1. Synthesis & Catabolism of Sucrose & Starch
By
N. Sannigrahi, Associate Professor,
Nistarini College, Purulia, (W.B) India
Plant metabolism
2. CARBOHYDRATES-TYPES
Carbohydrates are important bio-macromolecules and major
sources of supplying energy to living and also perform
architectural functions. Carbohydrate (hydrates of carbon) are
polyhydroxy aldehydes or ketones or substances that yield one of
these compounds on hydrolysis.
Carbohydrates are divided into three types-
MONOSACCHARIDE either aldoses (-CHO) or Ketoses (C=O)
like DHAP, Erythrose, Ribulose, Fructose, Seduoheptulose,
DISACCHARIDES AND OLIGOSACCHARIDES-two to ten
units of simple sugars joined by glycoside bonds. Maltose and
lactose are reducing sugar while sucrose is non-reducing sugar ,
predominant form of sugar in most vascular plants . “Sucrose is
something of a riddle in plant biochemistry”.
3. TYPES OF CARBOHYDRATES
Sucrose is the sugar of commerce abundantly present in ripened
fruits like pineapple, apple, mango, grapes, vegetable , sugarcane,
beet roots, tapioca, sweet potato etc.
POLYSACCHARIDES- Polymeric anhydrides of simple sugars
hydrolyzed with acids or enzymes to yield monosaccharide . It
may be two types-
Homo-polysaccharides- only one type of monosaccharide like
starch, inulin, cellulose, glycogen
Hetero-polysaccharides- Composed of different types of
monosaccharide or on hydrolysis yield a mixture of
monosaccharide and derived products. Hyaluronic acid,
Chondoroitin, vegetable gums, agar-agar. Polysaccharides may be
storage ( Starch, Glycogen) or structural polysaccharides
(Cellulose, Hemicelluloses, pectic compounds, chitin, Mucilage).
5. WHAT IS SUCCROSE?
Sucrose is the most abundant disaccharide and the major
product of photosynthesis. It is a non-reducing sugar with
limited chemical reactivity and thus is utilized as a transport
and storage molecule in most plants. Sucrose synthesis is
predominant in leaves, but the ability to synthesize sucrose is
fairly widespread among plant cells. Sucrose is synthesized in
the cytosol by the consecutive activities of two enzymes:
sucrose-phosphate synthetase (SPS) and sucrose phosphatase
(SPP). SPS catalyzes the reversible transfer of glucosyl units
from UDP-glucose to fructose 6-phosphate synthesizing
sucrose 6-phosphate that is dephosphorylated by SPP to yield
sucrose in an irreversible reaction. SPS is the key regulating
step of sucrose biosynthesis. In plants, SPS can be activated
allosterically by glucose 6-phosphate and inhibited by
6. WHAT IS SUCROSE ?
inorganic phosphate (Pi). In addition, SPS also contains several
regulatory phosphorylation sites. Sucrose synthase (SucS),
present in both soluble and membrane-bound forms, is
responsible for catalyzing both the synthesis and degradation
of sucrose
The translocation of synthesized sucrose from source to sink
tissues is essential for proper plant growth and development.
Sucrose can be translocated either symplastically (through
Plasmodesmata) or apoplastically (through apoplasts with the
help of sucrose transporters). In sink tissues, sucrose can be
stored inside cell vacuoles through transporters located at
tonoplasts or can be hydrolyzed by invertase providing glucose
and fructose to the cell. The translocation of sucrose from
source to sink tissues is very active during grain development
when storage carbohydrates are synthesized in the grains
8. SUCCROSE BIOSYNTHESIS
Photosynthesis is carried out by all the green plants irrespective of
nature and this is the only pathway of the fixation of carbon either
in simple or complex forms(Homo-polysaccharides or Hetero-
polysaccharides).
In green plants, Carbon is fixed in the carbon assimilation
mechanisms by Calvin cycle initially in the form of 3C , PGA.
The Calvin cycle yield triose phosphate (triose 3P) and it is
transported to the cytosol by triose P/Phosphate translocator,
In the cytosol, two triose P molecules- Glyceraldehydes 3-
Phosphate & Dihydroxy acetone phosphate joined together to
form Fructose 1, 6 bisphosphate (F1,6 BP) by the presence of
enzyme, aldolase catalyzed by it.
F1, 6BP is further metabolized to yield other hexose phosphate
like glucose 6 phosphate(G6P) and fructose 6 phosphate(F6P)
9. SUCROSE BIOSYNTHESIS
Glucose 6-phosphate is transformed into Glucose 1-phosphate
with the help of the enzyme, phosphoglucomutase,
Glucose 1-Phosphate can be used to form UDP-Glucose ( UDP-G)
in the presence of an enzyme UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase,
The Pyrophosphate produced in this reaction is removed by the
enzyme pyrophosphatase (2Pi).
UDP-G is combined with F6P to form Sucrose 6-Phosphate in a
reaction catalyzed by the enzyme Sucrose 6-Phosphate synthetase,
Sucrose 6-Phosphate is dephosphorylated by Sucrose 6-
phosphate phosphatase to form Sucrose.
So, with the help of the aforesaid biochemical reaction, Sucrose
synthesis takes place in cytosol of green plants.
10. SUCROSE CATABOLISM
Sucrose can be transported by apoplastic or symplstic pathway to
the sink tissues where it can be broken down through catabolism.
