Accumulation of starch in wheat grain under different shoot/root temperatures during maturation
Mohammed Guedira and Gary M. Paulsen
Abstract
The impact of high temperatures on accumulation of starch in the grain of
wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) is usually attributed to
direct effects of the stress on the enzymes involved. However, roots are
extremely sensitive to temperatures that can be as high as those experienced
by the shoots, and their role in whole-plant responses should be considered.
Wheat (cv. Len) was grown at 15/15, 30/15, 15/30, and
30/30˚C shoot/root temperatures during maturation, and
accumulation of dry matter and N, contents of sucrose and starch, and
activities of enzymes in the pathway of starch assimilation in the endosperm,
were measured weekly. Dry matter and N accumulation were affected more by root
than by shoot temperatures. High whole-plant temperatures (30/30˚C)
accelerated linear grain growth but diminished the duration of assimilation,
the contents of sucrose and starch, and the activities of the enzymes
involved. The effects of high root temperature (15/30˚C) resembled
those of high whole-plant temperature, whereas low root temperature
(30/15˚C) tended to ameliorate them. Sucrose synthase and soluble
starch synthase were affected more than the other enzymes by high shoot
and/or root temperature. However, treatments that caused the lowest
activities resulted in the fastest, but briefest, linear rates of grain
growth. We concluded that shoots and roots interact in the response of wheat
to high temperature, and that stress on both organs affects accumulation of
starch in grain.
Keywords: ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase, grain growth,
starch synthase, sucrose synthase,
Functional Plant Biology 29(4) 495 - 503
(2002) doi:10.1071/PP01006





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