Abstract

The inhibitory effects of sucrose on rates of sucrose synthesis by sucrose phosphate synthase (SPS) from the maize scutellum and on net rates of sucrose production in maize scutellum slices from added glucose or fructose were studied. Scutellum extracts were prepared by freezing and thawing scutellum slices in buffer. The extracts contained SPS and sucrose phosphate phosphatase, but were free of sucrose synthase. SPS activity was calculated from measurement of UDP formation in the presence of UDPG, fructose-6-P and sucrose. The ranges of metabolite concentrations used were those estimated to be in scutellum slices after incubation in water or fructose for periods up to 5 hr. UDPG and fructose-6-P also were added at concentrations that saturated SPS. At saturating substrate levels, sucrose inhibition of SPS was less than that when tissue levels of substrates were used. With tissue levels of substrates and sucrose concentrations up to ca 166 mM, sucrose inhibitions of sucrose synthesis in vitro by SPS were similar to those observed in vivo. However, as the sucrose concentration rose above 166 mM, SPS activity was not inhibited further, whereas there was a further sharp decline in sucrose production by the slices. It is concluded that sucrose synthesis in vivo is controlled by sucrose inhibition of SPS over a considerable range of internal sucrose concentrations.

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