It can be degraded by either sucrose synthase or invertase. Sucrose
synthase catalyses a reversible reaction that can synthesize or
breakdown sucrose. In plant cells, this enzyme associated
primarily with sucrose degradation. The reaction can be catalyzed
by Invertase which is irreversible and so only leads to sucrose
degradation. Breakdown or the hydrolysis of starch to yield its
constituent a-D-Glucose units may take
place :
a. By the presence of diastase
Starch + H20--------------------------Glucose
12. STARCH
Starch is an osmotically inert form of carbohydrate, polymer of
glucose; massive, compact, insoluble semi-crystalline granules;
starch granules contain two glucose polymers- Amylose &
amylopectin both of two are the homo-polymers of ⅋-1,4 linked
glucose.
Why Starch ?
-If a comparable number of hexose units accumulated as sucrose
in the plastid, the stomatal solution would contain too many solute
particles, and water from the cytosol, would flood in by osmosis
causing the plastid to swell and burst.
For the said reason, in most of the cases, starch play a very crucial
role as storage products in this regard in plants storage substances.
Potato, Wheat, Rice are the most common sources of starch in
plants
15. DIFFERENCE BETWEEN
Amylose Amylopectin
A linear polymer of glucose Branched molecule
An ⅋-(1,4) glucan ⅋-(1,4) & ⅋-(1,6) linkages
(branch points)
Smaller than amylopectin Branching pattern is not random,
one branching points 24-30
glucose residues
Has a very few branch points 1,00, 000-10, 00, 000 glucose
residues
1000-20,000 glucose units, 70% or more of the starch
Accounts 30% or less of the
starch
Similar to Glycogen
17. STARCH BIOSYNTHESIS
Synthesis of Starch:
Synthesis of starch involves the simultaneous synthesis of amylose
(with α-(1: 4) glycosidic linkages) and amylopectin (with α-(1: 6)
glycoside linkages), the two important constituents of starch.
(A) Synthesis of Amylose (Or α-(1: 4) Glycosidic Linkages):
Synthesis of amylose may take place by any of the following
ways:-
(1) According to Hanes (1940) amylose can be synthesized in the
presence of the enzyme starch phosphorylase from glucose-1-
phosphate and an acceptor molecule consisting of about 3 to 20
glucose units joined together by α-(1: 4) glycosidic linkages.
19. STARCH BIOSYNTHESIS
(2) Formation of α-(1 : 4) glycosidic linkages may also take place
in the presence of the enzyme UDPG-transglycosylase (amylose
synthetase) by the transfer of glucose from UDPG (Uridine Di
Phosphate Glucose) to an acceptor molecule consisting of 2 to 4 or
more glucose units joined together by α-(1 : 4) glycosidic linkages
or even a starch molecule.
(3) According to Akazawa et al (1964) glucose molecule obtained
as a result of the hydrolysis of sucrose in the presence of enzyme
sucrase is transferred to UDP (Uridine Di Phosphate) molecule to
form UDPG. Form UDPG the glucose molecule is transferred to
starch.
(4) Formation of α-(1: 4) glycosidic linkages leading to the
synthesis of; amylose may also take place in the presence of D-
Enzyme by the transfer of two or more glucose units from
maltodextrins (consisting of more than two glucose units) to a
20. STARCH BIOSYNTHESIS
variety of acceptors such as maltotroise, maltotetrose molecules.
B) Synthesis of Amylopectin (Or α-(1: 6) Glycosidic Linkages):
It takes place in the presence of Q-Enzyme by the transfer of small
chains of glucose units joined together by α-(1: 4) glycosidic
linkages to an acceptor molecule consisting of at least four α (1:4)
linked glucose units. The α-(1: 6) glycosidic bond is established
between C-1 of the terminal glucose unit of donor molecule and
C-6 of one of the glucose units of the acceptor molecule.
STARCH CATABOLISM:
Breakdown or the hydrolysis of starch to yield its constituent a-D-
Glucose units may take place in two ways
By the enzyme diastase: Starch ---------Glucose ( Diastase + H2O)
21. CATABOLISM OF STARCH
In fact, diastase is not a single enzyme; it is comprising of four
enzymes- ⅋ amylase, β-amylase, R-enzyme and Maltase.
α-amylase and β-amylase attack 1 : 4 linkages of amylose and
amylopectin (which constitute the starch) while R-Enzyme attacks
1 : 6 linkages of amylopectin, so that starch is hydrolyzed to yield
disaccharide units i.e., maltose. Finally, the enzyme maltase
converts maltose into glucose molecules.
By the enzyme starch phosphorylase.
Starch + Phosphate---------(Phosphorylase)---Glucose 1,
phosphate
Glucose 1, phosphate may be converted into glucose by the
enzyme Phosphatase
22. CONCLUSION
Carbohydrates , ‘staff of life’ are their most abundant class of bio-
molecules in nature and they are widely distributed in plants and
animals as energy source as well as the molecules for Skelton of
cells. They also serve to lubricate skeletal joints , to provide
adhesion between cells and to confer biological specificity on the
surface of animal cells. Out of the different carbohydrates, sucrose
is a major intermediate product of photosynthesis and it is the
predominant form in which sugar is transported in most plants
from leaves to other organs of plants via their vascular systems.
Starch plays a very important polysaccharides being white , soft
amorphous nature and lacks sweetness. Although it is insoluble in
water, alcohol and ether at ordinary temperature , still it plays a
very important role to extend lot of function in this regards.
23. THANKS FOR YOUR JOURNEY
Acknowledgement:
1. Google for images
2. Different web pages for content and enrichment,
3.Plant Physiology- Mukherji & Ghosh
Applied Plant Physiology- Arup Kumar Mitra
A text book of Botany- Hait, Bhattacharya & Ghosh
Plant Physiology-Devlin
Disclaimer: This presentation has been prepared for online free
study materials for academic domain without any financial
interest.