The se of the means are not shown
for graphical clarity.
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Photosynthesis versus Concurrent Export during Short-Term
CO2 Enrichment
When the CO2 level of the gas stream
entering the leaf cuvette was increased from 35 to 90 Pa, the
photosynthetic rates of the two C4 monocots
increased slightly, whereas those of the two C4
dicots decreased slightly (Fig. 4, A and B). The export rates changed
similarly. Overall, the data points for the four
C4 species were in quadrant ii in Figure 4A as
they were in Figure 3A. As a group, the C4
species continued to export a high percentage of recently fixed C (Fig.
4B). However, during CO2 enrichment (Fig. 4, A
and B) photosynthetic rates of the C3 species
increased dramatically because photorespiration was reduced. As a
consequence, the data points for the C3 species
were shifted to the right in Figure 4, A and B, relative to the
positions they occupied in Figure 3, A and B, respectively. The
C3 species appeared to segregate into two
subgroups with respect to their capacity to export the increased amount
of newly reduced C (Fig. 4B).
One subgroup, which included species such as sunflower, catnip,
cucumber, and salvia, and seemed to export C rapidly at ambient CO2 on a percentage basis relative to C fixation
(Fig. 3B), continued under CO2 enrichment to
export C readily on both a percentage (Fig. 4B) and an absolute basis
(Fig. 4A). At high CO2 the photosynthetic rate
and the export capacity of these species were comparable to those of
the C4 species (Fig. 4A). In contrast, even
though photosynthetic rates were increased by CO2
enrichment in all C3 species, many merely
retained more label and did not achieve similarly high, concurrent
export rates (Fig. 4A). These species are represented by data sets
found in quadrant iv (Fig. 4, A and B). The export data expressed as C
efflux relative to C fixation and the distribution of
14C remaining in the leaf tissue in the primary
storage pools at the end of the feeding periods are summarized in Table
I.
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Table I.
Summary of 14C partitioning in the total
sugar and starch pools after a 2-h feeding under ambient (35 Pa) and
high (90 Pa) CO2 and comparison with export
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14C Partitioning in the Leaf
Photosynthesis and 14C partitioning into the
ethanol-soluble fraction (primarily sugars) were positively correlated
at both ambient (Fig. 5A) and high
CO2 (Fig. 5B). However, export and 14C partitioning into the solubles were more
strongly correlated at ambient CO2 (Fig. 5C). The
linear regression line between export and synthesis of translocates in
all species assayed at ambient CO2 had a
correlation coefficient of 0.87 (Fig. 5C). The same value was obtained
when the concurrent export rate was plotted against photosynthesis
(Fig. 3A). At high CO2 the linear correlation coefficent between photosynthesis and synthesis of
14C translocates in all species was only 0.53 (Fig. 5B), similar to that between photosynthesis and the concurrent
export rate at high CO2 (r = 0.45; Fig. 4A). In most C3 species the absolute rates of export during photosynthesis increased during
CO2 enrichment (Fig. 4A); however, at high
CO2 the export fluxes relative to fixation did
not increase proportionally to the photosynthesis rates, and a much
greater amount of 14C was retained in all
species.

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| Figure 5.
Photosynthesis rates (A and B) and concurrent
export rates (C and D) at ambient and high CO2 plotted
against the total partitioning of label into the ethanol-soluble
fraction of the leaf, which primarily consisted of retained sugars but
also contained other potentially phloem-mobile intermediates.
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Although cognizant of the pitfalls inherent in examining the
14C-partitioning data obtained after a 2-h
labeling period, we nevertheless created Table I from these data. The
rationale for including these data here is that these data were
collected for attached leaves for which we have values for steady-state
photosynthesis and concurrent export rates (Figs. 3 and 4). As pointed
out by Lunn and Hatch (1995) , there are very few studies of immediate partitioning of 14C under steady-state conditions
using attached leaves. Table I was structured to assess whether there
was any pattern in the ability to maintain a high rate of concurrent
export during photosynthesis and the partitioning of label into sugars
versus starch (over 95% of the labeled aqueous-ethanol insolubles),
among several recognizable groups of plants (e.g.
