Abstract

The aim of this work was to determine which enzymes of carbohydrate metabolism are present in amyloplasts. Protoplasts from 4- to 5-day-old suspension cultures of soybean, Glycine max, were lysed and fractionated on a sucrose gradient. This gave an amyloplast fraction that contained stromal enzymes and was not seriously contaminated by cytosol or by organelles likely to be involved in carbohydrate metabolism. Studies of this fraction provide evidence that, in soybean cells, starch synthase and ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase are confined to amyloplasts; invertase, sucrose synthetase and UDPglucose pyrophosphorylase are absent from the amyloplast and probably confined to the cytosol; the following enzymes, though predominantly cytosolic, are present in the amyloplasts in activities high enough to mediate the rate of starch synthesis observed in vivo: glyceraldehyde-phosphate dehydrogenase (NAD), triosephosphate isomerase, fructose-1, 6-bisphosphate aldolase, fructose-bisphosphatase, glucosephosphate isomerase and phosphoglucomutase. The pathway from sucrose to starch in non-photosynthetic cells is discussed; particularly the possibility that sucrose is converted to triose phosphate for entry into the amyloplast.

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