Abstract

Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) leaves synthesize starch faster in short days than in long days, but the mechanism that adjusts the rate of starch synthesis to daylength is unknown. To understand this mechanism, we first investigated whether adjustment occurs in mutants lacking components of the circadian clock or clock output pathways. Most mutants adjusted starch synthesis to daylength, but adjustment was compromised in plants lacking the GIGANTEA or FLAVIN-BINDING, KELCH REPEAT, F BOX1 components of the photoperiod-signaling pathway involved in flowering. We then examined whether the properties of the starch synthesis enzyme adenosine 5'-diphosphate-glucose pyrophosphorylase (AGPase) are important for adjustment of starch synthesis to daylength. Modulation of AGPase activity is known to bring about short-term adjustments of photosynthate partitioning between starch and sucrose (Suc) synthesis. We found that adjustment of starch synthesis to daylength was compromised in plants expressing a deregulated bacterial AGPase in place of the endogenous AGPase and in plants containing mutant forms of the endogenous AGPase with altered allosteric regulatory properties. We suggest that the rate of starch synthesis is in part determined by growth rate at the end of the preceding night. If growth at night is low, as in short days, there is a delay before growth recovers during the next day, leading to accumulation of Suc and stimulation of starch synthesis via activation of AGPase. If growth at night is fast, photosynthate is used for growth at the start of the day, Suc does not accumulate, and starch synthesis is not up-regulated.

Highlights

  • Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) leaves synthesize starch faster in short days than in long days, but the mechanism that adjusts the rate of starch synthesis to daylength is unknown

  • We examined whether the adjustment of starch synthesis to daylength required either central components of

  • The flavin-binding, kelch repeat, f box1 and quadruple cycling DNA-binding one finger factor mutants lack proteins that interact with GI in the floweringtime pathway, and the co mutant lacks the CONSTANS (CO) protein that regulates expression of FLOWERING LOCUS T, the signal that moves from leaves to the shoot apex to trigger flowering (Imaizumi et al, 2005; Sawa et al, 2007; Fornara et al, 2009; Song et al, 2012)

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Summary

Introduction

Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) leaves synthesize starch faster in short days than in long days, but the mechanism that adjusts the rate of starch synthesis to daylength is unknown. To understand this mechanism, we first investigated whether adjustment occurs in mutants lacking components of the circadian clock or clock output pathways. Modulation of AGPase activity is known to bring about short-term adjustments of photosynthate partitioning between starch and sucrose (Suc) synthesis. Partitioning of photosynthate into starch in the chloroplast is largely determined by the balance between the rate of photosynthetic carbon assimilation and the rate of Suc synthesis. A change in either the rate of photosynthetic carbon assimilation or the rate of Suc synthesis can rapidly bring about a change in the amount of photosynthate allocated to starch synthesis

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