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1.
Inorganic carbon (Ci) uptake was measured in wild-type cells of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, and in cia-3, a mutant strain of C. reinhardtii that cannot grow with air levels of CO2. Both air-grown cells, that have a CO2 concentrating system, and 5% CO2-grown cells that do not have this system, were used. When the external pH was 5.1 or 7.3, air-grown, wild-type cells accumulated inorganic carbon (Ci) and this accumulation was enhanced when the permeant carbonic anhydrase inhibitor, ethoxyzolamide, was added. When the external pH was 5.1, 5% CO2-grown cells also accumulated some Ci, although not as much as air-grown cells and this accumulation was stimulated by the addition of ethoxyzolamide. At the same time, ethoxyzolamide inhibited CO2 fixation by high CO2-grown, wild-type cells at both pH 5.1 and 7.3. These observations imply that 5% CO2-grown, wild-type cells, have a physiologically important internal carbonic anhydrase, although the major carbonic anhydrase located in the periplasmic space is only present in air-grown cells. Inorganic carbon uptake by cia-3 cells supported this conclusion. This mutant strain, which is thought to lack an internal carbonic anhydrase, was unaffected by ethoxyzolamide at pH 5.1. Other physiological characteristics of cia-3 resemble those of wild-type cells that have been treated with ethoxyzolamide. It is concluded that an internal carbonic anhydrase is under different regulatory control than the periplasmic carbonic anhydrase.  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.
The effects on photosynthesis of acetazolamide (AZ, an inhibitor of the external carbonic anhydrase) and TRIS buffer at pH 8.7 were assessed in 24 species of red macroalgae. Only Palmaria palmata was unaffected by both substances. The rest of species were classified into three groups according to their sensitivity to TRIS and AZ. Photosynthesis of fourteen species was significantly inhibited by both TRIS and AZ. Inhibition by TRIS varied from almost 100% to 25% while AZ produced similar effects. Inhibition by TRIS was completely reverted by increasing the dissolved inorganic carbon concentration (DIC). This species group had half-saturation constants for photosynthesis (Km(DIC)) ranging from 0.5 to 1.1 mM of DIC. TRIS produced a significant increase of Km(DIC). Altogether, these results indicate that the algae sensitive to TRIS are capable of using HCO3 efficiently at pH 8.7. Furthermore, the buffering capacity of TRIS was responsible for its inhibitory effect on photosynthesis suggesting that HCO3 use was facilitated by excretion of protons outside the plasma membrane, which creates regions of low pH resulting in a higher-than-ambient CO2 concentration. In contrast, photosynthesis by two Porphyra species analysed was slightly stimulated by TRIS and completely inhibited by AZ, suggesting that the mechanism was different. In a third group of seaweeds, photosynthesis was insensitive to TRIS but it was significantly inhibited by AZ. These species had relatively high values of Km(DIC) indicating that they relied on purely diffusive entry of CO2 generated by external carbonic anhydrase activity. Consequently, the results demonstrate that external carbonic anhydrase is widespread among red macroalgae since only P. palmata was insensitive to AZ. The functional significance of this enzyme was quite variable among the tested species.  相似文献   

4.
A physiologically significant level of intracellular carbonic anhydrase has been identified in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii after lysis of the cell wall-less mutant, cw15, and two intracellular polypeptides have been identified which bind to anti-carbonic anhydrase antisera. The susceptibility of the intracellular activity to sulfonamide carbonic anhydrase inhibitors is more than three orders-of-magnitude less than that of the periplasmic enzyme, indicating that the intracellular activity was distinct from the periplasmic from of the enzyme. When electrophoretically separated cell extracts or chloroplast stromal fractions were probed with either anti-C. reinhardtii periplasmic carbonic anhydrase antiserum or anti-spinach carbonic anhydrase antiserum, immunoreactive polypeptides of 45 kilodaltons and 110 kilodaltons were observed with both antisera. The strongly immunoreactive 37 kilodalton polypeptide due to the periplasmic carbonic anhydrase was also observed in lysed cells, but neither the 37 kilodalton nor the 110 kilodalton polypeptides were present in the chloroplast stromal fraction. These studies have identified intracellular carbonic anhydrase activity, and putative intracellular carbonic anhydrase polypeptides in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii represented by a 45 kilodalton polypeptide in the chloroplast and a 110 kilodalton form probably in the cytoplasm, which may be associated with an intracellular inorganic carbon concentrating system.  相似文献   

