The role of the hexose transporter in the chloroplasts of Arabidopsis thaliana L
1994
Trethewey, R.N. | Ap Rees, T.
The metabolism of wild-type Arabidopsis thaliana L. and its mutant TC265 were compared in order to reveal the role of the chloroplast glucose transporter. Plants were grown in a 12-h photoperiod. From 20 to 40 days after germination, starch per gram fresh weight of shoot in the mutant was four times that in the wild type. The extent of this difference did not alter during this period. Stereological analysis showed that the chloroplasts in the mutant were larger than those in the wild type; the thylakoids appeared to be distorted by the high starch content. [U-14C]Glucose and [U-14C]glycerol were supplied, separately, to excised leaves in the dark. [U-14C]Glucose was a good precursor of sucrose in the wild type and mutant; [U-14C]glycerol was a poor precursor of sucrose in both. The distribution of 14C in the wild type was used to calculate that the net flux was from hexose monophosphates to triose phosphates, not vice versa. During the first 4 h of the night the sugar content (75% sucrose, 20% glucose) of the leaves of the mutant dropped sharply, and at all times during the night it was less than that of the wild-type leaves. This drop in sugar coincided with a decrease in the rate of respiration. The growth rate of the mutant was less than that of the wild type. Addition of sucrose restored the rate of respiration at night and increased the rate of growth. It is argued that a major function of the glucose transporter in Arabidopsis chloroplasts is export of the products of starch breakdown that are destined for sucrose synthesis at night.
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