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1.
The rate of HCO3 uptake by the red macroalga Chondrus crispus has been investigated. Unbalanced concentrations of free CO2 and HCO3, generated by the photosynthetic activity, were detected in steady state conditions by using an exchange column apparatus linked to an assimilation chamber. Observing the variations of this gradient as influenced by the time of seawater transit from the assimilation chamber towards the column allowed an experimental determination of: (a) the actual gradient created by the photosynthetic activity, (b) the rate constant of the chemical conversion of free CO2 to HCO3. With a value of 0.115 per second at pH 8.92, this rate constant was in good agreement with a previous estimation. By using a simple model, we show that the photosynthetic rate of HCO3 consumption can be estimated by the product of the actual gradient and the rate constant. In the conditions of the experiments reported here, this rate represented more than 90% of the whole photosynthetic flux.  相似文献   

2.
An O2 electrode system with a specially designed chamber for `whorl' cell complexes of Chara corallina was used to study the combined effects of inorganic carbon and O2 concentrations on photosynthetic O2 evolution. At pH = 5.5 and 20% O2, cells grown in HCO3 medium (low CO2, pH ≥ 9.0) exhibited a higher affinity for external CO2 (K½(CO2) = 40 ± 6 micromolar) than the cells grown for at least 24 hours in high-CO2 medium (pH = 6.5), (K½(CO2) = 94 ± 16 micromolar). With O2 ≤ 2% in contrast, both types of cells showed a high apparent affinity (K½(CO2) = 50 − 52 micromolar). A Warburg effect was detectable only in the low affinity cells previously cultivated in high-CO2 medium (pH = 6.5). The high-pH, HCO3-grown cells, when exposed to low pH (5.5) conditions, exhibited a response indicating an ability to fix CO2 which exceeded the CO2 externally supplied, and the reverse situation has been observed in high-CO2-grown cells. At pH 8.2, the apparent photosynthetic affinity for external HCO3 (K½[HCO3]) was 0.6 ± 0.2 millimolar, at 20% O2. But under low O2 concentrations (≤2%), surprisingly, an inhibition of net O2 evolution was elicited, which was maximal at low HCO3 concentrations. These results indicate that: (a) photorespiration occurs in this alga and can be revealed by cultivation in high-CO2 medium, (b) Chara cells are able to accumulate CO2 internally by means of a process apparently independent of the plasmalemma HCO3 transport system, (c) molecular oxygen appears to be required for photosynthetic utilization of exogenous HCO3: pseudocyclic electron flow, sustained by O2 photoreduction, may produce the additional ATP needed for the HCO3 transport.  相似文献   

3.
Scenedesmus cells grown on high CO2, when adapted to air levels of CO2 for 4 to 6 hours in the light, formed two concentrating processes for dissolved inorganic carbon: one for utilizing CO2 from medium of pH 5 to 8 and one for bicarbonate accumulation from medium of pH 7 to 11. Similar results were obtained with assays by photosynthetic O2 evolution or by accumulation of dissolved inorganic carbon inside the cells. The CO2 pump with K0.5 for O2 evolution of less than 5 micromolar CO2 was similar to that previously studied with other green algae such as Chlamydomonas and was accompanied by plasmalemma carbonic anhydrase formation. The HCO3 concentrating process between pH 8 to 10 lowered the K0.5 (DIC) from 7300 micromolar HCO3 in high CO2 grown Scenedesmus to 10 micromolar in air-adapted cells. The HCO3 pump was inhibited by vanadate (Ki of 150 micromolar), as if it involved an ATPase linked HCO3 transporter. The CO2 pump was formed on low CO2 by high-CO2 grown cells in growth medium within 4 to 6 hours in the light. The alkaline HCO3 pump was partially activated on low CO2 within 2 hours in the light or after 8 hours in the dark. Full activation of the HCO3 pump at pH 9 had requirements similar to the activation of the CO2 pump. Air-grown or air-adapted cells at pH 7.2 or 9 accumulated in one minute 1 to 2 millimolar inorganic carbon in the light or 0.44 millimolar in the dark from 150 micromolar in the media, whereas CO2-grown cells did not accumulate inorganic carbon. A general scheme for concentrating dissolved inorganic carbon by unicellular green algae utilizes a vanadate-sensitive transporter at the chloroplast envelope for the CO2 pump and in some algae an additional vanadate-sensitive plasmalemma HCO3 transporter for a HCO3 pump.  相似文献   

