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1.
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   

2.
Membrane-permeable and impermeable inhibitors of carbonic anhydrase have been used to assess the roles of extracellular and intracellular carbonic anhydrase on the inorganic carbon concentrating system in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Acetazolamide, ethoxzolamide, and a membrane-impermeable, dextran-bound sulfonamide were potent inhibitors of extracellular carbonic anhydrase measured with intact cells. At pH 5.1, where CO2 is the predominant species of inorganic carbon, both acetazolamide and the dextran-bound sulfonamide had no effect on the concentration of CO2 required for the half-maximal rate of photosynthetic O2 evolution (K0.5[CO2]) or inorganic carbon accumulation. However, a more permeable inhibitor, ethoxzolamide, inhibited CO2 fixation but increased the accumulation of inorganic carbon as compared with untreated cells. At pH 8, the K0.5(CO2) was increased from 0.6 micromolar to about 2 to 3 micromolar with both acetazolamide and the dextran-bound sulfonamide, but to a higher value of 60 micromolar with ethoxzolamide. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that CO2 is the species of inorganic carbon which crosses the plasmalemma and that extracellular carbonic anhydrase is required to replenish CO2 from HCO3 at high pH. These data also implicate a role for intracellular carbonic anhydrase in the inorganic carbon accumulating system, and indicate that both acetazolamide and the dextran-bound sulfonamide inhibit only the extracellular enzyme. It is suggested that HCO3 transport for internal accumulation might occur at the level of the chloroplast envelope.  相似文献   

3.
A simple model based on HCO3 transport has been developed to relate photosynthesis and inorganic carbon fluxes for the marine cyanobacterium, Synechococcus sp. Nägeli (strain RRIMP N1). Predicted relationships between inorganic carbon transport, CO2 fixation, internal carbonic anhydrase activity, and leakage of CO2 out of the cell, allow comparisons to be made with experimentally obtained data. Measurements of inorganic carbon fluxes and internal inorganic carbon pool sizes in these cells were made by monitoring time-courses of CO2 changes (using a mass spectrometer) during light/dark transients. At just saturating CO2 conditions, total inorganic carbon transport did not exceed net CO2 fixation by more than 30%. This indicates CO2 leakage similar to that estimated for C4 plants.

For this leakage rate, the model predicts the cell would need a conductance to CO2 of around 10−5 centimeters per second. This is similar to estimates made for the same cells using inorganic carbon pool sizes and CO2 efflux measurements. The model predicts that carbonic anhydrase is necessary internally to allow a sufficiently fast rate of CO2 production to prevent a large accumulation of HCO3. Intact cells show light stimulated carbonic anhydrase activity when assayed using 18O-labeled CO2 techniques. This is also supported by low but detectable levels of carbonic anhydrase activity in cell extracts, sufficient to meet the requirements of the model.

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4.
Spiller H  Wynns GC  Tu C 《Plant physiology》1988,86(4):1185-1192
The role of the photosystems in the exchange of 18O between species of inorganic carbon and water was studied in suspensions of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. (UTEX 2380) using membrane-inlet mass spectrometry. This 18O exchange is caused by the hydration-dehydration cycle of CO2 and is catalyzed by carbonic anhydrase. We observed the complex 18O exchange kinetics including dark-light-dark transients in suspensions of whole cells and found these to be identical to the 18O exchange kinetics of physiologically fully active spheroplast preparations. There was no enhancement effect of inorganic nitrogen on inorganic carbon accumulation. Membrane preparations exhibited no uptake of inorganic carbon and very little carbonic anhydrase activity, although these membranes were photosynthetically fully competent. DCMU, the inhibitor of photosystem II, eliminated almost entirely the 18O exchange activity of whole cells in the light. But this effect of DCMU could be reversed by addition of the electron donor couple 3,6-diaminodurene/ascorbate, suggesting the involvement of photosystem I in the events leading to 18O exchange. Iodoacetamide, an inhibitor of CO2 fixation, enhanced the 18O exchange in whole cell suspensions and inhibited neither the uptake of inorganic carbon nor the dehydration of bicarbonate in the light. The proton carrier carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone and the inhibitors diethylstilbestrol and N,N′ -dicyclohexyl carbodiimide affecting the membrane potential, totally abolished 18O exchange in the light. From 18 O-labeled inorganic carbon experiments we conclude that one of the roles of photosystem I is to provide the active uptake of inorganic carbon into the cells, where carbonic anhydrase catalyzes the interconversion between CO2 and HCO3 resulting in the 18O exchange from inorganic carbon to water.  相似文献   