C3 and C4, or monocots and dicots, or species transporting sugars other than Suc).
All species tested appeared to accumulate both sugars and starch. Which
sugars were formed at elevated CO2 depended on
the individual species. For example, in pea and maize, Suc was the dominant storage sugar, whereas in cucumber and other mints, raffinose and verbascose accumulated in addition to Suc and starch (e.g. Fig. 2,
H and K). Table I shows that on average the sugar-to-starch ratios for
different groups of plants (e.g. C3) were similar
under ambient and high CO2, as was the
proportional export rate when expressed as a percentage of the
photosynthetic rate. When the average values for export flux were
expressed as a percentage of photosynthesis and compared within groups
with the accumulation of sugars or starch, it was clear that
C4 dicots and monocots displayed similar export
capacities and similar 14C-partitioning into
sugars versus starch. On average, the sugar-to-starch ratio was
approximately 3 at both ambient and high CO2.
Among the C3 dicots, two subgroups were
distinguishable based on the rates of concurrent export flux. The first
subgroup was comprised of those species (i.e. celery, catnip, coleus,
cucumber, salvia, and sunflower) with relatively high C-efflux rates
(Fig. 3B) compared with the C4 species. The
average relative export fluxes of this subgroup were about 72% at
ambient CO2 and 68% at elevated
CO2 (Table I). Among this subgroup the
sugar-to-starch ratio in the leaf was rather low, averaging 1.4 at both
CO2 levels. This subgroup seemed to export newly
fixed C rapidly and to store proportionally less as sugars and more as
starch (Table I). However, as shown in Table I, it is incorrect to
equate a rapid export rate during photosynthesis with low storage rates
of sugar versus starch. When data for the second subgroup of
C3 dicots were averaged, the sugar-to-starch
ratios were about 3 at both CO2 levels (Table I).
Upon closer examination of this second subgroup of
C3 dicots, the ratio for pea (6.2) and for rose
(6.3) tended to raise the average ratio for all
C3 dicots. In total, 10 of the 12 C3 dicots examined (i.e. 6 in the first subgroup
plus chrysanthemums, pepper, tobacco, and bean) had an average
sugar-to-starch ratio of less than 1.5. The export rates of the first
subgroup were of the order of 70% exported versus 42% exported for
the second subgroup of C3 dicots.
The monocots as a group also illustrate the problem associated with
drawing general conclusions from the data. First, there was a very high
ratio of sugar accumulation relative to starch synthesis; at ambient
CO2 the average sugar-to-starch ratio was 9.0, and at high CO2 the average ratio among the
C3 monocots was 7.7. Second, the efflux rates
were the lowest recorded among the 21 species. In contrast to the
export characteristics of C3 monocots, the
C4 monocots had the highest export rates in the
light.
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DISCUSSION |
Our data confirm the conclusions of others (Hofstra and Nelson,
1969 ) that, as a general rule, at ambient CO2 and
O2 conditions C4 species
such as maize fix and export more C per unit leaf area than do leaves
of C3 species (Fig. 3A). However, the concept
that C4 species export newly fixed C more readily
than C3 species is challenged. The concurrent
export rates of many C3 species at ambient
CO2 were equal to or greater than those of
C4 species when concurrent export was expressed
as a percentage of the rate of CO2 assimilation
(Fig. 3B). In particular, a number of C3 species that produce auxiliary phloem mobile-transport sugars (e.g.
raffinose sugars) appear to be able to maintain a relatively high C
export rate relative to the rate of C fixation.
Reducing photorespiration by CO2 enrichment
generally increased photosynthesis in C3 species
relative to the CO2 fixation rates observed in
the C4 species (Fig. 4A). However, relative to
the C fixation rate, the concurrent export rates from the leaves did
not increase proportionally in all C3 species
(Fig. 4B). At high CO2 a number of
C3 species that transport sugars other than Suc
were capable of maintaining a high export flux rate both in absolute
amounts of C being exported per unit leaf area and in terms of export
flux relative to the rate of C fixation. A notable exception was
sunflower. Hofstra and Nelson (1969) noted previously that sunflower
displayed an unusually high rate of photosynthesis and export relative
to other C3 and C4 species.
