Abstract

Root tips (10-millimeter length) were excised from hypoxically pretreated (HPT, 4% [v/v] oxygen at 25 degrees C for 16 hours) or nonhypoxically pretreated (NHPT, 40% [v/v] oxygen) maize (Zea mays) plants, and their rates of respiration were compared by respirometry under aerobic and anaerobic conditions with exogenous glucose. The respiratory quotient under aerobic conditions with 50 millimolar glucose was approximately 1.0, which is consistent with glucose or other hexose sugars being utilized as the predominant carbon source in glycolysis. Under strictly anaerobic conditions (anoxia), glycolysis was accelerated appreciably in both HPT and NHPT root tips, but the rate of anaerobic respiration quickly declined in NHPT roots. [U-(14)C]Glucose supplied under anaerobic conditions was taken up and respired by HPT root tips up to five times more rapidly than by NHPT roots. When anaerobic ethanol production was measured with excised root tips in 50 millimolar glucose, HPT tissues consistently produced ethanol more rapidly than NHPT tissues. These data suggest that a period of low oxygen partial pressure is necessary to permit adequate acclimation of the root tip of maize to subsequent anoxia, resulting in more rapid rates of fermentation and generation of ATP.

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