Alterations in Carbohydrate Quantities in Freeze-Dried, Relative to Fresh or Frozen Maize Leaf Disks

Abstract

For various reasons, leaves are occasionally lyophilized prior to storage at −80 °C and preparing extracts. Soluble carbohydrate identity and quantity from maize leaf disks were ascertained in two separate years using anion exchange HPLC with pulsed electrochemical detection. Analyses were made from disks after freezing in liquid nitrogen with or without subsequent lyophilization (both years) or directly after removal from plants with or without lyophilization (only in the second year). By adding the lyophilizing step, galactose content consistently increased and, frequently, so did galactoglycerols. The source of the galactose increase with the added lyophilizing step was not due to metabolizing raffinose, as the raffinose synthase (rafs) null mutant leaves, which do not make that trisaccharide, also had a similar increase in galactose content with lyophilization. Apparently, the ester linkages attaching free fatty acids to galactoglycerolipids of the chloroplast are particularly sensitive to cleavage during lyophilization, resulting in increases in galactoglycerols. Regardless of the galactose source, a systematic error is introduced for carbohydrate (and, most likely, also chloroplast mono- or digalactosyldiacylglycerol) amounts when maize leaf samples are lyophilized prior to extraction. The recognition of lyophilization as a source of galactose increase provides a cautionary note for investigators of soluble carbohydrates.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Jan 11, 2023
Source ID
10.3390/biom13010148

Entities

People

  • Allan Bruce Downie
  • John May
  • Lynnette M A Dirk
  • Mohammad R. Sahib
  • Qinghui Han
  • Tao Li
  • Tianyong Zhao
  • Yumin Zhang

Organizations

  • Army Research Office

Tags

Readers

  • Gender and Food Studies
  • Mathematics or Statistics
  • Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry