Plant Production Science (Jan 1999)

Characterization of a Maize Sucrose–phosphate Synthase Protein and Its Effect on Carbon Partitioning in Transgenic Rice Plants

  • Kiyomi Ono,
  • Ken Ishimaru,
  • Naohiro Aoki,
  • Sakiko Takahashi,
  • Kenjiroh Ozawa,
  • Yasunobu Ohkawa,
  • Ryu Ohsugi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1626/pps.2.172
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 3
pp. 172 – 177

Abstract

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We obtained transgenic rice (Oryza sativa L. cv. Nipponbare) plants with the gene for maize sucrose-phosphate synthase (EC 2.4.1.14, SPS). Some of the transgenic plants over-expressed maize SPS (over-expressing plants) and some had reduced levels of native SPS protein (co-suppressed plants). There was a positive correlation between the amounts of maize SPS protein and SPS activities. However, apparent Km values for uridine diphosphoglucose (UDPG) were higher in over-expressing plants than in control rice plants. These results suggest that overproduced maize SPS protein was not fully activated. The sucrose contents did not differ significantly between control and over-expressing rice plants, but they were lower in co-suppressed plants than in control plants. The starch contents were negatively and the sucrose/starch ratios were positively correlated with SPS activities. Thus, carbon partitioning in the transgenic rice was changed, even though rice is predominantly a sucrose-former.

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