5.
Carbonyl sulfide (COS), a substrate for carbonic anhydrase, inhibited alkalization of the medium, O2 evolution, dissolved inorganic carbon accumulation, and photosynthetic CO2 fixation at pH 7 or higher by five species of unicellular green algae that had been air-adapted for forming a CO2-concentrating process. This COS inhibition can be attributed to inhibition of external HCO3 conversion to CO2 and OH by the carbonic anhydrase component of an active CO2 pump. At a low pH of 5 to 6, COS stimulated O2 evolution during photosynthesis by algae with low CO2 in the media without alkalization of the media. This is attributed to some COS hydrolysis by carbonic anhydrase to CO2. Although COS had less effect on HCO3 accumulation at pH 9 by a HCO3 pump in Scenedesmus, COS reduced O2 evolution probably by inhibiting internal carbonic anhydrases. Because COS is hydrolyzed to CO2 and H2S, its inhibition of the CO2 pump activity and photosynthesis is not accurate, when measured by O2 evolution, by NaH14CO3 accumulation, or by 14CO2 fixation.  相似文献   

6.
Equations have been developed which quantitatively predict the theoretical time-course of photosynthetic 14C incorporation when CO2 or HCO3 serves as the sole source of exogenous inorganic carbon taken up for fixation by cells during steady state photosynthesis. Comparison between the shape of theoretical (CO2 or HCO3) and experimentally derived time-courses of 14C incorporation permits the identification of the major species of inorganic carbon which crosses the plasmalemma of photosynthetic cells and facilitates the detection of any combined contribution of CO2 and HCO3 transport to the supply of intracellular inorganic carbon. The ability to discriminate between CO2 or HCO3 uptake relies upon monitoring changes in the intracellular specific activity (by 14C fixation) which occur when the inorganic carbon, present in the suspending medium, is in a state of isotopic disequilibrium (JT Lehman 1978 J Phycol 14: 33-42). The presence of intracellular carbonic anhydrase or some other catalyst of the CO2-HCO3 interconversion reaction is required for quantitatively accurate predictions. Analysis of equations describing the rate of 14C incorporation provides two methods by which any contribution of HCO3 ions to net photosynthetic carbon uptake can be estimated.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
The nature of the inorganic carbon (Ci) species actively taken up by cyanobacteria CO2 or HCO3 has been investigated. The kinetics of CO2 uptake, as well as that of HCO3 uptake, indicated the involvement of a saturable process. The apparent affinity of the uptake mechanism for CO2 was higher than that for HCO3. Though the calculated Vmax was the same in both cases, the maximum rate of uptake actually observed was higher when HCO3 was supplied. Ci uptake was far more sensitive to the carbonic anhydrase inhibitor ethoxyzolamide when CO2 was the species supplied. Observations of photosynthetic rate as a function of intracellular Ci level (following supply of CO2 or HCO3 for 5 seconds) led to the inference that HCO3 is the species which arrives at the inner membrane surface, regardless of the species supplied. When the two species were supplied simultaneously, mutual inhibition of uptake was observed.

On the basis of these and other results, a model is proposed postulating that a carboic anhydrase-like subunit of the Ci transport apparatus binds CO2 and releases HCO3 at or near a membrane porter. The latter transports HCO3 ions to the cell interior.