5.
B. N. Patel  M. J. Merrett 《Planta》1986,169(1):81-86
The regulation of carbonic anhydrase by environmental conditions was determined forChlamydomonas reinhardtii. The depression of carbonic anhydrase in air-grown cells was pH-dependent. Growth of cells on air at acid pH, corresponding to 10 m CO2 in solution, resulted in complete repression of carbonic-anhydrase activity. At pH 6.9, increasing the CO2 concentration to 0.15% (v/v) in the gas phase, corresponding to 11 M in solution, was sufficient to completely repress carbonic-anhydrase activity. Photosynthesis and intracellular inorganic carbon were measured in air-grown and high-CO2-grown cells using a silicone-oil centrifugation technique. With carbonic anhydrase repressed cells limited inorganic-carbon accumulation resulted from non-specific binding of CO2. With air-grown cells, inorganic-carbon uptake at acid pH, i.e. 5.5, was linear up to 0.5 mM external inorganic-carbon concentration whereas at alkaline pH, i.e. 7.5, the accumulation ratio decreased with increase in external inorganic-carbon concentration. It is suggested that in air-grown cells at acid pH, CO2 is the inorganic carbon species that crosses the plasmalemma. The conversion of CO2 to HCO 3 - by carbonic anhydrase in the cytosol results in inorganic-carbon accumulation and maintains the diffusion gradient for carbon dioxide across the cell boundary. However, this mechanism will not account for energy-dependent accumulation of inorganic carbon when there is little difference in pH between the exterior and cytosol.  相似文献   

6.
The biosynthesis of a 36 kilodalton polypeptide of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii was induced by photoautotrophic growth on low CO2. Fractionation studies using the cell-wall-deficient strain of C. reinhardtii, CC-400, showed that this polypeptide was different from the low CO2-induced periplasmic carbonic anhydrase. In addition, the 36 kilodalton polypeptide was found to be localized in intact chloroplasts isolated from low CO2-adapting cultures. This protein may, in part, account for the different inorganic carbon uptake characteristics observed in chloroplasts isolated from high and low CO2-grown C. reinhardtii cells.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
We have examined the induction of carbonic anhydrase activity in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and have identified the polypeptide responsible for this activity. This polypeptide was not synthesized when the alga was grown photoautotrophically on 5% CO2, but its synthesis was induced under low concentrations of CO2 (air levels of CO2). In CW-15, a mutant of C. reinhardtii which lacks a cell wall, between 80 and 90% of the carbonic anhydrase activity of air-adapted cells was present in the growth medium. Furthermore, between 80 and 90% of the carbonic anhydrase is released if wild type cells are treated with autolysin, a hydrolytic enzyme responsible for cell wall degradation during mating of C. reinhardtii. These data extend the work of Kimpel, Togasaki, Miyachi (1983 Plant Cell Physiol 24: 255-259) and indicate that the bulk of the carbonic anhydrase is located either in the periplasmic space or is loosely bound to the algal cell wall. The polypeptide associated with carbonic anhydrase activity has a molecular weight of approximately 37,000. Several lines of evidence indicate that this polypeptide is responsible for carbonic anhydrase activity: (a) it appears following the transfer of C. reinhardtii from growth on 5% CO2 to growth on air levels of CO2, (b) it is located in the periplasmic space or associated with the cell wall, like the bulk of the carbonic anhydrase activity, (c) it binds dansylamide, an inhibitor of the enzyme which fluoresces upon illumination with ultraviolet light, (d) antibodies which inhibit carbonic anhydrase activity only cross-react with this 37,000 dalton species.  相似文献   

