Article,

Ontogenetic changes of potato plants during acclimation to elevated carbon dioxide

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Journal of Experimental Botany, 51 (suppl 1): 429--437 (Feb 1, 2000)
DOI: 10.1093/jexbot/51.suppl\_1.429

Abstract

Transgenic potato plants (Solanum tuberosum cv. Desirée) with an antisense repression of the chloroplastic triosephosphate translocator were compared with wild‐type plants. Plants were grown in chambers with either an atmosphere with ambient (400μbar) or elevated (1000 μbar) CO2. After 7 weeks, the rate of CO2 assimilation between wild‐type and transgenic plants in both CO2 concentrations was identical, but the tuber yield of both plant lines was increased by about 30\%, when grown in elevated CO2. One explanation is that plants respond to the elevated CO2 only at a certain growth stage. Therefore, growth of wild‐type plants was analysed between the second and the seventh week. Relative growth rate and CO2 assimilation were stimulated in elevated CO2 only in the second and the third weeks. During this period, the carbohydrate content of leaves grown with elevated CO2 was lower than that of leaves grown with ambient CO2. In plants grown in elevated CO2, the rate of CO2 assimilation started to decline after 5 weeks, and accumulation of carbohydrates began after 7 weeks. From this observation it was concluded that acclimation of potato plants to elevated CO2 is the result of accelerated development rather than of carbohydrate accumulation causing down‐regulation of photosynthesis. For a detailed analysis for the cause of the stimulation of growth after 2 weeks, the contents of phosphorylated intermediates of wild‐type plants and transgenics were measured. Stimulation of CO2 assimilation was accompanied by changes in the contents of phosphorylated intermediates, resulting in an increase in the amount of dihydroxyacetone phosphate, the metabolite which is exported from the chloroplast into the cytosol. An increase of dihydroxyacetone phosphate was found in wild‐type plants in elevated CO2 when compared with ambient CO2 and in triosephosphate translocator antisense plants in ambient CO2, but not in the transgenic plants when grown in elevated CO2. These plants were not able to increase dihydroxyacetone phosphate further to cope with the increased CO2 supply. From these changes in phosphorylated intermediates in wild‐type and transgenic plants it was concluded that starch and sucrose synthesis pathways can replace each other only at moderate carbon flux rates.

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