Amino acid metabolism in senescing Sandersonia aurantiaca flowers: cloning and characterization of asparagine synthetase and glutamine synthetase cDNAs
Jocelyn R. Eason, Jason W. Johnston, Leigh de Vré, Ben K. Sinclair and Graeme A. King
Australian Journal of Plant Physiology 27(5) 389 - 396
Abstract
We have studied nitrogen metabolism during
senescence of the ethylene-insensitive flower
Sandersonia aurantiaca Hook. We report here on the
isolation and characterization of two cDNAs from senescing sandersonia tepals.
SAND1 encodes asparagine synthetase (AS; EC 6.3.5.4) and SAND3 encodes
glutamine synthetase (GS; EC 6.3.1.2). The accumulation of SAND3 mRNAs was
consistently high throughout flower development and senescence and was not
associated with senescence per se. SAND1 mRNAs started
to accumulate in mature flowers just prior to visual signs of senescence.
Sucrose feeding of individual flowers delayed tepal senescence and altered
amino acid metabolism. The levels of Asn, Gln and Glu were higher and Asp
levels were lower in the sucrose-fed flowers. The senescence-associated peak
in Gln was delayed in sucrose-fed flowers compared to controls that were held
in water. Sucrose feeding had no effect on the initiation of SAND1
transcription at the onset of flower senescence; however, the later decline in
SAND1 mRNA abundance was delayed in sucrose-fed flowers. Elimination of GS
activity and the subsequent reduction in Gln levels caused by phosphinothricin
treat-ment was associated with a delay of SAND1 mRNA accumulation in senescing
flowers.
Full text doi:10.1071/PP99200
© CSIRO 2000





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