4.
Carbon oxysulfide (COS) was reinvestigated as an inhibitor of active inorganic carbon transport in cells of Synechococcus PCC7942 adapted to growth at low inorganic carbon. COS inhibited both CO2 and HCO3 transport processes in a reversible (in the short term) and mixed competitive manner. The inhibition of COS was established using both silicone oil centrifugation experiments and O2-evolution studies. The Ki for COS inhibition was 29 micromolar for CO2 transport and 110 micromolar for HCO3 transport. These results support a model of inorganic carbon transport with a central CO2 pump and an inducible HCO3 utilizing accessory protein which supplies CO2 to the primary pump.  相似文献   

5.
Mass spectrometry has been used to confirm the presence of an active transport system for CO2 in Synechococcus UTEX 625. Cells were incubated at pH 8.0 in 100 micromolar KHCO3 in the absence of Na+ (to prevent HCO3 transport). Upon illumination the cells rapidly removed almost all the free CO2 from the medium. Addition of carbonic anhydrase revealed that the CO2 depletion resulted from a selective uptake of CO2, rather than a total uptake of all inorganic carbon species. CO2 transport stopped rapidly (<3 seconds) when the light was turned off. Iodoacetamide (3.3 millimolar) completely inhibited CO2 fixation but had little effect on CO2 transport. In iodoacetamide poisoned cells, transport of CO2 occurred against a concentration gradient of about 18,000 to 1. Transport of CO2 was completely inhibited by 10 micromolar diethylstilbestrol, a membrane-bound ATPase inhibitor. Studies with DCMU and PSI light indicated that CO2 transport was driven by ATP produced by cyclic or pseudocyclic photophosphorylation. Low concentrations of Na+ (<100 microequivalents per liter), but not of K+, stimulated CO2 transport as much as 2.4-fold. Unlike Na+-dependent HCO3 transport, the transport of CO2 was not inhibited by high concentrations (30 milliequivalents per liter) of Li+. During illumination, the CO2 concentration in the medium remained far below its equilibrium value for periods up to 15 minutes. This could only happen if CO2 transport was continuously occurring at a rapid rate, since the continuing dehydration of HCO3 to CO2 would rapidly raise the CO2 concentration to its equilibrium value if transport ceased. Measurement of the rate of dissolved inorganic carbon accumulation under these conditions indicated that at least part of the continuing CO2 transport was balanced by HCO3 efflux.  相似文献   

6.
The active transport of CO2 in Synechococcus UTEX 625 was measured by mass spectrometry under conditions that preclude HCO3 transport. The substrate concentration required to give one half the maximum rate for whole cell CO2 transport was determined to be 0.4 ± 0.2 micromolar (mean ± standard deviation; n = 7) with a range between 0.2 and 0.66 micromolar. The maximum rates of CO2 transport ranged between 400 and 735 micromoles per milligram of chlorophyll per hour with an average rate of 522 for seven experiments. This rate of transport was about three times greater than the dissolved inorganic carbon saturated rate of photosynthetic O2 evolution observed under these conditions. The initial rate of chlorophyll a fluorescence quenching was highly correlated with the initial rate of CO2 transport (correlation coefficient = 0.98) and could be used as an indirect method to detect CO2 transport and calculate the substrate concentration required to give one half the maximum rate of transport. Little, if any, inhibition of CO2 transport was caused by HCO3 or by Na+-dependent HCO3 transport. However, 12CO2 readily interfered with 13CO2 transport. CO2 transport and Na+-dependent HCO3 transport are separate, independent processes and the high affinity CO2 transporter is not only responsible for the initial transport of CO2 into the cell but also for scavenging any CO2 that may leak from the cell during ongoing photosynthesis.  相似文献   

7.
Synechococcus leopoliensis was grown in HCO3-limited chemostats. Growth at 50% the maximum rate occurred when the inorganic carbon concentration was 10 to 15 micromolar (or 5.6 to 8.4 nanomolar CO2). The O2 to CO2 ratios during growth were as high as 192,000 to 1. At growth rates below 80% the maximum rate, essentially all the supplied inorganic carbon was converted to organic carbon, and the cells were carbon limited. Carbon-limited cells used HCO3 rather than CO2 for growth. They also exhibited a very high photosynthetic affinity for inorganic carbon in short-term experiments. Cells growing at greater than 80% maximum growth rate, in the presence of high dissolved inorganic carbon, were termed carbon sufficient. These cells had photosynthetic affinities that were about 1000-fold lower than HCO3-limited cells and also had a reduced capacity for HCO3 transport. HCO3-limited cells are reminiscent of the air-grown cells of batch culture studies while the carbon sufficient cells are reminiscent of high-CO2 grown cells. However, the low affinity cells of the present study were growing at CO2 concentrations less than air saturation. This suggests that supranormal levels of CO2 not required to induce the physiological changes usually ascribed to high CO2 cells.  相似文献   

