Carbon partitioning and sucrose metabolism in two field-grown asparagus (Asparagus officinalis) cultivars with contrasting yield
Jianmin Guo, William A. Jermyn and Matthew H. Turnbull
Functional Plant Biology 29(4) 517 - 526
Abstract
The aim of this study was to investigate the roles of carbon partitioning and
sucrose metabolism in regulating cultivar differences in spear yield in
asparagus (Asparagus officinalis L.). In the two
cultivars studied, maximum net photosynthetic rate
(Amax) was positively correlated
with sucrose phosphate synthase (SPS) activity
(r2=0.86), which was in
turn linked to increases in sucrose content in cladophyll tissue. The
high-yielding cultivar ASP-69 exhibited greater SPS activity and sucrose
content than the low-yielding cultivar ASP-03, in fully-expanded and mature
cladophyll tissue. ASP-69 also displayed a higher percentage of soluble solids
in stem cell sap than did ASP-03. Sucrose synthase (SS) activity in storage
roots in ASP-69 was significantly greater than in ASP-03 during fern growth
season. Total non-structural carbohydrate (TNC) in storage roots did not
differ in the two cultivars. Biomass analysis revealed that ASP-69 had a
greater root/shoot ratio than ASP-03, suggesting that the total
carbohydrate storage pool, rather than carbohydrate concentration, is an
important determinant of asparagus yield. The overall results substantiate the
conclusion that carbohydrate partitioning in the two asparagus cultivars
studied is a property of the entire plant, and is influenced by both source
and sink properties. This is highlighted by greater
Amax, SPS activity and sucrose
concentrations in cladophyll tissue in ASP-69, and greater SS activity and
total carbohydrate content in storage root tissue in ASP-69.
Keywords: acid invertase,
Full text doi:10.1071/PP01148
© CSIRO 2002





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