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Standardized protocols and procedures can precisely and accurately quantify non-structural carbohydrates

Landhäusser, Simon M. and Chow, Pak S. and Dickman, L. Turin and Furze, Morgan E. and Kuhlman, Iris and Schmid, Sandra and Wiesenbauer, Julia and Wild, Birgit and Gleixner, Gerd and Hartmann, Henrik and Hoch, Günter and McDowell, Nate G. and Richardson, Andrew D. and Richter, Andreas and Adams, Henry D.. (2018) Standardized protocols and procedures can precisely and accurately quantify non-structural carbohydrates. Tree physiology, 38 (12). 1764–1778.

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Official URL: https://edoc.unibas.ch/67876/

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Abstract

Non-structural carbohydrates (NSCs), the stored products of photosynthesis, building blocks for growth and fuel for respiration, are central to plant metabolism, but their measurement is challenging. Differences in methods and procedures among laboratories can cause results to vary widely, limiting our ability to integrate and generalize patterns in plant carbon balance among studies. A recent assessment found that NSC concentrations measured for a common set of samples can vary by an order of magnitude, but sources for this variability were unclear. We measured a common set of nine plant material types, and two synthetic samples with known NSC concentrations, using a common protocol for sugar extraction and starch digestion, and three different sugar quantification methods (ion chromatography, enzyme, acid) in six laboratories. We also tested how sample handling, extraction solvent and centralizing parts of the procedure in one laboratory affected results. Non-structural carbohydrate concentrations measured for synthetic samples were within about 11.5% of known values for all three methods. However, differences among quantification methods were the largest source of variation in NSC measurements for natural plant samples because the three methods quantify different NSCs. The enzyme method quantified only glucose, fructose and sucrose, with ion chromatography we additionally quantified galactose, while the acid method quantified a large range of mono- and oligosaccharides. For some natural samples, sugars quantified with the acid method were two to five times higher than with other methods, demonstrating that trees allocate carbon to a range of sugar molecules. Sample handling had little effect on measurements, while ethanol sugar extraction improved accuracy over water extraction. Our results demonstrate that reasonable accuracy of NSC measurements can be achieved when different methods are used, as long as protocols are robust and standardized. Thus, we provide detailed protocols for the extraction, digestion and quantification of NSCs in plant samples, which should improve the comparability of NSC measurements among laboratories.
Faculties and Departments:05 Faculty of Science > Departement Umweltwissenschaften > Integrative Biologie > Physiological Plant Ecology (Kahmen)
UniBasel Contributors:Hoch, Günter and Schmid, Sandra
Item Type:Article, refereed
Article Subtype:Research Article
ISSN:0829-318X
Note:Publication type according to Uni Basel Research Database: Journal article
Identification Number:
Last Modified:22 Apr 2020 22:32
Deposited On:22 Apr 2020 22:32

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