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- Title
Control of barley root respiration.
- Authors
Williams, John H. H.; Farrar, John F.
- Abstract
Evidence from barley [Hordeum distichum (L.) Lam. cv. Maris Mink], and from many other species, suggests that respiration is controlled by either supply of carbohydrate or demand for ATP. The relationship between root respiration rate (measured as O2 consumption or CO2 production) and ethanol-soluble carbohydrate content altered with time following selective pruning, and the change could not be accounted for by buffering of the cytoplasmic carbohydrate concentration by sugars in the vacuole. Exogenous sucrose supplied to the roots prevented any decline of the respiration rate in shoot-pruned plants, and if supplied for 24 h stimulated the respiration rate after any treatment. Root extension responded to sucrose in a similar manner. We suggest that respiration is under fine control by adenylates, but the capacity of the respiratory system is fixed by the supply of sucrose, possibly via coarse control of the respiratory machinery, or of the processes requiring metabolic energy.
- Subjects
RESPIRATION in plants; BARLEY; CARBOHYDRATES; PLANT cell compartmentation; SUCROSE; ROOT development
- Publication
Physiologia Plantarum, 1990, Vol 79, Issue 2 Part 1, p259
- ISSN
0031-9317
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1399-3054.1990.tb06740.x