Interrelationships between carbohydrate metabolism and nitrogen assimilation in cultured plant cells
โ Scribed by W. Jessup; M. W. Fowler
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag
- Year
- 1976
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 403 KB
- Volume
- 132
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0032-0935
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Suspension cultured sycamore (Acer pseudoplatanus L.) cells will grow with either nitrate or glutamate as sole nitrogen source. Under the particular culture conditions used, cell growth is nitrogen limited. Within the range of initial nitrogen concentrations used (7-14 mM), cell growth on nitrate or glutamate at the same initial nitrogen concentrations is generally comparable. The rate of cell growth on these two nitrogen sources is also comparable with that observed when urea or urea plus nitrate is the prime nitrogen source. Increased nitrogen concentrations result in proportional increases in the final yield of numbers of cells, soluble protein and fresh weight. Dry weight yield by contrast shows both an absolute and relative decline with increasing nitrogen concentrations. At higher initial nitrogen concentrations differences are apparent in the pattern of cell growth between nitrate and glutamate grown cells.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
In sycamore cells grown on nitrate as opposed to glutamate there is a higher pentose phosphate pathway carbon flux relative to glycolysis in the early stages of cell growth when nitrate assimilation is most active. The high pentose phosphate pathway activity compared with glycolysis in nitrate grown
The purpose of this investigation is to deiiionstrate relationships that exist betu-een cellular respiration and cell growth in tissue culture. I n previous studies (Danes and Leinfelder, '51) it has been demonstrated that cellular growth in tissue cultures is altered when respiration is inhibited b
Using density gradient techniques we have shown that in addition to a location within the cytoplasm all the enzymes of the pentose phosphate pathway are also present within the plastids of apical cells of pea roots. The data are discussed in relation to the hypothesis that the pentose phosphate path
With the aim of quantifying intra- and extracellular carbohydrates media and cell-extracts from a Tabernaemontana divaricata plant cell-suspension culture were investigated with (1)H-NMR.For suppression of the solvent peak the Meiboom-Gill modification of the Carr-Purcell (CPMG) spin-echo sequence w