| Literature DB >> 16656718 |
Abstract
Sunflower leaf discs incubated in the light on carbohydrate substrates exhibit several-fold increases in amounts of extractable allagochrome and chlorogenic acid. These changes are linear with time, and oxygen is required. The light effect saturates at approximately 600 muW/cm(2) "white" light, roughly the compensation point for photosynthesis. Red light is as effective as white light. Incubation in the dark, or in far red light, produces negligible changes in allagochrome and chlorogenic acid content.Sucrose (0.2 m) has been used as the standard substrate. At this concentration, glucose and fructose are slightly more effective. The optimum temperature range for incubation is 20 to 30 degrees . Allagochrome and chlorogenic acid values of both light and dark incubated samples decrease between 30 and 50 degrees , approaching zero at 50 degrees . Net light effects decrease to zero between 40 and 50 degrees .Of the inhibitors tested, 2,4-dinitrophenol, hydroxylamine and salicylaldoxime have no effect on light enhanced allagochrome and chlorogenic acid values except at high concentrations (which are generally deleterious to leaf tissues and cause decreased values for both dark and light incubated samples). Net light effects are completely inhibited, without changes in values of dark incubated discs, by azide (0.1 to 1 mm) and dichlorophenyldimethylurea (1 to 10 mum).Leaf tissues from the xantha mutant of Helianthus annuus do not exhibit a light effect. The absence of light effects in nonphotosynthetic leaf tissue and the inhibiting effects of photosynthetic poisons suggest that the photosynthetic apparatus is somehow involved.An hypothesis for light regulated metabolism via phenolic synthesis is discussed.Entities:
Year: 1967 PMID: 16656718 PMCID: PMC1086795 DOI: 10.1104/pp.42.12.1769
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Physiol ISSN: 0032-0889 Impact factor: 8.340