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1.
Fu CF  Gibbs M 《Plant physiology》1988,88(1):207-212
Isolated, intact spinach (Spinacia oleracea L. var. “Long Standing Bloomsdale”) chloroplasts were heated in the dark and the effect of this treatment on photosynthetic activities was determined at 25°C. Dark incubation of the chloroplasts for 10 minutes at 35°C and pH 8.1 resulted in a 50% decline in CO2 photoassimilation. This decline in photosynthetic performance was dependent upon time, temperature, and medium pH with the optimum effect at acidic pH values. Photosynthetic decline was not observed if MgATP, MgADP, or a mixture of fructose 1,6-bisphosphate, aldolase, and oxaloacetate or ribose 5-phosphate and oxaloacetate was added prior to but not after the temperature pretreatment. A chloroplast preparation reconstituted with thylakoids and stroma from pretreated (35°C, 10 minutes, pH 8.1) intact chloroplasts and supplemented with ferredoxin, ADP, and NADP was photosynthetically competent, indicating that ATP-coupled electron flow and the enzymes comprising the Benson-Calvin cycle remained stable during the dark treatment. In contrast, exposure of isolated thylakoids to 35°C for 10 minutes uncoupled photophosphorylation from NADP and ferricyanide reduction. We propose that the decline of intact chloroplast photosynthesis is the result of a decrease in the content of or a change in the ratios of the adenine nucleotides. Maintenance of an adequate supply of adenine nucleotide is the effect of the externally added MgATP or of chloroplastic respiration of a sugar phosphate.  相似文献   

2.
Physiology of Root-Associated Nitrogenase Activity in Oryza sativa   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
An intact method for measuring immediately linear rates of acetylene reduction was used to investigate the relationship between temperature, pH, O2 concentration, and light intensity with the rate of root-associated nitrogenase activity in rice (Oryza sativa L.). Nitrogenase activity varied over a temperature range of 10 to 50°C and optimal rates of acetylene reduction were recorded at 35°C. Nitrogenase activity was also influenced by the pH of the liquid surrounding the roots prior to assay. Maximal rates of acetylene reduction were recorded over a pH range from 5.8 to 7.5. Nitrogenase activity was significantly reduced by concentrations of O2 0.5% (v/v) or more when the intact plant assay method was used, and no optimum was detected. However, when the plant tops were removed and the cut ends sealed from the atmosphere for 4 hours, acetylene reduction rates were maximal at 0.25% O2 (v/v). When plants were moved from sunlight (1,400 microeinsteins per square meter per second) to shade (9.6) root-associated nitrogenase activity at 35° C significantly decreased 15 min later to one-fourth the rate and recovered upon return to sunlight. When the light intensity reaching the leaf canopy was progressively reduced from 1,050 to 54 microeinsteins per square meter per second the rate of root-associated nitrogenase activity decreased from 550 ± 135 to 192 ± 55 nanomoles ethylene per gram dry root per hour. The study suggests that the rate of root-associated nitrogenase activity in rice at constant temperature may well be mediated by variations in the concentration of O2 resulting from changes in the rate of photosynthesis as well as variations in the rate of transport of photosynthate.  相似文献   

3.
Fu CF  Gibbs M 《Plant physiology》1987,83(4):849-855
Spinach chloroplasts were used to study the relationship between photosynthetic CO2 fixation and temperature from 30 to −15°C. In saturating light and high concentrations of CO2, the temperature coefficients (Q10) above 20°C were less than 2 in the intact chloroplast. Below 15°C, the Q10 values were greater than 2 and gradually increased with decreasing (down to 0°C) temperature to approximately 4.4. Photosynthesis responded similarly to temperature in a reconstituted chloroplast preparation fortified with ribose 5-phosphate. In the intact chloroplast, temperature did not alter the Q10 value in low light and high CO2. Elevating the temperature to 25°C after photosynthesizing at −15°C (46 minutes) or 0°C (17 minutes) restored the temperature-depressed photosynthetic rate without a lag in the intact chloroplast to the rate of a chloroplast continually at 25°C. At 0°C, the intact chloroplast photosynthetic rate responded slightly to the inorganic phosphate concentration (0.1-1.0 millimolar) and to pH (7.0-8.6). Relative to 25°C, the levels of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate and glycerate 3-phosphate were increased 1300 and 200%, respectively, whereas glycolate decreased 57% during intact chloroplast photosynthesis at 0°C. Chilling temperature impeded the transport of photosynthetic intermediates from the stromal compartment to the external medium. Ethylene glycol was shown to be an appropriate additive to prevent freezing of the reaction mixture down to −15°C for photosynthetic CO2 assimilation.  相似文献   