8.
Abel KM 《Plant physiology》1984,76(3):776-781
Photosynthetic carbon uptake of the tropical seagrass Thalassia hemprichii (Ehrenb.) Aschers was studied by several methods. Photosynthesis in buffered seawater in media in the range of pH 6 to pH 9 showed an exponentially increasing rate with decreasing pH, thus indicating that free CO2 was a photosynthetic substrate. However, these experiments were unable to determine whether photosynthesis at alkaline pH also contained some component due to HCO3 uptake. This aspect was further investigated by studying photosynthetic rates in a number of media of varying pH (7.8-8.61) and total inorganic carbon (0.75-13.17 millimolar). In these media, photosynthetic rate was correlated with free CO2 concentration and was independent of the HCO3 concentration in the medium. Short time-course experiments were conducted during equilibration of free CO2 and HCO3 after injection of 14C labeled solution at acid or alkaline pH. High initial photosynthetic rates were observed when acidic solutions (largely free CO2) were used but not with alkaline solutions. The concentration of free CO2 was found to be a limiting factor for photosynthesis in this plant.  相似文献   

9.
Light-induced acidification by the cyanobacterium Anabaena variabilis is biphasic (a fast phase I and slow phase II) and shown to be sodium-dependent with an optimum concentration of 40 to 60 millimolar Na+. Cells grown under low CO2 concentrations at pH 9 (i.e. mainly HCO3 present in the medium) exhibited the slow phase II of proton efflux only, while cells grown under low CO2 concentrations at pH 6.3 (i.e. CO2 and HCO3 present) exhibited both phases. Light-induced proton release of phase I was dependent on inorganic carbon available in the bathing medium with an apparent Km for CO2 of 20 to 70 micromolar. As was concluded from the CO2 dependence of acidification measured at different pH of the bathing medium, bicarbonate inhibited phase-I acidification noncompetetively. Acidification was inhibited by acetazolamide, an inhibitor of carbonic anhydrase. Apparently, acidification of phase I is due to a light-dependent uptake of CO2 being converted to HCO3 by a carbonic anhydrase-like function of the HCO3-transport system (M Volokita, D Zenvirth, A Kaplan, L Reinhold 1984 Plant Physiol 76: 599-602) before or during entering the cell, thus releasing one proton per CO2 converted to HCO3.  相似文献   

10.
In maize chloroplasts, the ratio of HCO3 (anion) binding sites to high-affinity atrazine binding sites is unity. In the dark, atrazine noncompetitively inhibits the binding of half of the HCO3 to the photosystem II (PSII) complexes. The inhibition of binding saturates at 5 micromolar atrazine, little inhibition is seen at 0.5 micromolar atrazine, although the high-affinity herbicide binding sites are nearly filled at this concentration. This means that HCO3 and atrazine interact noncompetitively at a specific low-affinity herbicide binding site that exists on a portion of the PSII complexes. Light abolishes the inhibitory effects of atrazine on HCO3 binding. Based on the assumption that there is one high-affinity atrazine binding site per PSII complex, we conclude that there is also only one binding site for HCO3 with a dissociation constant near 80 micromolar. The location of the HCO3 binding site, and the low-affinity atrazine binding site, is not known.  相似文献   

