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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Physiologia plantarum 21 (1968), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1399-3054
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: The investigation dealt with starch accumulation in four species of Cuscuta (Cuscuta campestris, C. indecora, C. planiflora and C. reflexa), a leafy mistletoe (Dendrophthoe falcata) and a chlorophyll-lacking root parasite (Orobanche aegyptiaca). The highest content of starch occurred In O. aegyptiaca, with a maximum of 45 per cent of dry weight Starch in Cuscuta filaments and mistletoe leaves showed a maximum of about 10 per cent of dry weight. The starch content varied along the length of the Cuscuta vine, with a maximum in the apical region. Orobanche had a higher starch content when it was still submerged than it was fully developed. Cuscuta vines did not show any marked diurnal alteration in the starch content. The content of ethanol-soluble carbohydrate was only a tenth of the starch in Orobanche, but was relatively higher in the other parasites. the neutral sugars in Cuscuta filaments were sucrose and glucose, whereas fructose was also present in mistletoe and Orobanche. Raffinose and stachyose were absent or present only ill traces in parasite tissue. Starch granules from Cuscuta and Orobanche bad ADPG/UDPG-starch synthetase activity and homogenates starch phosphorylase activity. The former enzyme appeared to be responsible for synthesis of starch and the latter for utilization. The four different species of Cuscnta, growing on alfalfa, had more or less the same activity of starch synthetase and also of phosphorylase activity. Hosts infected by Cuscuta had significantly less starch per plant than the controls. A characteristic feature of invasion by Cuscuta and Orobanche was increased phosphorylase activity in the host tissues. The protein content of the tissues of Cuscuta and Orobanche was of a lower level than that of the host shoot system or foliage, indicating that the parasite differed from the host in having a higher carbon (of starch) to nitrogen (of protein) ratio.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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