4.7 Article

Carbon partitioning in Arabidopsis thaliana is a dynamic process controlled by the plants metabolic status and its circadian clock

Journal

PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT
Volume 38, Issue 10, Pages 1965-1979

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/pce.12512

Keywords

Arabidopsis; carbon starvation; diurnal cycle; isotope labelling; photosynthesis; starch; source-sink relations

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Funding

  1. SystemsX.ch RTD project 'Plant growth in a changing environment'
  2. EU FP7 project TiMet [245143]

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Plant growth involves the coordinated distribution of carbon resources both towards structural components and towards storage compounds that assure a steady carbon supply over the complete diurnal cycle. We used (CO2)-C-14 labelling to track assimilated carbon in both source and sink tissues. Source tissues exhibit large variations in carbon allocation throughout the light period. The most prominent change was detected in partitioning towards starch, being low in the morning and more than double later in the day. Export into sink tissues showed reciprocal changes. Fewer and smaller changes in carbon allocation occurred in sink tissues where, in most respects, carbon was partitioned similarly, whether the sink leaf assimilated it through photosynthesis or imported it from source leaves. Mutants deficient in the production or remobilization of leaf starch exhibited major alterations in carbon allocation. Low-starch mutants that suffer from carbon starvation at night allocated much more carbon into neutral sugars and had higher rates of export than the wild type, partly because of the reduced allocation into starch, but also because of reduced allocation into structural components. Moreover, mutants deficient in the plant's circadian system showed considerable changes in their carbon partitioning pattern suggesting control by the circadian clock.

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