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9.
In high inorganic carbon grown (1% CO2 [volume/volume]) cells of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus PCC7942, the carbonic anhydrase (CA) inhibitor, ethoxyzolamide (EZ), was found to inhibit the rate of CO2 uptake and to reduce the final internal inorganic carbon (Ci) pool size reached. The relationship between CO2 fixation rate and internal Ci concentration in high Ci grown cells was little affected by EZ. This suggests that in intact cells internal CA activity was unaffected by EZ. High Ci grown cells readily took up CO2 but had little or no capacity for HCO3 uptake. These cells appear to possess a CO2 utilizing Ci pump that has a CA-like function associated with the transport step such that HCO3 is the species delivered to the cell interior. This CA-like step may be the site of inhibition by EZ. Low Ci grown cells possess both CO2 uptake and HCO3 uptake activities and EZ inhibited both activities to a similar degree, suggesting that a common step in CO2 and HCO3 uptake (such as the Ci pump) may have been affected. The inhibitor had no apparent effect on internal CO2/HCO3 equilibria (internal CA function) in low Ci grown cells.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Utilization of Inorganic Carbon by Ulva lactuca   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Drechsler Z  Beer S 《Plant physiology》1991,97(4):1439-1444
Thalli discs of the marine macroalga Ulva lactuca were given inorganic carbon in the form of HCO3, and the progression of photosynthetic O2 evolution was followed and compared with predicted O2 evolution as based on calculated external formation of CO2 (extracellular carbonic anhydrase was not present in this species) and its carboxylation (according to the Km(CO2) of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase), at two different pHs, assuming a photosynthetic quotient of 1. The Km(inorganic carbon) was some 2.5 times lower at pH 5.6 than at the natural seawater pH of 8.2, whereas Vmax was similar under the two conditions, indicating that the unnaturally low pH per se had no adverse effect on U. lactuca's photosynthetic performance. These results, therefore, could be evaluated with regard to differential CO2 and HCO3 utilization. The photosynthetic performance observed at the lower pH largely followed that predicted, with a slight discrepancy probably reflecting a minor diffusion barrier to CO2 uptake. At pH 8.2, however, dehydration rates were too slow to supply CO2 for the measured photosynthetic response. Given the absence of external carbonic anhydrase activity, this finding supports the view that HCO3 transport provides higher than external concentrations of CO2 at the ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase site. Uptake of HCO3 by U. lactuca was further indicated by the effects of potential inhibitors at pH 8.2. The alleged band 3 membrane anion exchange protein inhibitor 4,4′-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2′disulphonate reduced photosynthetic rates only when HCO3 (but not CO2) could be the extracellular inorganic carbon form taken up. A similar, but less drastic, HCO3-competitive inhibition of photosynthesis was obtained with Kl and KNO3. It is suggested that, under ambient conditions, HCO3 is transported into cells at defined sites either via facilitated diffusion or active uptake, and that such transport is the basis for elevated internal [CO2] at the site of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase carboxylation.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
This study investigated inorganic carbon accumulation in relation to photosynthesis in the marine dinoflagellate Prorocentrum micans. Measurement of the internal inorganic carbon pool showed a 10-fold accumulation in relation to external dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC). Dextran-bound sulfonamide (DBS), which inhibited extracellular carbonic anhydrase, caused more than 95% inhibition of DIC accumulation and photosynthesis. We used real-time imaging of living cells with confocal laser scanning microscopy and a fluorescent pH indicator dye to measure transient pH changes in relation to inorganic carbon availability. When steady-state photosynthesizing cells were DIC limited, the chloroplast pH decreased from 8.3 to 6.9 and cytosolic pH decreased from 7.7 to 7.1. Re-addition of HCO3 led to a rapid re-establishment of the steady-state pH values abolished by DBS. The addition of DBS to photosynthesizing cells under steady-state conditions resulted in a transient increase in intracellular pH, with photosynthesis maintained for 6 s, the amount of time needed for depletion of the intracellular inorganic carbon pool. These results demonstrate the key role of extracellular carbonic anhydrase in facilitating the availability of CO2 at the exofacial surface of the plasma membrane necessary to maintain the photosynthetic rate. The need for a CO2-concentrating mechanism at ambient CO2 concentrations may reflect the difference in the specificity factor of ribulose-1,5 bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase in dinoflagellates compared with other algal phyla.  相似文献   

