The incorporation of [35S]sulphur in thiophenes
by Tagetes patula roots was used as a model to study the
regulation of secondary metabolism with a limited supply of substrate.
Growth
and thiophene accumulation were
measured in root cultures incubated at various sulphate concentrations
in
the medium. A 20-fold to 40-fold
reduction in the sulphate concentration did not affect elongation growth,
branching and biomass production
within 14 d but decreased the thiophene level to 25–50% of the control
in the same period. The reduction in
thiophene content was found to result from a decline in biosynthetic capacity
of 80–95% after 8 d. This capacity
was restored when roots were transferred to standard medium. The restoration
took more than 24 h and was
suppressed by cordycepin, an inhibitor of mRNA processing. It is concluded
that the rate of thiophene synthesis
is regulated by a control mechanism that reacts to the availability of
sulphate
to the roots.