4.7 Article

Cool temperature hinders flux from glucose to sucrose during cellulose synthesis in secondary wall stage cotton fibers

Journal

CELLULOSE
Volume 11, Issue 3-4, Pages 339-349

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1023/B:CELL.0000046420.10403.15

Keywords

cellulose synthesis; cool temperature stress; cotton fiber; fructose; glucose; Gossypium hirsutum; in vitro culture; metabolic flux; secondary wall; sucrose synthesis

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Current knowledge about the integration of cellulose synthesis into cellular carbon metabolism and the cool temperature sensitivity of cellulose synthesis is reviewed briefly. Roles for sucrose synthase (to channel UDP-glucose to the cellulose synthase) and sucrose phosphate synthase (to recycle the fructose released by sucrose synthase to more sucrose) in secondary wall cellulose synthesis are described. Data are presented that implicate sucrose synthesis within cotton fibers as a particularly cool temperature-sensitive step in the partitioning of carbon to cellulose. Sugar metabolism during fiber secondary wall deposition was analyzed in in vitro cultures of ovules from two cultivars of Gossypium hirsutum L. (cv. Acala SJ-1 and cv. Paymaster HS 200), which had different levels of cool temperature sensitivity. The sizes of the sucrose, glucose, and fructose pools within fibers at 4 and 7 h after a temperature shift to 15 or 34 degreesC did not change in either cultivar. Feeding exogenous U-C-14-glucose in pulse and pulse/chase experiments showed that uptake of glucose and transport through the ovule into fibers occurred at the same rate at 34 and 15 degreesC. In contrast, the flux from glucose to sucrose within fibers was greatly hindered at 15 degreesC in both cultivars. Since sucrose is the preferred donor of UDP-Glc to the cellulose synthase during secondary wall deposition, this sensitivity in sucrose synthesis is likely to at least partially explain the cool temperature sensitivity of cotton fiber cellulose synthesis that is observed in the field.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available