9.
Unicellular green algae have a dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) concentrating mechanism, commonly known as the DIC pump, to concentrate inorganic carbon into cells and chloroplasts. The DIC pump activity is normally measured as the K0.5(DIC) that equals the CO2 plus HCO3‐ concentration at a cited pH at which the rate of DIC‐dependent photosynthetic O2 evolution is half‐maximal, or by the amount of intra‐cellular DIC accumulation in 15–60 s, using a limited amount of NaH14CO3, measured by the silicone oil cen‐trifugation technique. The dissolved oxygen in the assay inhibits or reduces the DIC uptake by the cells of unicellular green algae Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Dangeard, strain 137 and in a cell wall‐less marine algae Dunaliella tertiolecta Butcher. The algal cells concentrated the highest amount of DIC when little or no oxygen was present in the assay medium. The results suggest that the amount of O2 and DIC must be carefully monitored before DIC‐pump assay.  相似文献   

10.
Air-grown cells of Porphyridium purpurem contain appreciable carbonic-anhydrase activity, comparable to that in air-grown Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, but activity is repressed in CO2-grown cells. Assay of carbonic-anhydrase activity in intact cells and cell extracts shows all activity to be intracellular in Porphyridium. Measurement of inorganic-carbon-dependent photosynthetic O2 evolution shows that sodium ions increase the affinity of Porphyridium cells for HCO 3 - . Acetazolamide and ethoxyzolamide were potent inhibitors of carbonic anhydrase in cell extracts but at pH 5.0 both acetazolamide and ethoxyzolamide had little effect upon the concentration of inorganic carbon required for the half-maximal rate of photosynthetic O2 evolution (K0.5[CO2]). At pH 8.0, where HCO 3 - is the predominant species of inorganic carbon, the K0.5 (CO2) was increased from 50 M to 950 M in the presence of ethoxyzolamide. It is concluded that in air-grown cells of Porphyridium. HCO 3 - is transported across the plasmalemma and intracellular carbonic anhydrase increases the steady-state flux of CO2 from inside the plasmalemma to ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase by catalysing the interconversion of HCO 3 - and CO2 within the cell.Abbreviations AZ acetazolamide - EZ ethoxyzolamide - K0.5[CO2] half-maximal rate of photosynthetic O2 evolution  相似文献   

