Abstract

Short term experiments were conducted with vegetative soybean plants (Glycine max L. Merr. ;Ransom' or ;Arksoy') to determine whether sourcesink manipulations, which rapidly changed the ;demand' for sucrose and partitioning of photosynthetically fixed carbon into starch, were associated with alterations in activities of sucrose-P synthase and/or cytoplasmic fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase in leaf extracts. When demand for sucrose from a particular source leaf was increased by defoliation of other source leaves, starch accumulation was restricted and activities of both enzymes were markedly enhanced. When demand for sucrose from source leaves was limited by excision, starch accumulation in the detached leaves was increased while activity of sucrose-P synthase declined sharply. The consistent responsiveness of sucrose-P synthase activity to changes in demand for sucrose supports the contention that regulation of sucrose-P synthase is an integral component of the system which controls sucrose biosynthesis and partitioning of carbon between starch and sucrose biosynthesis in the light.

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