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Characteristics of the respiratory peak in batch cultures of Petunia hybrida
Author(s) -
Emmerik Willie A. M.,
Plas Linus H. W.,
Wagner Anneke M.
Publication year - 1994
Publication title -
physiologia plantarum
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.351
H-Index - 146
eISSN - 1399-3054
pISSN - 0031-9317
DOI - 10.1111/j.1399-3054.1994.tb08802.x
Subject(s) - sugar , dilution , respiration , biomass (ecology) , petunia , mannitol , botany , respiratory system , biology , aeration , horticulture , chemistry , food science , zoology , biochemistry , agronomy , ecology , anatomy , thermodynamics , physics , gene
In batch cultures of Petunia hybrida cv. Rosy Morn Fertile. one respiratory peak is usually observed shortly after subculturing. However, two types of peak respiration could be distinguished, one connected with the dilution process and one with sugar addition at low biomass concentrations. The dilution peak was observed when cells were diluted in medium without sugar, in the presence or absence of mannitol. The sugar peak occurred only after previous dilution of the cells and not when sugar is added at high biomass concentrations Apparently the existence of a dilute suspension is a prerequisite for the induction of the peak. The presence of sugar is not a prerequisite for the increased respiratory activity but it is necessary lor growth: however, growth is possible without the increase in respiration, as was shown by the addition of sugar to a culture with a high biomass concentration. The peak caused by dilution either in the presence or absence of sugar showed no significant differences in height. The height of the peak caused by sugar addition to a previously diluted cell suspension was correlated with the sugar concentration. The respiratory peak disappeared long before the end of the growth period; this decline of the respiratory rates was not connected to sugar or oxygen limitation. In a continuous culture of Petunia hybrida growing at low biomass concentration, the respiration was always at the high level as observed during the peak of batch culture. Growing at lower biomass concentrations might be more expensive for plant cell suspensions.

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