11.
A Chlamydomonas reinhardtii mutant has been isolated that cannot grow photoautotrophically on low CO2 concentrations but can grow on elevated CO2. In a test cross, the high CO2-requirement for growth showed a 2:2 segregation. This mutant, designated CIA-5, had a phenotype similar to previously identified mutants that were defective in some aspect of CO2 accumulation. Unlike previously isolated mutants, CIA-5 did not have detectable levels of the periplasmic carbonic anhydrase, an inducible protein that participates in the acquisition of CO2 by C. reinhardtii. CIA-5 also did not accumulate inorganic carbon to levels higher than could be accounted for by diffusion. This mutant strain did not synthesize any of the four polypeptides preferentially made by wild type C. reinhardtii when switched from an environment containing elevated CO2 levels to an environment low in CO2. It is concluded that this mutant fails to induce the CO2 concentrating system and is incapable of adapting to low CO2 conditions.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
A closed system consisting of an assimilation chamber furnished with a membrane inlet from the liquid phase connected to a mass spectrometer was used to measure O2 evolution and uptake by Chlamydomonas reinhardtii cells grown in ambient (0.034% CO2) or CO2-enriched (5% CO2) air. At pH = 6.9, 28°C and concentrations of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) saturating for photosynthesis, O2 uptake in the light (Uo) equaled O2 production (Eo) at the light compensation point (15 micromoles photons per square meter per second). Eo and Uo increased with increasing photon fluence rate (PFR) but were not rate saturated at 600 micromoles photons per square meter per second, while net O2 exchange reached a saturation level near 500 micromoles photons per square meter per second which was nearly the same for both, CO2-grown and air-grown cells. Comparison of the Uo/Eo ratios between air-grown and CO2-grown C. reinhardtii showed higher values for air-grown cells at light intensities higher than light compensation. For both, air-grown and CO2-grown algae the rates of mitochondrial O2 uptake in the dark measured immediately before and 5 minutes after illumination were much lower than Uo at PFR saturating for net photosynthesis. We conclude that noncyclic electron flow from water to NADP+ and pseudocyclic electron flow via photosystem I to O2 both significantly contribute to O2 exchange in the light. In contrast, mitochondrial respiration and photosynthetic carbon oxidation cycle are regarded as minor O2 consuming reactions in the light in both, air-grown and CO2-grown cells. It is suggested that the “extra” O2 uptake by air-grown algae provides ATP required for the energy dependent CO2/HCO3 concentrating mechanism known to be present in these cells.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
To survive in various conditions of CO2 availability, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii shows adaptive changes, such as induction of a CO2-concentrating mechanism, changes in cell organization, and induction of several genes, including a periplasmic carbonic anhydrase (pCA1) encoded by Cah1. Among a collection of insertionally generated mutants, a mutant has been isolated that showed no pCA1 protein and no Cah1 mRNA. This mutant strain, designated cah1-1, has been confirmed to have a disruption in the Cah1 gene caused by a single Arg7 insert. The most interesting feature of cah1-1 is its lack of any significant growth phenotype. There is no major difference in growth or photosynthesis between the wild type and cah1-1 over a pH range from 5.0 to 9.0 even though this mutant apparently lacks Cah1 expression in air. Although the presence of pCA1 apparently gives some minor benefit at very low CO2 concentrations, the characteristics of this Cah1 null mutant demonstrate that pCA1 is not essential for function of the CO2-concentrating mechanism or for growth of C. reinhardtii at limiting CO2 concentrations.  相似文献   

16.
Mass spectrometric measurements of 16O2 and 18O2 isotopes were used to compare the rates of gross O2 evolution (E0), O2 uptake (U0) and net O2 evolution (NET) in relation to different concentrations of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) by Chlamydomonas reinhardtii cells grown in air (air-grown), in air enriched with 5% CO2 (CO2-grown) and by cells grown in 5% CO2 and then adapted to air for 6h (air-adapted).At a photon fluence rate (PFR) saturating for photosynthesis (700 mol photons m-2 s-1), pH=7.0 and 28°C, U0 equalled E0 at the DIC compensation point which was 10M DIC for CO2-grown and zero for air-grown cells. Both E0 and U0 were strongly dependent on DIC and reached DIC saturation at 480 M and 70 M for CO2-grown and air-grown algae respectively. U0 increased from DIC compensation to DIC saturation. The U0 values were about 40 (CO2-grown), 165 (air-adapted) and 60 mol O2 mg Chl-1 h-1 (air-grown). Above DIC compensation the U0/E0 ratios of air-adapted and air-grown algae were always higher than those of CO2-grown cells. These differences in O2 exchange between CO2- and air-grown algae seem to be inducable since air-adapted algae respond similarly to air-grown cells.For all algae, the rates of dark respiratory O2 uptake measured 5 min after darkening were considerably lower than the rates of O2 uptake just before darkening. The contribution of dark respiration, photorespiration and the Mehler reaction to U0 is discussed and the energy requirement of the inducable CO2/HCO3 - concentrating mechanism present in air-adapted and air-grown C. reinhardtii cells is considered.Abbreviations DIC dissolved inorganic carbon - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - E0 rate of photosynthetic gross O2 evolution - PCO photosynthetic carbon oxidation - PFR photon fluence rate - PS I photosystem I - PS II photosystem II - U0 rate of O2 uptake in the light - MS mass spectrometer  相似文献   

