4.7 Article

Loss of cytosolic fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase limits photosynthetic sucrose synthesis and causes severe growth retardations in rice (Oryza sativa)

Journal

PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT
Volume 31, Issue 12, Pages 1851-1863

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-3040.2008.01890.x

Keywords

carbon partitioning; mutant; photosynthesis; starch

Categories

Funding

  1. ABRC
  2. SRC program of MOST/KOSEF [R11-2000-081]
  3. Biogreen 21 program
  4. Rural Development Administration
  5. Crop Functional Genomics Center (CFGC)
  6. 21st Century Frontier Research Program [CG2111-2]
  7. Basic Research Program [R01-2007-000-20149-0]

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During photosynthesis, triose-phosphates (trioseP) exported from the chloroplast to the cytosol are converted to sucrose via cytosolic fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (cFBPase). Expression analysis in rice suggests that OscFBP1 plays a major role in the cytosolic conversion of trioseP to sucrose in leaves during the day. The isolated OscFBP1 mutants exhibited markedly decreased photosynthetic rates and severe growth retardation with reduced chlorophyll content, which results in plant death. Analysis of primary carbon metabolites revealed both significantly reduced levels of sucrose, glucose, fructose and starch in leaves of these mutants, and a high accumulation of sucrose to starch in leaves of rice plants. In the oscfbp1 mutants, products of glycolysis and the TCA cycle were significantly increased. A partitioning experiment of C-14-labelled photoassimilates revealed altered carbon distributions including a slight increase in the insoluble fraction representing transitory starch, a significant decrease in the neutral fraction corresponding to soluble sugars and a high accumulation of phosphorylated intermediates and carboxylic acid fractions in the oscfbp1 mutants. These results indicate that the impaired synthesis of sucrose in rice cannot be sufficiently compensated for by the transitory starch-mediated pathways that have been found to facilitate plant growth in the equivalent Arabidopsis mutants.

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