Sucrose metabolism: regulatory mechanisms and pivotal roles in sugar sensing and plant development

被引:1068
作者
Koch, K [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Florida, Dept Hort Sci, Plant Mol & Cellular Biol Program, Gainesville, FL 32611 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
D O I
10.1016/j.pbi.2004.03.014
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Sucrose cleavage is vital to multicellular plants, not only for the allocation of crucial carbon resources but also for the initiation of hexose-based sugar signals in importing structures. Only the invertase and reversible sucrose synthase reactions catalyze known paths of sucrose breakdown in vivo. The regulation of these reactions and its consequences has therefore become a central issue in plant carbon metabolism. Primary mechanisms for this regulation involve the capacity of invertases to alter sugar signals by producing glucose rather than UDPglucose, and thus also two-fold more hexoses than are produced by sucrose synthase. In addition, vacuolar sites of cleavage by invertases could allow temporal control via compartmentalization. In addition, members of the gene families encoding either invertases or sucrose synthases respond at transcriptional and posttranscriptional levels to diverse environmental signals, including endogenous changes that reflect their own action (e.g. hexoses and hexose-responsive hormone systems such as abscisic acid [ABA] signaling). At the enzyme level, sucrose synthases can be regulated by rapid changes in sub-cellular localization, phosphorylation, and carefully modulated protein turnover. In addition to transcriptional control, invertase action can also be regulated at the enzyme level by highly localized inhibitor proteins and by a system that has the potential to initiate and terminate invertase activity in vacuoles. The extent, path, and site of sucrose metabolism are thus highly responsive to both internal and external environmental signals and can, in turn, dramatically alter development and stress acclimation.
引用
收藏
页码:235 / 246
页数:12
相关论文
共 98 条
[31]   Carbon partitioning to cellulose synthesis [J].
Haigler, CH ;
Ivanova-Datcheva, M ;
Hogan, PS ;
Salnikov, VV ;
Hwang, S ;
Martin, K ;
Delmer, DP .
PLANT MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 2001, 47 (1-2) :29-51
[32]   Decreased sucrose content triggers starch breakdown and respiration in stored potato tubers (Solanum tuberosum) [J].
Hajirezaei, MR ;
Börnke, F ;
Peisker, M ;
Takahata, Y ;
Lerchl, J ;
Kirakosyan, A ;
Sonnewald, U .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY, 2003, 54 (382) :477-488
[33]   Highly conserved protein kinases involved in the regulation of carbon and amino acid metabolism [J].
Halford, NG ;
Hey, S ;
Jhurreea, D ;
Laurie, S ;
McKibbin, RS ;
Zhang, YH ;
Paul, MJ .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY, 2004, 55 (394) :35-42
[34]   Metabolic signalling and carbon partitioning: role of Snf1-related (SnRK1) protein kinase [J].
Halford, NG ;
Hey, S ;
Jhurreea, D ;
Laurie, S ;
McKibbin, RS ;
Paul, M ;
Zhang, YH .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY, 2003, 54 (382) :467-475
[35]   Phosphorylation of sucrose synthase at serine 170: occurrence and possible role as a signal for proteolysis [J].
Hardin, SC ;
Tang, GQ ;
Scholz, A ;
Holtgraewe, D ;
Winter, H ;
Huber, SC .
PLANT JOURNAL, 2003, 35 (05) :588-603
[36]  
HARDIN SC, 2004, IN PRESS PLANT PHYSL
[37]   Altered gene expression brought about by inter- and intracellularly formed hexoses and its possible implications for plant-pathogen interactions [J].
Herbers, K ;
Sonnewald, U .
JOURNAL OF PLANT RESEARCH, 1998, 111 (1102) :323-328
[38]   The Medicago truncatula sucrose synthase gene MtSucS1 is activated both in the infected region of root nodules and in the cortex of roots colonized by arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi [J].
Hohnjec, N ;
Perlick, AM ;
Pühler, A ;
Küster, H .
MOLECULAR PLANT-MICROBE INTERACTIONS, 2003, 16 (10) :903-915
[39]   A novel UDP-glucose transferase is part of the callose synthase complex and interacts with phragmoplastin at the forming cell plate [J].
Hong, ZL ;
Zhang, ZM ;
Olson, JM ;
Verma, DPS .
PLANT CELL, 2001, 13 (04) :769-779
[40]   Phosphorylation of serine-15 of maize leaf sucrose synthase - Occurrence in vivo and possible regulatory significance [J].
Huber, C ;
Huber, JL ;
Liao, PC ;
Gage, DA ;
McMichael, RW ;
Chourey, PS ;
Hannah, LC ;
Koch, K .
PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 1996, 112 (02) :793-802