Environmental Control of Carbohydrate and Lipid Synthesis in Euglena
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概要
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Dark-grown and light-grown nitrogen deficient Euglena accumulated carbohydrates and lipids under heterotrophic and phototrophic conditions. Although cellular lipid content increased, lipid as a percentage of dry weight was unaltered. Nitrogen deficient and sufficient hetero-trophic cultures synthesized equal amounts of lipid per mole of exogenous carbon. Nitrogen deficiency does not alter the partitioning of available carbon between the synthesis of lipid and other cellular constituents but simply inhibits cell division so that the carbohydrate and lipid produced are divided among fewer cells increasing the quantity of storage products per cell. Cellular chlorophyll content decreased only when nitrogen deficient cells were maintained at high light intensities suggesting that chlorophyll loss is due to a reduction in the rate of resynthesis of chlorophyll destroyed through photooxidative damage. Anaerobiosis triggered lipid synthesis and promoted carbohydrate breakdown in the dark and light. Even after six days of nitrogen deficiency, anaerobiosis triggered additional lipid accumulation and carbohydrate breakdown. In contrast to nitrogen deficiency, anaerobiosis produced a preferential increase in the percentage of dry weight as lipid. This increase was due as much to a decrease in cellular dry weight as it was to the preferential utilization of available carbon for lipid synthesis.
- 日本植物生理学会の論文
著者
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Rosen Barry
School Of Biological Sciences University Of Nebraska:(present)department Of Biology University Of Ta
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Coleman L.
School Of Biological Sciences University Of Nebraska:(present)the Mycology Center Washington Univers
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Schwartzbach S
Univ. Nebraska Nebraska Usa
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Schwartzbach Steven
School of Biological Sciences, University of Nebraska
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Schwartzbach Steven
School Of Biological Sciences University Of Nebraska
関連論文
- Preferential Loss of Chloroplast Proteins in Nitrogen Deficient Euglena
- Environmental Control of Carbohydrate and Lipid Synthesis in Euglena
- A Soluble Chloroplast Protease Processes the Euglena Polyprotein Precursor to the Light Harvesting Chlorophyll a/b Binding Protein of Photosystem II
- Immunocytochemical Localization of RuBisCO in the Compartmentalized Osmiophilic Body in Dark-Grown Cells of Euglena gracilis Z^1