4.
As part of an analysis of the factors regulating photosynthesis in Agropyron smithii Rydb., a C3 grass, the response of electron transport and photophosphorylation to temperature in isolated chloroplast thylakoids has been examined. The response of the light reactions to temperature was found to depend strongly on the preincubation time especially at temperatures above 35°C. Using methyl viologen as a noncyclic electron acceptor, coupled electron transport was found to be stable to 38°C; however, uncoupled electron transport was inhibited above 38°C. Photophosphorylation became unstable at lower temperatures, becoming progressively inhibited from 35 to 42°C. The coupling ratio, ATP/2e, decreased continuously with temperature above 35°C. Likewise, photosystem I electron transport was stable up to 48°C, while cyclic photophosphorylation became inhibited above 35°C. Net proton uptake was found to decrease with temperatures above 35°C supporting the hypothesis that high temperature produces thermal uncoupling in these chloroplast thylakoids. Previously determined limitations of net photosynthesis in whole leaves in the temperature region from 35 to 40°C may be due to thermal uncoupling that limits ATP and/or changes the stromal environment required for photosynthetic carbon reduction. Previously determined limitations to photosynthesis in whole leaves above 40°C correlate with inhibition of photosynthetic electron transport at photosystem II along with the cessation of photophosphorylation.  相似文献   

5.
The temperature response on gas and water vapour exchange characteristics of three medicinal drug type (HP Mexican, MX and W1) and four industrial fiber type (Felinq 34, Kompolty, Zolo 11 and Zolo 15) varieties of Cannabis sativa, originally from different agro-climatic zones worldwide, were studied. Among the drug type varieties, optimum temperature for photosynthesis (Topt) was observed in the range of 30–35 °C in high potency Mexican HPM whereas, it was in the range of 25–30 °C in W1. A comparatively lower value (25 °C) for Topt was observed in MX. Among fiber type varieties, Topt was around 30 °C in Zolo 11 and Zolo 15 whereas, it was near 25 °C in Felinq 34 and Kompolty. Varieties having higher maximum photosynthesis (PN max) had higher chlorophyll content as compared to those having lower PN max. Differences in water use efficiency (WUE) were also observed within and among the drug and fiber type plants. However, differences became less pronounced at higher temperatures. Both stomatal and mesophyll components seem to be responsible for the temperature dependence of photosynthesis (PN) in this species, however, their magnitude varied with the variety. In general, a two fold increase in dark respiration with increase in temperature (from 20 °C to 40 °C) was observed in all the varieties. However, a greater increase was associated with the variety having higher rate of photosynthesis, indicating a strong association between photosynthetic and respiratory rates. The results provide a valuable indication regarding variations in temperature dependence of PN in different varieties of Cannabis sativa L.  相似文献   