When chrysanthemum, another member of the family Compositae, was
tested, a relatively low rate of export was measured compared with that
of sunflower. Our survey of other members of this family or of other
members of the same genus is ongoing. It remains a curiosity why within the subgroup of C3 dicots that showed very high
rates of export during photosynthesis (Table I; Figs. 3 and 4),
sunflower, which translocates no special sugars other than Suc, should
have such a high relative export rate at both ambient and high
CO2 compared with the C4
plants.
The high export rates of C4 species such as
gomphrena, maize, pigweed, and sorghum may be due to a combination of
the differences between C3 and
C4 plants, with the most prominent being the
lower photosynthetic and higher photorespiratory rates of
C3 plants (Hofstra and Nelson, 1969 ; Berry and
Björkman, 1980 ; Zelitch, 1992 ). Huber et al. (1985) have shown
that leaves of maize have higher amounts of Suc-phosphate synthase
relative to several C3 species. A faster rate of
Suc synthesis in maize is certainly consistent with the view that
leaves exhibiting C4 metabolism export C more
rapidly than do leaves with C3 metabolism (Fig. 3A), but these observations do not explain why many species accumulate sugars in their leaves during the photoperiod (e.g. Table I) and yet do
not export these sugars immediately (Gordon, 1986 ; Geiger and
Servaites, 1994 ).
There are certainly many potential sites of temporary storage of sugars
in the leaf, which may become even more important when export is
blocked temporarily (Robards and Lucas, 1990 ; Jiao and Grodzinski,
1996 ). At high CO2 all sites of storage in the leaf tissue have the potential to become filled more readily. It is
well known that sugars and starch act as temporary storage pools in a
wide variety of C3 and C4
leaf types (Stitt et al., 1987 ; Geiger and Servaites, 1994 ; Lunn and
Hatch, 1995 ). An examination of the 14C
intermediates remaining in the leaves at the end of the 2-h feeding
periods indicated that at both CO2 levels, label
accumulated in both sugar- and starch-storage pools (Table I). There
was no discernable pattern in the labeling of sugar and starch among the C3 and C4 species
tested, which would address specifically the question of whether the
type of storage product would predict if a species had a propensity to
export C readily in the light.
Taken together, the data show that at ambient CO2
there was a strong linear relationship between photosynthesis,
synthesis of translocates, and concurrent export (Figs. 3A and 5, A and B). These data are consistent with a feed-forward relationship among
photosynthesis, sugar synthesis, and immediate export (Stitt et al.,
1987 ; Geiger and Servaites, 1994 ). However, at high
CO2 the relationship between photosynthesis and
export rate, or between immediate export and sugar synthesis was not as
strong because sugars and starch were being stored.
It has been suggested that the distance that photoassimilates may
travel before being loaded into the vascular system of
C4 species may be shorter than in
C3 species (Wardlaw, 1990 , and refs. therein).
Although it seems that a C4 leaf might have an advantage over a C3 leaf in concentrating
CO2 at the site of Rubisco in the bundle sheath
and in exporting reduced forms of C between fixation sites and the
phloem, C4 species have additional C transport steps that may negate such advantages. In maize, for example, the
Suc-synthesis enzymes are mainly located in the mesophyll cells (Ohsugi
and Huber, 1987 ). Thus, trioses produced in bundle-sheath cells must be
transferred to mesophyll cells before being converted to Suc. Newly
formed Suc must then be returned to the bundle sheath, presumably via a
symplastic route, before it can be loaded into the phloem. Whether Suc
is then loaded into the phloem via a symplastic or an apoplastic
mechanism is not known. Even among C3 species the
movement of sugars from the mesophyll to the vascular tissue is not
well defined.
Several review articles have pointed out that loading of sugars can
occur by both apoplastic and symplastic routes (Robards and Lucas,
1990 ; Van Bel, 1993 ; Turgeon, 1995 ). In plants that export
photoassimilates in the form of Suc, transfer of photoassimilates to
the phloem region may be primarily symplastic, whereas phloem loading
(sieve element loading) is apoplastic (Giaquinta, 1983 ; Van Bel, 1993 ).
