Sucrose uptake and partitioning in discs derived from source versus sink potato tubers
- PMID: 24212346
- DOI: 10.1007/BF00392812
Sucrose uptake and partitioning in discs derived from source versus sink potato tubers
Abstract
The uptake of sucrose into isolated discs cut from sink (growing) and source (sprouting) potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) tuber tissue was studied. The uptake of sucrose into sink-tuber discs demonstrated biphasic kinetics. The large saturable component was inhibited by incubation of the discs with p-chloromercuribenzene sulfonic acid (PCMBS) whilst both the saturable and linear components were inhibited by carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP). By contrast, in source-tuber discs, the linear component represented the majority of sucrose taken up, the saturable component playing only a minor role. In source discs, only the saturable component of uptake was inhibited by either PCMBS or CCCP. A large proportion (up to 25%) of sucrose taken up into sink-tuber discs was converted to starch but as the tubers aged the proportion of sucrose converted to starch decreased to the level found in source-tuber discs (approx. 3%). By contrast with sink-tuber discs (see Oparka and Wright, 1988b, Planta 175, 520-526) sucrose uptake into source discs was insensitive to turgor and demonstrated an uptake pattern similar to that of CCCP-treated sink tissue. It is proposed that exogenous sucrose is taken into the storage parenchyma of sink-tuber discs by both a carrier-mediated and a diffusional process. By contrast, uptake into the storage parenchyma of source-tuber discs appears to be essentially diffusional. The turgor sensitivity of sucrose uptake into sink-tissue discs may be mediated via the plasmalemma H(+)-ATPase. As the tuber ages the sucrose-uptake activity decreases and the capacity of the storage parenchyma to synthesise starch is lost. The data are discussed in relation to the in-vivo mechanisms of sucrose transport in storage tissues.
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