STORAGE, MOBILIZATION AND INTERRELATIONS OF STARCH, SUGARS, PROTEIN AND FAT IN THE RAY STORAGE TISSUE OF POPLAR TREES

Citation
Jj. Sauter et B. Vancleve, STORAGE, MOBILIZATION AND INTERRELATIONS OF STARCH, SUGARS, PROTEIN AND FAT IN THE RAY STORAGE TISSUE OF POPLAR TREES, Trees, 8(6), 1994, pp. 297-304
Citations number
NO
Categorie Soggetti
Forestry,"Plant Sciences",Ecology
Journal title
TreesACNP
ISSN journal
09311890
Volume
8
Issue
6
Year of publication
1994
Pages
297 - 304
Database
ISI
SICI code
0931-1890(1994)8:6<297:SMAIOS>2.0.ZU;2-P
Abstract
The seasonal pattern in starch, various sugars, protein, and fat, and their interrelationship, has been followed in 3-year-old branch wood o f poplar trees (Populus x canadensis Moench 'robusta') under natural s ite conditions. The deposition of starch, protein and fat proceeds at different times. Starch accumulates from May until October, fat mainly during the summer months, and protein when the leaves are yellowing i n September and October. The maximum concentrations in the branch wood were 15-18 mu g starch, 6-9 mu g protein, 4-8 mu g fat, 10-15 mu g su crose, and up to 30 mu g total sugars per milligram dry weight (DW). D uring starch deposition periods no increased sucrose level is found in the tissue. The maximum daily starch deposition rate was 0.2-0.4 mu g starch/day/mg DW of wood. During starch hydrolysis in late autumn and winter, a dramatic increase in sucrose and its galactosides is measur ed (up to 15-27 mu g/mg DW in total). In early spring, before budbreak , the concentrations of these sugars diminishes sharply. In contrast t o this clear-cut starch-to-sugar conversion in autumn no significant s tarch-to-fat conversion is detected. An elevated content of free glyce rol, however, is found in winter. In spring, starch and storage protei n are mobilized completely, or almost completely, in poplar twig wood. A noteworthy pool of maltose is found transiently during autumn (up t o 8 mu g/mg DW) and again in spring. The results demonstrate that the individual storage materials, e.g. starch, protein, and fat, are accum ulated fairly independently in the wood storage parenchyma. Tissue sug ar levels, in contrast, appear to be closely related to the seasonal v ariations in starch content, on the one hand, and to the acclimation a nd deacclimation of the cells, on the other. The interrelations of the storage materials and sugars are discussed.