| Literature DB >> 16656316 |
Abstract
Experiments were designed to determine the significance of dark CO(2) fixation in excised maize roots, carrot slices and excised tomato roots grown in tissue culture. Bicarbonate-(14)C was used to determine the pathway and amounts of CO(2) fixation, while leucine-(14)C was used to estimate protein synthesis in tissues aerated with various levels of CO(2).Organic acids were labeled from bicarbonate-(14)C, with malate being the major labeled acid. Only glutamate and aspartate were labeled in the amino acid fraction and these 2 amino acids comprised over 90% of the (14)C label in the ethanol-water insoluble residue.Studies with leucine-(14)C as an indicator of protein synthesis in carrot slices and tomato roots showed that those tissues aerated with air incorporated 33% more leucine-(14)C into protein than those aerated with CO(2)-free air. Growth of excised tomato roots aerated with air was 50% more than growth of tissue aerated with CO(2)-free air. These studies are consistent with the suggestion that dark fixation of CO(2) is involved in the growth of plant tissues.Entities:
Year: 1966 PMID: 16656316 PMCID: PMC1086419 DOI: 10.1104/pp.41.5.755
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Physiol ISSN: 0032-0889 Impact factor: 8.340