Abstract

There has been no study on key enzymes in sucrose cleavage in metallophyte plants so far, which may be crucial for the plants’ root growth and heavy-metal tolerance maintenance. Here, we tested the hypothesis that the roots of copper tolerant plants should manifest a higher activity of acid invertases that are rate-limiting in sucrose catabolism than non-tolerant plants both for supporting growth and for their maintaining tolerance under Cu stress. Two populations of Kummerowia stipulacea, one from an ancient waste heap at a Cu mine, and the other from a non-contaminated site, were used in the experiments. The plants were grown in 1/2-fold (control) or 1/20-fold (nutrient deficiency) Hoagland’ solution, with (Cu stress) or without (control) 10 μmol/L Cu 2+. Plants from the mine proved to be of Cu tolerance. Cu exposure had a stronger inhibition on root growth and thus resulting in a lower root/shoot ratio in the plants of non-mine population compared to the mine population. Cu exposure showed a stronger inhibition of acid invertase activity of Cu non-tolerant plants than Cu-tolerant plants, while neutral/alkaline invertase was insensitive to Cu. A positive correlation between the activity of acid invertases and the root growth and root/shoot ratio was observed. The results indicated an important role of acid invertases in governing root growth and root/shoot biomass allocation in the plants of mine population. The results also suggested that the higher activities in acid invertases of mine population plants might at least partly associate with the plants’ Cu tolerance, and their higher activities in acid invertases in turn played an role in maintenance of the Cu tolerance by supplying carbon and energy for tolerance mechanisms. In addition, the results showed evidence that neutral/alkaline invertase might play a role in compensating for the depression in sucrose catabolism due to Cu-induced inhibition in acid invertases.

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