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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Transport-related amino acid metabolism in germinating barley grains

Juhani MikolaRitva Saarelainen

subject

chemistry.chemical_classificationArgininePhysiologyfood and beveragesCell BiologyPlant ScienceGeneral MedicineBiologyScutellumAmino acidGlutaminechemistryBiochemistryGlutamine synthetaseGeneticsHordeum vulgareAsparagineLeucine

description

When eight [14C]-labelled amino acids were separately injected into the endosperm of germinating (4 days at 20°C) barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Himalaya) grains, the label was rapidly taken up by the scutellum and further transported to the shoot and roots. Some of the amino acids (leucine, lysine and asparagine) were transported in an intact form through the scutellum to the seedling, whilst glutamic acid and aspartic acid were largely converted to glutamine in the scutellum. Proline was mainly transported unchanged, but a small part of the label appeared in glutamine. Arginine was mostly broken down in the scutellum, possibly providing ammonia for the synthesis of glutamine. During further transport in the seedling there was a partial transfer of label from glutamine to asparagine, particularly in the shoot. None of the amino acids used supplied carbon for the synthesis of sucrose, glucose or fructose. Glutamine synthetase activity was particularly high in the scutellum during the period of rapid amino acid transport.

https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1399-3054.1987.tb06121.x