Sources of carbon for export from spinach leaves throughout the day

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Abstract

Rates of net carbon exchange, export, starch, and sucrose synthesis were measured in leaves of spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) throughout a 14-hour period of sinusoidal light to determine the sources of carbon contributing to export. Net carbon exchange rate closely followed light level, but export remained relatively constant throughout the day. In the morning when photosynthesis was low, starch degradation provided most of the carbon for export, while accumulated sucrose was exported during the evening. At high photosynthesis rate, the regulatory metabolite fructose 2,6-bisphosphate was low, allowing more of the newly fixed carbon to flow to sucrose through cytosolic fructose bisphosphatase. When the rate of sucrose synthesis exceeded the rate of export from the leaf, sucrose accumulated and soon thereafter sucrose synthesis declined. A decreasing sucrose synthesis rate resulted in additional carbon moving to the synthesis of starch, which was maintained throughout the remainder of the day. The declining sucrose synthesis rate coincided with decreasing activity of sucrose phosphate synthase present in gel-filtered leaf extracts. A rise in the leaf levels of uridine diphosphoglucose and fructose 6-phosphate throughout the day was consistent with this declining activity.

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Servaites, J. C., Fondy, B. R., Li, B., & Geiger, D. R. (1989). Sources of carbon for export from spinach leaves throughout the day. Plant Physiology, 90(3), 1168–1174. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.90.3.1168

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