CARBON-14 STUDIES OF INTERMEDIARY METABOLISM IN POTASSIUM-DEFICIENT TOMATO PLANTS

1966; Canadian Science Publishing; Volume: 44; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1139/b66-036

ISSN

1480-3305

Autores

L. H. Jones,

Tópico(s)

Plant Micronutrient Interactions and Effects

Resumo

The effect of potassium deficiency on the metabolism of tomato leaves was studied by the use of 14 CO 2 . After normal and potassium-deficient plants had been exposed to 14 CO 2 in the light for 5 minutes, the latter showed smaller amounts of label in starch, uridine–diphosphate–glucose, glucose, fructose, glyceric acid, phosphoenol-pyruvate, pyruvic acid, alanine, and aspartic acid. Relatively more was present in 3-phosphoglycerate, serine, glycine, and glutamine. When exposure for 5 minutes to 14 CO 2 in the light was followed by 2 hours of darkness, the potassium-deficient plants had less 14 C in glucose, fructose, alanine, and aspartic acid, but relatively more in sucrose, glycine, and glutamine.Exposure to 14 CO 2 in the dark for 2 hours resulted in less label entering aspartic acid, but relatively more in glycine in potassium-deficient plants.The results are consistent with decreased pyruvic kinase activity in potassium-deficient plants, and there is evidence of a similar effect on glyceric acid production, invertase activity, and UDPG synthesis.

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