6.
Hall NP  Keys AJ 《Plant physiology》1983,73(4):945-948
Carboxylase and oxygenase activities of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase purified from wheat were measured over the temperature range 5 to 35°C either at constant O2 and CO2 concentrations or where the O2 and CO2 simulated the concentrations in water equilibrated at each temperature with the same gaseous phase. At constant CO2 (14 micromolar) and O2 (0.34 millimolar), the oxygenase to carboxylase ratio remained constant at 0.21 between 5 and 25°C but increased to 0.26 at 35°C. At O2 and CO2 concentrations near those expected in water equilibrated with air (21% [v/v] O2) containing 300 μl/l CO2 at the various temperatures, the ratio of oxygenase to carboxylase activity increased 2.2-fold between 15 and 35°C. At CO2 and O2 concentrations expected in water in equilibrium with subatmospheric concentrations of CO2 in air (21% [v/v] O2, 210 μl/l CO2), the oxygenase to carboxylase ratio increased from 0.25 at 10°C to 0.56 at 35°C. Between 20 and 30°C, the apparent Q10 value for the oxygenase reaction was 1.78 and that for the carboxylase was 1.26. Hence, the different responses of photosynthesis and photorespiration to temperature are due more to changes in the relative solubilities of CO2 and O2 (the solubility ratio) than to changes in kinetic parameters of the reactions catalyzed by ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase.  相似文献   

7.
Protoplasts, protoplast extracts (intact chloroplasts plus extrachloroplastic material), and chloroplasts isolated from protoplasts of wheat (Triticum aestivum) have rates of photosynthesis as measured by light-dependent O2 evolution of about 100 to 150 micromoles of O2 per milligram of chlorophyll per hour at 20 C and saturating bicarbonate. The assay conditions sufficient for this activity were 0.4 molar sorbitol, 50 millimolar N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N′-2-ethanesulfonic acid KOH (pH 7.6), and 10 millimolar NaHCO3 with protoplast, plus a requirement of 1 to 10 millimolar ethylenediaminetetraacetate (EDTA) and 0.2 to 0.5 millimolar inorganic orthophosphate (Pi) with protoplast extracts and chloroplasts. Protoplast extracts evolved approximately 6 micromoles of O2 per milligram of chlorophyll before photosynthesis became largely dependent on exogenous Pi while photosynthesis by chloroplasts had a much stronger dependence on exogenous Pi from the outset.

Photosynthesis by chloroplasts from 6-day-old wheat plants under optimum levels of Pi was similar to that with the addition of 5 millimolar inorganic pyrophosphate (PPi) plus 0.2 millimolar adenosine-5′-diphosphate (ADP). Either PPi or ADP added separately inhibited photosynthesis. When chloroplasts were incubated in the dark for 2 to 6 minutes, photosynthesis was strongly inhibited by 5 millimolar PPi and this inhibiting was relieved by including adenosine-5′-triphosphate (ATP) or ADP (0.2 to 0.6 millimolar). Chloroplasts from 9-day-old wheat leaves were slightly less sensitive to inhibition by PPi and showed little or no inhibition by ADP.

Chloroplasts isolated from protoplasts and assayed with 0.3 millimolar Pi added before illumination have an induction time from less than 1 minute up to 16 minutes depending on the time of the assay after isolation and the components of the medium. In order to obtain maximum rates of photosynthesis and minimum induction time, NaHCO3 and chelating agents, EDTA or PPi (+ATP), are required in the chloroplast isolation, resuspension and assay medium. With these inclusions in the isolation and resuspension medium the induction time decreased rapidly during the first 20 to 30 minutes storage of chloroplasts on ice. Requirements for isolating intact and photosynthetically functional chloroplasts from wheat protoplasts are discussed.

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8.
Thermostability of the photosynthetic apparatus of abscisic acid (ABA)-treated seedlings of barley (Hordeum vulgare) was studied by light-scattering and by fluorescence measurements of isolated chloroplasts. ABA treatment markedly decreased heat damage of the chloroplast ultrastructure; an exogenous ABA concentration of 10−5 molar was most effective. Heat-induced increase of the 77 kilodalton fluorescence ratio F740/F685 was also smaller at this ABA concentration. The heat-induced increase of the initial chlorophyll fluorescence level (Fo) was virtually eliminated in ABA-treated (10−5 molar) chloroplasts up to 45°C and slightly increased at 50°C, relative to control chloroplasts where Fo increased even at 35°C and reached its maximal value at 45°C. In control chloroplasts, Fo increased with a 5-minute pretreatment temperature, an effect observed as low as 35°C. Fo was maximal at 45°C. In contrast, chloroplasts treated with 10−5 molar ABA did not exhibit a heat-induced increase in Fo until 50°C.  相似文献   