11.
At low levels of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and alkaline pH the rate of photosynthesis by air-grown cells of Synechococcus leopoliensis (UTEX 625) was enhanced 7- to 10-fold by 20 millimolar Na+. The rate of photosynthesis greatly exceeded the CO2 supply rate and indicated that HCO3 was taken up by a Na+-dependent mechanism. In contrast, photosynthesis by Synechococcus grown in standing culture proceeded rapidly in the absence of Na+ and exceeded the CO2 supply rate by 8 to 45 times. The apparent photosynthetic affinity (K½) for DIC was high (6-40 micromolar) and was not markedly affected by Na+ concentration, whereas with air-grown cells K½ (DIC) decreased by more than an order of magnitude in the presence of Na+. Lithium, which inhibited Na+-dependent HCO3 uptake in air-grown cells, had little effect on Na+-independent HCO3 uptake by standing culture cells. A component of total HCO3 uptake in standing culture cells was also Na+-dependent with a K½ (Na+) of 4.8 millimolar and was inhibited by lithium. Analysis of 14C-fixation during isotopic disequilibrium indicated that standing culture cells also possessed a Na+-independent CO2 transport system. The conversion from Na+-independent to Na+-dependent HCO3 uptake was readily accomplished by transferring cells grown in standing to growth in cultures bubbled with air. These results demonstrated that the conditions experienced during growth influenced the mode by which Ssynechococcus acquired HCO3 for subsequent photosynthetic fixation.  相似文献   

12.
The active transport of CO2 in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus UTEX 625 was inhibited by H2S. Treatment of the cells with up to 150 micromolar H2S + HS at pH 8.0 had little effect on Na+-dependent HCO3 transport or photosynthetic O2 evolution, but CO2 transport was inhibited by more than 90%. CO2 transport was restored when H2S was removed by flushing with N2. At constant total H2S + HS concentrations, inhibition of CO2 transport increased as the ratio of H2S to HS increased, suggesting a direct role for H2S in the inhibitory process. Hydrogen sulfide does not appear to serve as a substrate for transport. In the presence of H2S and Na+ -dependent HCO3 transport, the extracellular CO2 concentration rose considerably above its equilibrium level, but was maintained far below its equilibrium level in the absence of H2S. The inhibition of CO2 transport, therefore, revealed an ongoing leakage from the cells of CO2 which was derived from the intracellular dehydration of HCO3 which itself had been recently transported into the cells. Normally, leaked CO2 is efficiently transported back into the cell by the CO2 transport system, thus maintaining the extracellular CO2 concentration near zero. It is suggested that CO2 transport not only serves as a primary means of inorganic carbon acquisition for photosynthesis but also serves as a means of recovering CO2 lost from the cell. A schematic model describing the relationship between the CO2 and HCO3 transport systems is presented.  相似文献   

13.
The possibility of HCO3 transport in the blue-green alga (cyanobacterium) Coccochloris peniocystis has been investigated. Coccochloris photosynthesized most rapidly in the pH range 8 to 10, where most of the inorganic C exists as HCO3. If photosynthesis used only CO2 from the external solution the rate of photosynthesis would be limited by the rate of HCO3 dehydration to CO2. Observed rates of photosynthesis at alkaline pH were as much as 48-fold higher than could be supported by spontaneous dehydration of HCO3 in the external solution. Assays for extracellular carbonic anhydrase were negative. The evidence strongly suggests that HCO3 was a direct C source for photosynthesis.  相似文献   

14.
A mass spectrometer was used to simultaneously follow the time course of photosynthetic O2 evolution and CO2 depletion of the medium by cells of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus leopoliensis UTEX 625. Analysis of the data indicated that both CO2 and HCO3 were simultaneously and continuously transported by the cells as a source of substrate for photosynthesis. Initiation of HCO3 transport by Na+ addition had no effect on ongoing CO2 transport. This result is interpreted to indicate that the CO2 and HCO3 transport systems are separate and distinctly different transport systems. Measurement of CO2-dependent photosynthesis indicated that CO2 uptake involved active transport and that diffusion played only a minor role in CO2 acquisition in cyanobacteria.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of pH, O2 concentration, and temperature on the CO2 compensation point (Г[CO2]) of isolated Asparagus sprengeri Regel mesophyll cells has been determined in a closed, aqueous environment by a sensitive gas-chromatographic technique. Measured values range between 10 and 100 microliters per liter CO2 depending upon experimental conditions. The Г(CO2) increases with increasing temperature. The rate of increase is dependent upon the O2 concentration and is more rapid at high (250-300 micromolar), than at low (30-60 micromolar), O2 concentrations. The differential effect of temperature on Г(CO2) is more pronounced at pH 6.2 than at pH 8.0, but this pH-dependence is not attributable to a direct, differential effect of pH on the relative rates of photosynthesis and photorespiration, as the O2-sensitive component of Г(CO2) remains constant over this range. The Г(CO2) of Asparagus cells at 25°C decreases by 50 microliters per liter when the pH is raised from 6.2 to 8.0, regardless of the prevailing O2 concentration. It is suggested that the pH-dependence of Г(CO2) is related to the ability of the cell to take up CO2 from the aqueous environment. The correlation between high HCO3 concentrations and low Г(CO2) at alkaline pH indicates that extracellular HCO3 facilitates the uptake of CO2, possibly by increasing the flux of inorganic carbon from the bulk medium to the cell surface. The strong O2− and temperature-dependence of Г(CO2) indicates that isolated Asparagus mesophyll cells lack an efficient means for concentrating intracellular CO2 to a level sufficient to reduce or suppress photorespiration.  相似文献   

