Response to Phosphate Deprivation in Brassica nigra Suspension Cells

  • Lefebvre D
  • Duff S
  • Fife C
  • et al.
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Abstract

Suspension cells of Brassica nigra responded to Pi deprivation by increasing their potential for Pi influx and by raising the active levels of intracellular, cell surface, and secreted acid phospha- tases. These responses, however, were temporally distinct. Phos- phate influx capacity increased 15-fold in parallel to a 10-fold decrease in endogenous Pi during 7 days of culture in basal growth medium. In contrast, intracellular and cell surface phos- phatase activities changed only after alterations in cellular phos- phorus status had been in place for a number of days. Even in nutrient sufficient cells the secretion of phosphatase remained relatively high as did the acfivities of the other phosphatases. The cell surface acid phosphatase had a Km of approximately 10 times that of the influx process and molybdate was a much stronger inhibitor of this phosphatase activity. From these results it appears that Pi absorption and the production or activation of phosphatases are regulated in a distinct manner. In addition, Pi uptake into Brassica nigra cells does not appear to directly involve the cell surface phosphatase under Pi-deficient conditions. Plants

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Lefebvre, D. D., Duff, S. M. G., Fife, C. A., Julien-Inalsingh, C., & Plaxton, W. C. (1990). Response to Phosphate Deprivation in Brassica nigra Suspension Cells. Plant Physiology, 93(2), 504–511. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.93.2.504

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