Abstract

The imposition of a partial drying treatment (PDT) on mature white spruce somatic embryos is a necessary step for successful germination and embryo conversion into plantlets. Purine and pyrimidine metabolism was investigated during the PDT of white spruce somatic embryos by following the metabolic fate of 14C‐labeled adenine, adenosine, and inosine, as purine intermediates, and orotic acid, uridine, and uracil, as pyrimidine intermediates, as well as examining the activities of key enzymes. Both the salvage and the degradation pathways of purines were operative in partially dried embryos. Adenine and adenosine were extensively salvaged by the enzymes adenine phosphoribosyltransferase and adenosine kinase, respectively. The activity of the former enzyme increased during the PDT. In both mature and partially dried embryos, a large proportion of inosine was recovered as degradation products. The de novo pathway of pyrimidine nucleotide biosynthesis, estimated by the incorporation of orotic acid into the nucleotides and nucleic acids, was high at the end of the maturation period and declined during the PDT. Uridine was the main substrate for the pyrimidine salvage pathway, since a large proportion of uracil was recovered as degradation products, i.e. CO2 and β‐ureidopropionic acid in both mature and partially dried embryos. Uridine was mainly salvaged by uridine kinase, whose activity was found to increase during the PDT. Taken together these results indicate that the PDT might be required for increasing the activity of adenine and uridine salvage enzymes, which could contribute to the enlargement of the nucleotide pool required at the onset of germination.

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