Abstract

Abstract:During heartwood formation, a kind of apoptosis in the inner parts of woody axes, phenolic substances are accumulated by in situ biosynthesis. In Robinia pseudoacacia L, these compounds are mainly flavonoids. In the present work, we performed a study to show if there is a correlation between measurable activities and detectable protein levels of phenylalanine ammonia lyase (PAL; EC 4.3.1.5) and chalcone synthase (CHS; EC 2.3.1.74), key enzymes of general phenylpropanoid metabolism and flavonoid biosynthesis, respectively. After separation of total protein extracts by one‐dimensional micro‐gel electrophoresis, newly emerging polypeptides were detectable within the sapwood‐heartwood transition zone, pointing toward a transient activation of metabolism shortly before cell death occurs. Most prominent was a polypeptide around 46 kDa. By immunoblotting, this band was identified as a CHS subunit. Thus, the exclusive presence of both enzyme protein and extractable enzyme activity of CHS in the heartwood bordering tissue was shown. In contrast, levels of PAL protein were similar in all xylem tissues which contain living cells. PAL activity, however, was measurable only in the differentiating xylem and the sapwood‐heartwood transition zone. From these results we conclude that during heartwood formation, CHS and PAL differ in their mode of regulation. It seems likely that CHS activity is regulated at the level of enzyme protein while PAL regulation is most probably post‐translational.

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