9.
Robinson SP 《Plant physiology》1985,79(4):996-1002
Spinach leaf chloroplasts isolated in isotonic media (330 millimolar sorbitol, −1.0 megapascals osmotic potential) had optimum rates of photosynthesis when assayed at −1.0 megapascals. When chloroplasts were isolated in hypertonic media (720 millimolar sorbitol, −2.0 megapascals osmotic potential) the optimum osmotic potential for photosynthesis was shifted to −1.8 megapascals and the chloroplasts had higher rates of CO2-dependent O2 evolution than chloroplasts isolated in 330 millimolar sorbitol when both were assayed at high solute concentrations.

Transfer of chloroplasts isolated in 330 millimolar sorbitol to 720 millimolar sorbitol resulted in decreased chloroplast volume but this shrinkage was only transient and the chloroplasts subsequently swelled so that within 2 to 3 minutes at 20°C the chloroplast volume had returned to near the original value. Thus, actual steady state chloroplast volume was not decreased in hypertonic media. In isotonic media, there was a slow but significant uptake of sorbitol by chloroplasts (10 to 20 micromoles per milligram chlorophyll per hour at 20°C). Transfer of chloroplasts from 330 millimolar sorbitol to 720 millimolar sorbitol resulted in rapid uptake of sorbitol (up to 280 micromoles per milligram chlorophyll per hour at 20°C) and after 5 minutes the concentration of sorbitol inside the chloroplasts exceeded 500 millimolar. This uptake of sorbitol resulted in a significant underestimation of chloroplast volume unless [14C]sorbitol was added just prior to centrifuging the chloroplasts through silicone oil. Sudden exposure to osmotic stress apparently induced a transient change in the permeability of the chloroplast envelope since addition of [14C]sorbitol 3 minutes after transfer to hypertonic media (when chloroplast volume had returned to normal) did not result in rapid uptake of labeled sorbitol.

It is concluded that chloroplasts can osmotically adjust in vitro by uptake of solutes which do not normally penetrate the chloroplast envelope, resulting in a restoration of normal chloroplast volume and partially preventing the inhibition of photosynthesis by high solute concentrations. The results indicate the importance of matching the osmotic potential of isolation media to that of the tissue, particularly in studies of stress physiology.

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10.
The response of photosynthetic carbon assimilation and chlorophyll fluorescence quenching to changes in intercellular CO2 partial pressure (Ci), O2 partial pressure, and leaf temperature (15-35°C) in triazine-resistant and -susceptible biotypes of Brassica napus were examined to determine the effects of the changes in the resistant biotype on the overall process of photosynthesis in intact leaves. Three categories of photosynthetic regulation were observed. The first category of photosynthetic response, ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco)-limited photosynthesis, was observed at 15, 25, and 35°C leaf temperatures with low Ci. When the carbon assimilation rate was Rubisco-limited, there was little difference between the resistant and susceptible biotypes, and Rubisco activity parameters were similar between the two biotypes. A second category, called feedback-limited photosynthesis, was evident at 15 and 25°C above 300 microbars Ci. The third category, photosynthetic electron transport-limited photosynthesis, was evident at 25 and 35°C at moderate to high CO2. At low temperature, when the response curves of carbon assimilation to Ci indicated little or no electron transport limitation, the carbon assimilation rate was similar in the resistant and susceptible biotypes. With increasing temperature, more electron transport-limited carbon assimilation was observed, and a greater difference between resistant and susceptible biotypes was observed. These observations reveal the increasing importance of photosynthetic electron transport in controlling the overall rate of photosynthesis in the resistant biotype as temperature increases. Photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence (qP) in the resistant biotype never exceeded 60%, and triazine resistance effects were more evident when the susceptible biotype had greater than 60% qP, but not when it had less than 60% qP.  相似文献   

