Abstract

A photoautotrophic soybean suspension culture was used to study free amino acid pools during a subculture cycle. Free amino acid analysis showed that the intracellular concentrations of asparagine, serine, glutamine, and alanine reached peaks of 200, 10, 9 and 7 mM, respectively, at specific times in the 14-day subculture cycle. Asparagine and serine levels peaked at day 14 but glutamine level rose quickly after subculture, peaking at day three and then declined gradually. Roughly similar patterns were found in the conditioned culture medium although the levels were 1000-fold lower than those found in cells. Photoautotrophic (SB-P) and photomixotrophic (SB-M) cultures were quantitatively similar with regard to free asparagine and serine but not glutamine or free ammonia. Heterotrophic (SB-H) cells had 81–85% less free asparagine on day seven than did SB-M or SB-P cells. Hence, similar to the phloem sap of a soybean plant, asparagine, glutamine, alanine and serine were the predominant amino acids in photoautotrophic soybean cell cultures. Varying the amount of total nitrogen in culture medium for two subcultures at 10, 25, 50, and 100% Of normal levels showed that growth was inhibited only at the 10 and 25% levels but that growth on medium containing 50% of the normal nitrogen was as good as that on 100% nitrogen. Moreover, cellular chlorophyll content correlated exceptionally well with initial nitrogen content of the medium. Thus, the photosynthesis of SB-P cells was not limited by chlorophyll content. SB-P cells grown for two subcultures on 10% nitrogen contained very low free amino acid levels and only 1% of the free ammonia levels found in cells growing on a full nitrogen complement.

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