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Early response of plant cell to carbon deprivation: in vivo 31 P‐NMR spectroscopy shows a quasi‐instantaneous disruption on cytosolic sugars, phosphorylated intermediates of energy metabolism, phosphate partitioning, and intracellular pHs
Author(s) -
Gout Elisabeth,
Bligny Richard,
Douce Roland,
Boisson AnneMarie,
Rivasseau Corinne
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
new phytologist
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.742
H-Index - 244
eISSN - 1469-8137
pISSN - 0028-646X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1469-8137.2010.03449.x
Subject(s) - cytosol , biochemistry , sugar phosphates , vacuole , intracellular , metabolism , sugar , biology , carbohydrate metabolism , chemistry , cytoplasm , phosphate , enzyme
Summary• In plant cells, sugar starvation triggers a cascade of effects at the scale of 1–2 days. However, very early metabolic response has not yet been investigated. • Soluble phosphorus (P) compounds and intracellular pHs were analysed each 2.5 min intervals in heterotrophic sycamore ( Acer pseudoplatanus ) cells using in vivo phosphorus nuclear magnetic resonance ( 31 P‐NMR). • Upon external‐sugar withdrawal, the glucose 6‐P concentration dropped in the cytosol, but not in plastids. The released inorganic phosphate (Pi) accumulated transiently in the cytosol before influx into the vacuole; nucleotide triphosphate concentration doubled, intracellular pH increased and cell respiration decreased. It was deduced that the cytosolic free‐sugar concentration was low, corresponding to only 0.5 mM sucrose in sugar‐supplied cells. • The release of sugar from the vacuole and from plastids is insufficient to fully sustain the cell metabolism during starvation, particularly in the very short term. Similarly to Pi‐starvation, the cell’s first response to sugar starvation occurs in the cytosol and is of a metabolic nature. Unlike the cytoplasm, cytosolic homeostasis is not maintained during starvation. The important metabolic changes following cytosolic sugar exhaustion deliver early endogenous signals that may contribute to trigger rescue metabolism.

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