11.
The sensitivity of photosynthesis to O2 and CO2 was measured in leaves from field grown plants of six species (Phaseolus vulgaris, Capsicum annuum, Lycopersicon esculentum, Scrophularia desertorum, Cardaria draba, and Populus fremontii) from 5°C to 35°C using gas-exchange techniques. In all species but Phaseolus, photosynthesis was insensitive to O2 in normal air below a species dependent temperature. CO2 insensitivity occurred under the same conditions that resulted in O2 insensitivity. A complete loss of O2 sensitivity occurred up to 22°C in Lycopersicon but only up to 6°C in Scrophularia. In Lycopersicon and Populus, O2 and CO2 insensitivity occurred under conditions regularly encountered during the cooler portions of the day. Because O2 insensitivity is an indicator of feedback limited photosynthesis, these results indicate that feedback limitations can play a role in determining the diurnal carbon gain in the field. At higher partial pressures of CO2 the temperature at which O2 insensitivity occurred was higher, indicating that feedback limitations in the field will become more important as the CO2 concentration in the atmosphere increases.  相似文献   

12.
The effect of 21% O2 and 3% O2 on the CO2 exchange of detached wheat leaves was measured in a closed system with an infrared carbon dioxide analyzer. Temperature was varied between 2° and 43°, CO2 concentration between 0.000% and 0.050% and light intensity between 40 ft-c and 1000 ft-c. In most conditions, the apparent rate of photosynthesis was inhibited in 21% O2 compared to 3% O2. The degree of inhibition increased with increasing temperature and decreasing CO2 concentration. Light intensity did not alter the effect of O2 except at light intensities or CO2 concentrations near the compensation point. At high CO2 concentrations and low temperature, O2 inhibition of apparent photosynthesis was absent. At 3% O2, wheat resembled tropical grasses in possessing a high rate of photosynthesis, a temperature optimum for photosynthesis above 30°, and a CO2 compensation point of less than 0.0005% CO2. The effect of O2 on apparent photosynthesis could be ascribed to a combination of stimulation of CO2 production during photosynthesis, and inhibition of photosynthesis itself.  相似文献   

13.
In vivo room temperature chlorophyll a fluorescence coupled with CO2 and O2 exchange was measured to determine photosynthetic limitation(s) for spring and winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) grown at cold-hardening temperatures (5°C/5°C, day/night). Plants of comparable physiological stage, but grown at nonhardening temperatures (20°C/16°C, day/night) were used in comparison. Winter wheat cultivars grown at 5°C had light-saturated rates of CO2 exchange and apparent photon yields for CO2 exchange and O2 evolution that were equal to or greater than those of winter cultivars grown at 20°C. In contrast, spring wheat cultivars grown at 5°C showed 35% lower apparent photon yields for CO2 exchange and 25% lower light-saturated rates of CO2 exchange compared to 20°C grown controls. The lower CO2 exchange capacity is not associated with a lower efficiency of photosystem II activity measured as either the apparent photon yield for O2 evolution, the ratio of variable to maximal fluorescence, or the level of reduced primary quinone electron acceptor maintained at steady-state photosynthesis, and is most likely associated with carbon metabolism. The lower CO2 exchange capacity of the spring cultivars developed following long-term exposure to low temperature and did not occur following over-night exposure of nonhardened plants to 5°C.  相似文献   

14.
The response of maize (Zea mays L.) protoplasts to high temperature stress was investigated. After isolation and electroporation, protoplasts were preincubated for 12 hours at 26°C then incubated for 6 hours at elevated temperatures. The pattern of polypeptides synthesized by these protoplasts during the last hour was monitored by in vivo labeling with 35S-methionine. Incubation at 40° and 42°C resulted in the synthesis of polypeptides not detectable at 26°C. Introduction of a chimeric maize heat shock protein 70 promoter-chloramphenicol acetyltransferase coding region gene into protoplasts via electroporation resulted in the temperature-dependent induction of chloramphenicol acetyltransferase activity with maximal activity at 40°C. In the same protoplasts, a second chimeric gene, in which the firefly luciferase coding region was under the control of the 35S promoter from cauliflower mosaic virus, did not show an increase in expression after incubation at higher temperatures. Maize protoplasts provide a system to study molecular responses to high temperature stress.  相似文献   