14.
Active CO(2) Transport by the Green Alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii   总被引:6,自引:6,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Mass spectrometric measurements of dissolved free 13CO2 were used to monitor CO2 uptake by air grown (low CO2) cells and protoplasts from the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. In the presence of 50 micromolar dissolved inorganic carbon and light, protoplasts which had been washed free of external carbonic anhydrase reduced the 13CO2 concentration in the medium to close to zero. Similar results were obtained with low CO2 cells treated with 50 micromolar acetazolamide. Addition of carbonic anhydrase to protoplasts after the period of rapid CO2 uptake revealed that the removal of CO2 from the medium in the light was due to selective and active CO2 transport rather than uptake of total dissolved inorganic carbon. In the light, low CO2 cells and protoplasts incubated with carbonic anhydrase took up CO2 at an apparently low rate which reflected the uptake of total dissolved inorganic carbon. No net CO2 uptake occurred in the dark. Measurement of chlorophyll a fluorescence yield with low CO2 cells and washed protoplasts showed that variable fluorescence was mainly influenced by energy quenching which was reciprocally related to photosynthetic activity with its highest value at the CO2 compensation point. During the linear uptake of CO2, low CO2 cells and protoplasts incubated with carbonic anhydrase showed similar rates of net O2 evolution (102 and 108 micromoles per milligram of chlorophyll per hour, respectively). The rate of net O2 evolution (83 micromoles per milligram of chlorophyll per hour) with washed protoplasts was 20 to 30% lower during the period of rapid CO2 uptake and decreased to a still lower value of 46 micromoles per milligram of chlorophyll per hour when most of the free CO2 had been removed from the medium. The addition of carbonic anhydrase at this point resulted in more than a doubling of the rate of O2 evolution. These results show low CO2 cells of Chlamydomonas are able to transport both CO2 and HCO3 but CO2 is preferentially removed from the medium. The external carbonic anhydrase is important in the supply to the cells of free CO2 from the dehydration of HCO3.  相似文献   

15.
We have studied the CO2 permeability of the erythrocyte membrane of the rat using a mass spectrometric method that employs 18 O-labelled CO2. The method yields, in addition, the intraerythrocytic carbonic anhydrase activity and the membrane HCO3 permeability. For normal rat erythrocytes, we find at 37 °C a CO2 permeability of 0.078 ± 0.015 cm/s, an intracellular carbonic anhydrase activity of 64,100, and a bicarbonate permeability of 2.1 × 10−3 cm/s. We studied whether the rat erythrocyte membrane possesses protein CO2 channels similar to the human red cell membrane by applying the potential CO2 channel inhibitors pCMBS, Dibac, phloretin, and DIDS. Phloretin and DIDS were able to reduce the CO2 permeability by up to 50%. Since these effects cannot be attributed to the lipid part of the membrane, we conclude that the rat erythrocyte membrane is equipped with protein CO2 channels that are responsible for at least 50% of its CO2 permeability.  相似文献   

16.
We tested a number of inhibitory monovalent anions for their primary site of action on photosystem II(PSII) in chloroplasts. We find that the inhibitory effects of F, HCO2, NO2, NO3, and CH3CO2 are all reversed by addition of a high concentration of HCO3. This class of anions competitively inhibits H14CO3 binding to PSII. All of those anions tested reduced H14CO3 binding more in the light than in the dark. We conclude that the primary inhibitory site of action of a number of monovalent anions is at the HCO3 binding site(s) on the PSII complex. The carbonic anhydrase inhibitor gold cyanide, and also azide, inhibit PSII but at a site other than the HCO3 binding site. We suggest that the unique ability of HCO3 to reverse the effects of inhibitory anions reflects its singular ability to act as a proton donor/acceptor at the anion binding site. A similar role has been proposed for non-substrate-bound HCO3 on carbonic anhydrase by Yeagle et al. (1975 Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 72: 454-458).  相似文献   

17.
The induction of a high-affinity state of the CO2-concentration mechanism was investigated in two cyanobacterial species, Synechococcus sp. strain PCC7002 and Synechococcus sp. strain PCC7942. Cells grown at high CO2 concentrations were resuspended in low-CO2 buffer and illuminated in the presence of carbonic anhydrase for 4 to 10 min until the inorganic C compensation point was reached. Thereafter, more than 95% of a high-affinity CO2-concentration mechanism was induced in both species. Mass-spectrometric analysis of CO2 and HCO3 fluxes indicated that only the affinity of HCO3 transport increased during the fast-induction period, whereas maximum transport activities were not affected. The kinetic characteristics of CO2 uptake remained unchanged. Fast induction of high-affinity HCO3 transport was not inhibited by chloramphenicol, cantharidin, or okadaic acid. In contrast, fast induction of high-affinity HCO3 transport did not occur in the presence of K252a, staurosporine, or genistein, which are known inhibitors of protein kinases. These results show that induction of high-affinity HCO3 transport can occur within minutes of exposure to low-inorganic-C conditions and that fast induction may involve posttranslational phosphorylation of existing proteins rather than de novo synthesis of new protein components.  相似文献   

