Supply and demand: sink regulation of sugar accumulation in sugarcane

被引:107
作者
McCormick, A. J. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Watt, D. A. [1 ,3 ]
Cramer, M. D. [4 ,5 ]
机构
[1] SASRI, Crop Biol Resource Ctr, ZA-4300 Mt Edgecombe, South Africa
[2] Univ Oxford, Dept Plant Sci, Oxford OX1 3RB, England
[3] Univ KwaZulu Natal, Sch Biol & Conservat Sci, ZA-4041 Durban, South Africa
[4] Univ Cape Town, Dept Bot, ZA-7701 Rondebosch, South Africa
[5] Univ Western Australia, Sch Plant Biol, Fac Nat & Agr Sci, Nedlands, WA 6009, Australia
基金
新加坡国家研究基金会;
关键词
Elasticity; metabolic regulation; photosynthesis; sucrose; SUCROSE ACCUMULATION; PHOTOSYNTHETIC RATES; LEAF PHOTOSYNTHESIS; PLANT DEVELOPMENT; GENE-EXPRESSION; DOWN-REGULATION; MATURE LEAVES; CARBON FLUX; CELL-WALL; METABOLISM;
D O I
10.1093/jxb/ern310
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Sugarcane (Saccharum spp. hybrids) accumulates sucrose to high concentrations and, as a result, has been the focus of extensive research into the biochemistry and physiology of sucrose accumulation. Despite this, the relationship between source leaf photosynthetic activity and sucrose accumulation in the culm sink is not well understood. The observations that photosynthetic activity declines during culm maturation in commercial cultivars and that high-sucrose-accumulating noble ancestral genotypes (Saccharum officinarum L.) photosynthesize at rates two-thirds of those of low-sucrose ancestors (Saccharum spontaneum L.) indicate that source-sink communication may play a pivotal role in determining sucrose yield. Although maturation of the culm results in a decreased demand for sucrose, recent evidence from partial leaf shading, defoliation, and transgenic studies indicates that sugarcane cultivars are capable of further increases in sugar content. Furthermore, sugarcane leaves appear to retain the capacity to increase the supply of assimilate to culm tissues under conditions of increased assimilate demand. The relationship between source and sink tissues in sugarcane should be viewed within a supply-demand paradigm; an often neglected conceptual approach in the study of this crop. Uncoupling of the signalling pathways that mediate negative feedback between source and sink tissues may result in improved leaf assimilation rates and, consequently, lead to increased sugarcane sucrose yields.
引用
收藏
页码:357 / 364
页数:8
相关论文
共 80 条
[71]   SINK REGULATION OF PHOTOSYNTHETIC METABOLISM IN TRANSGENIC TOBACCO PLANTS EXPRESSING YEAST INVERTASE IN THEIR CELL-WALL INVOLVES A DECREASE OF THE CALVIN-CYCLE ENZYMES AND AN INCREASE OF GLYCOLYTIC-ENZYMES [J].
STITT, M ;
VONSCHAEWEN, A ;
WILLMITZER, L .
PLANTA, 1991, 183 (01) :40-50
[72]   The control of source to sink carbon flux during tuber development in potato [J].
Sweetlove, LJ ;
Kossmann, J ;
Riesmeier, JW ;
Trethewey, RN ;
Hill, SA .
PLANT JOURNAL, 1998, 15 (05) :697-706
[73]   Source metabolism dominates the control of source to sink carbon flux in tuberizing potato plants throughout the diurnal cycle and under a range of environmental conditions [J].
Sweetlove, LJ ;
Hill, SA .
PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT, 2000, 23 (05) :523-529
[74]   Kinetic model of sucrose accumulation in maturing sugarcane culm tissue [J].
Uys, Lafras ;
Botha, Frederik C. ;
Hofmeyr, Jan-Hendrik S. ;
Rohwer, Johann M. .
PHYTOCHEMISTRY, 2007, 68 (16-18) :2375-2392
[75]   EXPRESSION OF A YEAST-DERIVED INVERTASE IN THE CELL-WALL OF TOBACCO AND ARABIDOPSIS PLANTS LEADS TO ACCUMULATION OF CARBOHYDRATE AND INHIBITION OF PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND STRONGLY INFLUENCES GROWTH AND PHENOTYPE OF TRANSGENIC TOBACCO PLANTS [J].
VONSCHAEWEN, A ;
STITT, M ;
SCHMIDT, R ;
SONNEWALD, U ;
WILLMITZER, L .
EMBO JOURNAL, 1990, 9 (10) :3033-3044
[76]   PHYSIOLOGY OF SUGAR-CANE .9. FACTORS AFFECTING PHOTOSYNTHESIS AND SUGAR STORAGE [J].
WALDRON, JC ;
GLASZIOU, KT ;
BULL, TA .
AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 1967, 20 (06) :1043-&
[77]   The anatomy of the pathway of sucrose unloading within the sugarcane stalk [J].
Walsh, KB ;
Sky, RC ;
Brown, SM .
FUNCTIONAL PLANT BIOLOGY, 2005, 32 (04) :367-374
[78]   Increasing the utility of genomics in unravelling sucrose accumulation [J].
Watt, DA ;
McCormick, AJ ;
Govender, C ;
Carson, DL ;
Cramer, MD ;
Huckett, BI ;
Botha, FC .
FIELD CROPS RESEARCH, 2005, 92 (2-3) :149-158
[79]   Doubled sugar content in sugarcane plants modified to produce a sucrose isomer [J].
Wu, Luguang ;
Birch, Robert G. .
PLANT BIOTECHNOLOGY JOURNAL, 2007, 5 (01) :109-117
[80]   Glucose and ethylene signal transduction crosstalk revealed by an Arabidopsis glucose-insensitive mutant [J].
Zhou, L ;
Jang, JC ;
Jones, TL ;
Sheen, J .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1998, 95 (17) :10294-10299