15.
Root temperature strongly affects shoot growth, possibly via “nonhydraulic messengers” from root to shoot. In short-term studies with barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) and sorghum (Sorghum bicolor L.) seedlings, the optimum root temperatures for leaf expansion were 25° and 35°C, respectively. Hydraulic conductance (Lp) of both intact plants and detached exuding roots of barley increased with increasing root temperature to a high value at 25°C, remaining high with further warming. In sorghum, the Lp of intact plants and of detached roots peaked at 35°C. In both species, root temperature did not affect water potentials of the expanded leaf blade or the growing region despite marked changes in Lp. Extreme temperatures greatly decreased ion flux, particularly K+ and NO3, to the xylem of detached roots of both species. Removing external K+ did not alter short-term K+ flux to the xylem in sorghum but strongly inhibited flux at high temperature in barley, indicating differences in the sites of temperature effects. Leaf growth responses to root temperature, although apparently “uncoupled” from water transport properties, were correlated with ion fluxes. Studies of putative root messengers must take into account the possible role of ions.  相似文献   

16.
A few species of Cymbopogon and Vetiveria are potentially important tropical grasses producing essential oils. In the present study, we report on the leaf anatomy and photosynthetic carbon assimilation in five species of Cymbopogon and Vetiveria zizanioides. Kranz-type leaf anatomy with a centrifugal distribution of chloroplasts and exclusive localization of starch in the bundle sheath cells were common among the test plants. Besides the Kranz leaf anatomy, these grasses displayed other typical C4 characteristics including a low (0–5 µl/l) CO2 compensation point, lack of light saturation of CO2 uptake at high photon flux densities, high temperature (35°C) optimum of net photosynthesis, high rates of net photosynthesis (55–67 mg CO2 dm-2 leaf area h-1), little or no response of net photosynthesis to atmospheric levels of O2 and high leaf 13C/12C ratios. The biochemical studies with 14CO2 indicated that the leaves of the above plant species synthesize predominantly malate during short term (5 s) photosynthesis. In pulse-chase experiments it was shown that the synthesis of 3-phosphoglycerate proceeds at the expense of malate, the major first formed product of photosynthesis in these plant species.  相似文献   

17.
As part of an extensive analysis of the factors regulating photosynthesis in Agropyron smithii Rydb., a C3 grass, we have examined the response of leaf gas exchange and ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) carboxylase activity to temperature. Emphasis was placed on elucidating the specific processes which regulate the temperature response pattern. The inhibitory effects of above-optimal temperatures on net CO2 uptake were fully reversible up to 40°C. Below 40°C, temperature inhibition was primarily due to O2 inhibition of photosynthesis, which reached a maximum of 65% at 45°C. The response of stomatal conductance to temperature did not appear to have a significant role in determining the overall temperature response of photosynthesis. The intracellular conductance to CO2 increased over the entire experimental temperature range, having a Q10 of 1.2 to 1.4. Increases in the apparent Michaelis constant (Kc) for RuBP carboxylase were observed in both in vitro and in vivo assays. The Q10 values for the maximum velocity (Vmax) of CO2 fixation by RuBP carboxylase in vivo was lower (1.3-1.6) than those calculated from in vitro assays (1.8-2.2). The results suggest that temperature-dependent changes in enzyme capacity may have a role in above-optimum temperature limitations below 40°C. At leaf temperatures above 40°C, decreases in photosynthetic capacity were partially dependent on temperature-induced irreversible reductions in the quantum yield for CO2 uptake.  相似文献   

