The induction of fructosylsucrose-synthesizing activity (FSS) by sugars was tested using detached primary leaf blades of several wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) cultivars, immersed in different sugars solutions for 24 h in the dark. The highest induction was brought about by sucrose, while glucose, fructose and maltose also caused significant induction. 5-Ketofructose, 3-methylglucose and 6-deoxyglucose, which cannot be metabolized by plants, produced no induction at all. The fact that mannose also failed to induce FSS and that mannoheptulose did not inhibit the induction by sucrose suggests that the hexokinase-sensing system may not be involved. The protein phosphatase inhibitor okadaic acid and the calmodulin-dependent protein kinase antagonist W7 inhibited FSS induction while some types of protein kinase inhibitors, such as staurosporine and genistein, had less or no effect, respectively. Cycloheximide and cordycepin completely inhibited the induction response, indicating that transcription and translation are necessary for the FSS induction. Northern blot experiments using a sucrose:fructan-6-fructosyl transferase probe gave a clear indication that the mRNA for this enzyme, which is almost absent in control leaves, is dramatically increased after a 24-h treatment with 500 mM sucrose, and confirmed the inhibition produced by protein kinase and protein phosphatase inhibitors. Our data indicate that protein kinase and protein phosphatase activities take part in the chain of events that intervenes in the induction of fructan synthesis by sugars.
The relative contribution of sucrose synthase and sucrose-phosphate synthase to sucrose synthesis in dormant tubers of Jerusalem artichokes was determined. Feeding dormant tubers alternatively with mixtures of [14C]glucose and unlabeled fructose, and [14C]glucose and [14C]fructose has shown that sucrose synthase contributes ca. 95-97% to sucrose synthesis. This is the first report of sucrose synthesis in Jerusalem artichokes dormant tubers.
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