Production and organ distribution of succinate in rice seedlings during anoxia

1988 
Anaerobic production of succinate, a common feature in animals able to sustain anoxia, has seldom been reported in plants. By the use of 1H-nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy we show here that succinate is produced by rice seedlings (Oryza sativa L. cv. Arborio) subjected to anoxic conditions. Starting from levels below I μmol (g fresh weight)−1 in air, after 48 h of anoxia the levels of alanine, succinate and lactate had increased to 23.8, 5.2 and 1.0 μmol (g fresh weight) −1, respectively, in shoot tissues. Succinate was accumulated in shoots, notably in the coleoptiles, but not in roots of the rice seedlings, suggesting its involvement in rice coleoptile elongation under anoxia. Other possible functions of succinate production in rice seedling, an organism highly tolerant to anoxia, are discussed.
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