18.
The role of external carbonic anhydrase in inorganic carbon acquisition and photosynthesis by Chlamydomonas reinhardii at alkaline pH (8.0) was studied. Acetazolamide (50 micromolar) completely inhibited external carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity as determined from isotopic disequilibrium experiments. Under these conditions, photosynthetic rates at low dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) were far greater than could be maintained by CO2 supplied from the spontaneous dehydration of HCO3 thereby showing that C. reinhardii has the ability to utilize exogenous HCO3. Acetazolamide increased the concentration of DIC required to half-saturate photosynthesis from 38 to 80 micromolar, while it did not affect the maximum photosynthetic rate. External CA activity was also removed from the cell-wall-less mutant (CW-15) by washing. This had no effect on the photosynthetic kinetics of the algae while the addition of acetazolamide to washed cells (CW-15) increased the K½DIC from 38 to 80 micromolar. Acetazolamide also caused a buildup of the inorganic carbon pool upon NaHCO3 addition, indicating that this compound partially inhibited internal CA activity. The effects of acetazolamide on the photosynthetic kinetics of C. reinhardii are likely due to the inhibition of internal rather than a consequence of the inhibition of external CA. Further analysis of the isotopic disequilibrium experiments at saturating concentration of DIC provided evidence consistent with active CO2 transport by C. reinhardii. The observation that C. reinhardii has the ability to take up both CO2 and bicarbonate throws into question the role of external CA in the accumulation of DIC in this alga.  相似文献   

19.
An experimental system consisting of a gas exchange column linked to an assimilation chamber has been developed to record continuously the free dissolved CO2 concentration in seawater containing marine plants. From experiments performed on the red macroalga Chondrus crispus (Rhodophyta, Gigartinales), this measurement is in agreement with the free CO2 concentration calculated from the resistance to CO2 exchanges in a biphasic system (gas and liquid) as earlier reported. The response time of this apparatus is short enough to detect, in conditions of constant pH, a photosynthesis-caused gradient between free CO2 and HCO3 pools which half-equilibrates in 25 seconds. Abolished by carbonic anhydrase, the magnitude of this gradient increases with decreasing time of seawater transit from the chamber to the column apparatus. But its maximum magnitude (0.35 micromolar CO2) is negligible compared to the difference between air and free CO2 (11.4 micromolar CO2). This illustrates the extent of the physical limiting-step occurring at the air-water interface when inorganic carbon consumption in seawater is balanced by dissolving gaseous CO2. The direction of this small free CO2/HCO3 gradient indicates that HCO3 is consumed during photosynthesis.  相似文献   

20.
The species of inorganic carbon (CO2 or HCO3) taken up a source of substrate for photosynthetic fixation by isolated Asparagus sprengeri mesophyll cells is investigated. Discrimination between CO2 or HCO3 transport, during steady state photosynthesis, is achieved by monitoring the changes (by 14C fixation) which occur in the specific activity of the intracellular pool of inorganic carbon when the inorganic carbon present in the suspending medium is in a state of isotopic disequilibrium. Quantitative comparisons between theoretical (CO2 or HCO3 transport) and experimental time-courses of 14C incorporation, over the pH range of 5.2 to 7.5, indicate that the specific activity of extracellular CO2, rather than HCO3, is the appropriate predictor of the intracellular specific activity. It is concluded, therefore, that CO2 is the major source of exogenous inorganic carbon taken up by Asparagus cells. However, at high pH (8.5), a component of net DIC uptake may be attributable to HCO3 transport, as the incorporation of 14C during isotopic disequilibrium exceeds the maximum possible incorporation predicted on the basis of CO2 uptake alone. The contribution of HCO3 to net inorganic carbon uptake (pH 8.5) is variable, ranging from 5 to 16%, but is independent of the extracellular HCO3 concentration. The evidence for direct HCO3 transport is subject to alternative explanations and must, therefore, be regarded as equivocal. Nonlinear regression analysis of the rate of 14C incorporation as a function of time indicates the presence of a small extracellular resistance to the diffusion of CO2, which is partially alleviated by a high extracellular concentration of HCO3.  相似文献   

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