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Plant Physiology 92:160-167 (1990) © 1990 American Society of Plant Biologists Nitrogen-Induced Changes in the Growth and Metabolism of Developing Maize Kernels Grown in Vitro1Department of Agronomy, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois 61801
Cereal kernel growth and grain yield are functions of endosperm starch accumulation. The objective of this study was to examine how various metabolic factors in developing maize (Zea mays L.) endosperm influence starch deposition. Kernels were grown in vitro on medium with: (a) zero N (N), (b) optimum N (+N), or (c) N from 3 to 20 days after pollination followed by +N until maturity (±N) to produce different degrees of endosperm growth and to promote an enhancement of starch synthesis midway through development. At intervals, kernels were harvested and levels of enzyme activities and carbohydrate and N constituents examined. Endosperm starch and protein accumulation were decreased in N compared to +N kernels, but relief of N starvation increased both constituents. With greater movement of N into ±N kernels, endosperm sugar concentrations declined suggesting an inverse relationship between C and N transport. Unusually high concentrations of sugar in N stressed kernels did not appear to limit or enhance starch production. Rather, increased accumulation of starch in ±N endosperm was correlated with significant increases in the enzymatic activities of sucrose synthase and PPi-linked phosphofructokinase, and to a lessor extent hexokinase. In addition, the occurrence of specific proteins of the albumin/globulin fraction either increased, decreased, or remained unchanged in relation to starch synthesis. These data suggest that lack of N limits starch deposition in maize endosperm primarily through an influence on synthesis of key proteins.
2 Present address: Garst Seed Company, Box 500, Slater, IA 50244. 1 This study was a part of project No. 15-0371 of the Agricultural Experiment Station, College of Agriculture, University of Illinois. It was supported in part by a grant from EniChem Americas Inc., Research and Development Center, Monmouth Junction, NJ. This article has been cited by other articles:
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