16.
The Na+ requirement for photosynthesis and its relationship to dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) concentration and Li+ concentration was examined in air-grown cells of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus leopoliensis UTEX 625 at pH 8. Analysis of the rate of photosynthesis (O2 evolution) as a function of Na+ concentration, at fixed DIC concentration, revealed two distinct regions to the response curve, for which half-saturation values for Na+ (K½[Na+]) were calculated. The value of both the low and the high K½(Na+) was dependent upon extracellular DIC concentration. The low K½(Na+) decreased from 1000 micromolar at 5 micromolar DIC to 200 micromolar at 140 micromolar DIC whereas over the same DIC concentration range the high K½(Na+) decreased from 10 millimolar to 1 millimolar. The most significant increases in photosynthesis occurred in the 1 to 20 millimolar range. A fraction of total photosynthesis, however, was independent of added Na+ and this fraction increased with increased DIC concentration. A number of factors were identified as contributing to the complexity of interaction between Na+ and DIC concentration in the photosynthesis of Synechococcus. First, as revealed by transport studies and mass spectrometry, both CO2 and HCO3 transport contributed to the intracellular supply of DIC and hence to photosynthesis. Second, both the CO2 and HCO3 transport systems required Na+, directly or indirectly, for full activity. However, micromolar levels of Na+ were required for CO2 transport while millimolar levels were required for HCO3 transport. These levels corresponded to those found for the low and high K½(Na+) for photosynthesis. Third, the contribution of each transport system to intracellular DIC was dependent on extracellular DIC concentration, where the contribution from CO2 transport increased with increased DIC concentration relative to HCO3 transport. This change was reflected in a decrease in the Na+ concentration required for maximum photosynthesis, in accord with the lower Na+-requirement for CO2 transport. Lithium competitively inhibited Na+-stimulated photosynthesis by blocking the cells' ability to form an intracellular DIC pool through Na+-dependent HCO3 transport. Lithium had little effect on CO2 transport and only a small effect on the size of the pool it generated. Thus, CO2 transport did not require a functional HCO3 transport system for full activity. Based on these observations and the differential requirement for Na+ in the CO2 and HCO3 transport system, it was proposed that CO2 and HCO3 were transported across the membrane by different transport systems.  相似文献   

17.
We report the changes in the concentrations and 18O contents of extracellular CO2 and HCO3 in suspensions of Synechococcus sp. (UTEX 2380) using membrane inlet mass spectrometry. This marine cyanobacterium is known to have an active uptake mechanism for inorganic carbon. Measuring 18O exchange between CO2 and water, we have found the intracellular carbonic anhydrase activity to be equivalent to 20 times the uncatalyzed CO2 hydration rate in different samples of cells that were grown on bubbled air (low-CO2 conditions). This activity was only weakly inhibited by ethoxzolamide with an I50 near 7 to 10 micromolar in lysed cell suspensions. We have shown that even with CO2-starved cells there is considerable generation of CO2 from intracellular stores, a factor that can cause errors in measurement of net CO2 uptake unless accounted for. It was demonstrated that use of 13C-labeled inorganic carbon outside the cell can correct for such errors in mass spectrometric measurement. Oxygen-18 depletion experiments show that in the light, CO2 readily passes across the cell membrane to the sites of intracellular carbonic anhydrase. Although HCO3 was readily taken up by the cells, these experiments shown that there is no significant efflux of HCO3 from Synechococcus.  相似文献   