18.
Mesophyll cells, protoplasts, and protoplast extracts of Digitaria sanguinalis were used for comparative studies of light-dependent CO2 fixation. CO2 fixation was low without the addition of organic substrates. Pyruvate, oxaloacetate, and 3-phosphoglycerate induced relatively low rates (10 to 90 μmoles/mg chlorophyll·hr) of CO2 fixation when added separately. However, a highly synergistic relationship was found between pyruvate + oxaloacetate and pyruvate + 3-phosphoglycerate for inducing light-dependent CO2 fixation in the mesophyll preparations. Highest rates of CO2 fixation were obtained with protoplast extracts. Pyruvate, in combination with oxaloacetate or 3-phosphoglycerate induced light-dependent rates from 150 to 380 μmoles of CO2 fixed/mg chlorophyll·hr which are equivalent to or exceed reported rates of whole leaf photosynthesis in C4 species. Concentrations of various substrates required to give half-maximum velocities of CO2 fixation were determined, with the protoplast extracts generally saturating at the lowest substrate concentrations. Chloroplasts separated from protoplast extracts showed little capacity for CO2 fixation. The results suggest that CO2 fixation in C4 mesophyll cells is dependent on chloroplasts and extrachloroplastic phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase.  相似文献   

19.
Boese SR  Huner NP 《Plant physiology》1990,94(4):1830-1836
The growth kinetics of spinach plants (Spinacia oleracea L. cv Savoy) grown at 5°C or 16°C were determined to allow us to compare leaf tissues of the same developmental stage rather than chronological age. The second leaf pairs reached full expansion at a plant age of 32 and 92 days for the 16°C and 5°C plants, respectively. Growth at 5°C resulted in an increased leaf area, dry weight, dry weight per area, and leaf thickness. Despite these changes, pigment content and composition, room temperature in vivo fluorescence, and apparent quantum yield and light-saturated rates of CO2 exchange or O2 evolution were not affected by the growth temperature. Furthermore, 5°C expanded leaves were found to be more resistant to photoinhibition at 5°C than were 16°C expanded leaves. Thus, it is concluded that spinach grown at low temperature is not stressed. However, shifting spinach leaves from 5°C to 16°C or from 16°C to 5°C for 12 days after full leaf expansion had occurred resulted in a 20 to 25% reduction in apparent quantum yields and 50 to 60% reduction in light saturated rates of both CO2 exchange and O2 evolution. This was not accompanied by a change in the pigment content or composition or in the room temperature in vivo fluorescence. It appears that leaf aging during the temperature shift period can account for the reduction in photosynthesis. Comparison of cold-hardened and non-hardened winter rye (Secale cereale L. cv Muskateer) with spinach by in vivo fluorescence indicated that rye is more sensitive to both short term and longer duration temperature shifts than is spinach. Thus, susceptibility to an abrupt temperature shift appears to be species dependent.  相似文献   

20.
Net photosynthetic assimilation rate (A), extractable activities of three photosynthetic enzymes, and the concentrations of six metabolites were determined for wheat (Tricum aestivum L.) leaves as leaf temperature was varied under photorespiring (350 microliters per liter CO2 and 21% O2) and under nonphotorespiring conditions (800 microliters per liter CO2 and 2% O2). The extractable activity of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (Rubisco) and fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase declined with increasing leaf temperature from 15 to 45°C. Leaf concentrations of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) declined slightly between 15 and 25°C but increased to a level which is 4 to 5 times the binding site concentration of Rubisco at leaf temperatures of 35 and 45°C. Leaf concentrations of 3-phosphoglycerate, fructose-6-phosphate, and glucose-6-phosphate all declined with increasing leaf temperature. Outside of the limitations imposed by photorespiration, it is proposed that under high light and at suboptimal temperatures, A is limited by rate of utilization of triose phosphate; at optimal temperatures, by the availability of substrate (CO2 and RuBP) under photorespiring conditions or utilization of triose phosphate under nonphotorespiring conditions; and at supraoptimal temperatures, by the activation state of Rubisco.  相似文献   

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