Abstract

The presence of sucrose synthesizing and degrading enzymes and the correlation of their enzyme activity with cambial growth and heartwood formation are demonstrated in trunks of Robinia pseudoacacia L., black locust. Sucrose is formed by sucrose-phosphate synthase (SPS; EC 2.4.1.14), predominantly in the storage part of the sapwood. In the cambial differentiation zone and the sapwood-heartwood transition zone, both of which constitute carbohydrate sinks, sucrose is primarily cleaved by sucrose synthase (SuSy; EC 2.4.1.13) and a neutral invertase (NI; EC 3.2.1.26). In spring, enhanced activities of SuSy and NI were found in the differentiating xylem tissues. This coincided with elevated SPS rates at the sites of starch mobilization. Heartwood formation in autumn, a period of intense accumulation of phenolics in the innermost living wood tissues, was accompanied by high activities of SuSy and NI. Increased SPS and NI activities in all tissues of winter samples could be correlated with cold acclimation. Probing of SPS and SuSy protein from black locust with heterologous antibodies revealed a subunit size of 130 kDa for SPS and of 89 kDa for SuSy. Both SPS and SuSy exhibited a linear correlation between catalytic activity and amount of enzyme protein with respect to the radial profile from bark to inner core and with respect to the seasonal course. The highest amounts of SuSy-specific mRNA were detected in differentiating xylem in summer and the sapwood-heartwood transition zone in autumn. These data are taken as evidence for a pivotal role of SuSy in supplying carbon skeletons for the biosynthesis of secondary substances in woody axes.

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