Carbohydrate Metabolism in Taproots of Medicago sativa L. during Winter Adaptation and Spring Regrowth
- 1 July 1991
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Plant Physiology
- Vol. 96 (3) , 786-793
- https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.96.3.786
Abstract
Our objective was to identify amylases that may participate in starch degradation in alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) taproots during winter hardening and subsequent spring regrowth. Taproots from field-grown plants were sampled at intervals throughout fall, winter, and early spring. In experiment 1, taproots were separated into bark and wood tissues. Concentrations of soluble sugars, starch, and buffer-soluble proteins and activities of endo- and exoamylase were determined. Starch concentrations declined in late fall, whereas concentrations of sucrose increased. Total amylolytic activity (primarily exoamylase) was not consistently associated with starch degradation but followed trends in soluble protein concentration of taproots. This was especially evident in spring when both declined as starch degradation increased and shoot growth resumed. Activity of endoamylase increased during periods of starch degradation, especially in bark tissues. In experiment 2, a low starch line had higher specific activity of taproot amylases. This line depleted its taproot starch by late winter, after which taproot sugar concentrations declined. As in experiment 1, total amylolytic activity declined in spring in both lines, whereas that of endoamylase increased in both lines even though little starch remained in taproots of the low starch line. Several isoforms of both amylases were distinguished using native polyacrylamide electrophoresis, with isoforms being similar in bark and wood tissues. The slowest migrating isoform of endoamylase was most prominent at each sampling. Activity of all endoamylase isoforms increased during winter adaptation and in spring when shoot growth resumed. Endoamylase activity consistently increased at times of starch utilization in alfalfa taproots (hardening, spring regrowth, after defoliation), indicating that it may serve an important role in starch degradation.Keywords
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