In plants that export Suc and auxiliary sugars of the raffinose series,
vein loading appears to involve a symplastic mechanism (Turgeon, 1991 ,
1995 ). However, it is unclear whether there is any relationship between
the mechanism of vein loading and the immediate allocation of C to
export during photosynthesis. Gamalei (1991) and Van Bel (1993) have
hypothesized that from an evolutionary standpoint, symplastic loading
mechanisms may be less efficient than apoplastic loading mechanisms.
Whatever the energy requirements of symplastic loading mechanisms, our
data show that under light-saturated photosynthetic conditions, the
efflux of C (proportional to the rate of C reduction) in these
C3 species is as great as in
C4 plants. Species such as cucumber, coleus,
catnip, and salvia, which might be classified as symplastic loaders,
displayed rapid rates of C export relative to their fixation rates. In
both ambient (Fig. 3B) and enriched (Fig. 4B) CO2
atmospheres, intact, attached leaves of these species exported C more
readily under steady-state labeling conditions than did leaves of other
C3 species such as pea that are apoplastic loaders (Giaquinta, 1983 ; Turgeon and Wimmers, 1988 ; Van Bel, 1993 ).
Celery, which translocated mannitol, and sunflower, which translocated
Suc, both exported newly fixed C as readily as the group making the
raffinose sugars (Figs. 3B and 4B).
Our data are restricted to a comparison of export during photosynthesis
among 21 species under conditions in which the light levels did not
limit the uptake of C. These experiments do not provide an accurate
estimate of daytime versus nighttime C export, which certainly reflect
diurnal patterns of control (Geiger and Servaites, 1994 ). When the leaf
is in the dark, both C skeletons for the synthesis of the translocates
and the energy generated for translocation processes must be derived
exclusively from previously stored carbohydrate reserves with no real
opportunity to refix the CO2 lost during
respiration (Grange, 1985 ; Gordon, 1986 ; Côté et al., 1992 ;
Geiger and Servaites, 1994 ; Bouma et al., 1995 ; Grodzinski et al.,
1995 ). Although no clear pattern of partitioning of
14C into major storage pools of sugars and starch
that could be related to export during photosynthesis was derived
(Table I), the nature of the storage products may affect nighttime
export and the total net export of reduced C from the leaf.
We are currently investigating daytime and nighttime export patterns in
a wider range of leaf forms (e.g. isogenic lines of peas) that have
different export abilities under varying O2
levels (Côté et al., 1992 ), as well as examining a number
of C4 subtypes, including
C3-C4 intermediate species
(Leonardos and Grodzinski, 1997 ). More experiments are clearly required
to determine whether (and under what environmental conditions) the
mechanism of loading or the utilization of auxiliary translocates
(Zimmermann and Ziegler, 1975 ) is a factor affecting export rate during
photosynthesis and the storage and subsequent export of these
assimilates during the night.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author; e-mail
bgrodzinski{at}evbhort.uoguelph.ca; fax 1-519-767-0755.
Received September 23, 1997;
accepted January 24, 1998.
1
This research was supported by grants to B.G.
from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada;
the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food, and Rural Affairs; Flowers
Canada, Ltd. (Ontario); the Cecil Delworth Foundation; and the Center for Research in Earth and Space Technology; and by an
Ontario-Québec Exchange Fellowship (B.G.). E.D.L. was a recipient
of an Ontario graduate fellowship.
2
This paper is dedicated to our friend the late David
Strathern Fenson, Professor Emeritus, Mount Allison University, New
Brunswick, Canada, who helped to stimulate much of the thinking about
the problems associated with the measurement of export fluxes from leaves.
 |
ABBREVIATIONS |
Abbreviations:
CE, counting efficiency.
GM, Geiger-Müller.
IRGA, IR gas analyzer.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
The authors appreciate the technical assistance of Bernie Watts
and George Lin in the study of the pepper leaves and in the analysis of
14C photoassimilates, respectively. The comments
of Dr. Donald Collier and Arende Librande during the preparation of an
early version of this manuscript are also gratefully acknowledged.
 |
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