18.
Rates of photosynthetic O2 evolution, for measuring K0.5(CO2 + HCO3) at pH 7, upon addition of 50 micromolar HCO3 to air-adapted Chlamydomonas, Dunaliella, or Scenedesmus cells, were inhibited up to 90% by the addition of 1.5 to 4.0 millimolar salicylhydroxamic acid (SHAM) to the aqueous medium. The apparent K1(SHAM) for Chlamydomonas cells was about 2.5 millimolar, but due to low solubility in water effective concentrations would be lower. Salicylhydroxamic acid did not inhibit oxygen evolution or accumulation of bicarbonate by Scenedesmus cells between pH 8 to 11 or by isolated intact chloroplasts from Dunaliella. Thus, salicylhydroxamic acid appears to inhibit CO2 uptake, whereas previous results indicate that vanadate inhibits bicarbonate uptake. These conclusions were confirmed by three test procedures with three air-adapted algae at pH 7. Salicylhydroxamic acid inhibited the cellular accumulation of dissolved inorganic carbon, the rate of photosynthetic O2 evolution dependent on low levels of dissolved inorganic carbon (50 micromolar Na-HCO3), and the rate of 14CO2 fixation with 100 micromolar [14C] HCO3. Salicylhydroxamic acid inhibition of O2 evolution and 14CO2-fixation was reversed by higher levels of NaHCO3. Thus, salicylhydroxamic acid inhibition was apparently not affecting steps of photosynthesis other than CO2 accumulation. Although salicylhydroxamic acid is an inhibitor of alternative respiration in algae, it is not known whether the two processes are related.  相似文献   

19.
We have measured the exchange of 18O between CO2 and H2O in stirred suspensions of Chlorella vulgaris (UTEX 263) using a membrane inlet to a mass spectrometer. The depletion of 18O from CO2 in the fluid outside the cells provides a method to study CO2 and HCO3 kinetics in suspensions of algae that contain carbonic anhydrase since 18O loss to H2O is catalyzed inside the cells but not in the external fluid. Low-CO2 cells of Chlorella vulgaris (grown with air) were added to a solution containing 18O enriched CO2 and HCO3 with 2 to 15 millimolar total inorganic carbon. The observed depletion of 18O from CO2 was biphasic and the resulting 18C content of CO2 was much less than the 18O content of HCO3 in the external solution. Analysis of the slopes showed that the Fick's law rate constant for entry of HCO3 into the cell was experimentally indistinguishable from zero (bicarbonate impermeable) with an upper limit of 3 × 10−4 s−1 due to our experimental errors. The Fick's law rate constant for entry of CO2 to the sites of intracellular carbonic anhydrase was large, 0.013 per second, but not as great as calculated for no membrane barrier to CO2 flux (6 per second). The experimental value may be explained by a nonhomogeneous distribution of carbonic anhydrase in the cell (such as membrane-bound enzyme) or by a membrane barrier to CO2 entry into the cell or both. The CO2 hydration activity inside the cells was 160 times the uncatalyzed CO2 hydration rate.  相似文献   

20.
The active transport and intracellular accumulation of HCO3 by air-grown cells of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus UTEX 625 (PCC 6301) was strongly promoted by 25 millimolar Na+.Na+-dependent HCO3 accumulation also resulted in a characteristic enhancement in the rate of photosynthetic O2 evolution and CO2 fixation. However, when Synechococcus was grown in standing culture, high rates of HCO3 transport and photosynthesis were observed in the absence of added Na+. The internal HCO3 pool reached levels up to 50 millimolar, and an accumulation ratio as high as 970 was observed. Sodium enhanced HCO3 transport and accumulation in standing culture cells by about 25 to 30% compared with the five- to eightfold enhancement observed with air-grown cells. The ability of standing culture cells to utilize HCO3 from the medium in the absence of Na+ was lost within 16 hours after transfer to air-grown culture and was reacquired during subsequent growth in standing culture. Studies using a mass spectrometer indicated that standing culture cells were also capable of active CO2 transport involving a high-affinity transport system which was reversibly inhibited by H2S, as in the case for air-grown cells. The data are interpreted to indicate that Synechococcus possesses a constitutive CO2 transport system, whereas Na+-dependent and Na+-independent HCO3 transport are inducible, depending upon the conditions of growth. Intracellular accumulation of HCO3 was always accompanied by a quenching of chlorophyll a fluorescence which was independent of CO2 fixation. The extent of fluorescence quenching was highly dependent upon the size of the internal pool of HCO3 + CO2. The pattern of fluorescence quenching observed in response to added HCO3 and Na+ in air-grown and standing culture cells was highly characteristic for Na+-dependent and Na+-independent HCO3 accumulation. It was concluded that measurements of fluorescence quenching provide an indirect means for following HCO3 transport and the dynamics of intracellular HCO3 accumulation and dissipation.  相似文献   

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