17.
Polypeptides of 21, 36 and 37 kDa are induced in the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Dang. when cells are transferred from high (2%) to low (0.03%) CO2 concentrations. The synthesis of these polypeptides is correlated with the induction of the CO2-concentrating mechanism. In this work we studied the effect of the growth conditions on the synthesis of these polypeptides with the aim of clarifying whether the induction of all three of these low-CO2-inducible polypeptides requires the same environmental factor. Our results showed that induction of the 21- and 36-kDa polypeptides under low-CO2 conditions occurred only in the light, while the 37-kDa periplasmic carbonic anhydrase (EC 4.2.1.1) was induced in light, darkness, and in both synchronous and asynchronous cultures. In addition, induction of these polypeptides appeared to be determined more by the O2/CO2 ratio than by the CO2 concentrations. None of these polypeptides could be induced in either of two different mutants of C. reinhardtii, one lacking ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (EC 4.1.1.39) and the other with inactive enzyme. Our results indicate that the 21- and 36-kDa polypeptides are regulated by a mechanism different from that controlling the 37-kDa polypeptide.Abbreviations pCA (periplasmic) carbonic anhydrase - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - TAP Trisacetate phosphate medium The authors thank Prof. M. Spalding (Iowa State University, USA) for providing antisera to LIP-21 and LIP-36. We thank Prof. S. Bartlett and Dr. J. Moroney (Louisiana State University, USA) for providing antibodies to C. reinhardtii, Rubisco and 37-kDa pCA, respectively. This work was supported by the Instituto Tecnologico de Canarias.  相似文献   

18.
Active human carbonic anhydrase II (HCAII) protein was expressed in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus PCC7942 by means of transformation with the bidirectional expression vector, pCA. This expression was driven by the bacterial Tac promoter and was regulated by the IacIQ repressor protein, which was expressed from the same plasmid. Expression levels reached values of around 0.3% of total cell protein and this protein appeared to be entirely soluble in nature and located within the cytosol of the cell. The expression of this protein has dramatic effects on the photosynthetic physiology of the cell. Induction of expression of carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity in both high dissolved inorganic carbon (Ci) and low Ci grown cells leads the creation of a high Ci requiring phenotype causing: (a) a dramatic increase in the K0.5 (Ci) for photosynthesis, (b) a loss of the ability to accumulate internal Ci, and (c) a decrease in the lag between the initial Ci accumulation following illumination and the efflux of CO2 from the cells. In addition, the effects of the expressed CA can largely be reversed by the carbonic anhydrase inhibitor ethoxyzolamide. As a result of the above findings, it is concluded that the CO2 concentrating mechanism in Synechococcus PCC7942 is largely dependent on (a) the absence of CA activity from the cytosol, and (b) the specific localization of CA activity in the carboxysome. A theoretical model of photosynthesis and Ci accumulation is developed in which the carboxysome plays a central role as both the site of CO2 generation from HCO3 and a resistance barrier to CO2 efflux from the cell. There is good qualitative agreement between this model and the measured physiological effects of expressed cytosolic CA in Synechococcus cells.  相似文献   

19.
A model is presented which quantifies a possible role for the carbonic anhydrase in the mitochondrial matrix of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii which incorporates the observation that the expression of this enzyme is increased under growth conditions in which the expression of the carbon dioxide-concentrating mechanism is increased. It is assumed that the inorganic carbon enters the cytosol from the medium, and leaves the cytosol to the plastids, as HCO3 and that there is negligible carbonic anhydrase activity in the cytosol. The role of the mitochondrial carbonic anhydrase is suggested to be the conversion to HCO3 of the CO2 produced in the mitochondria in the light from tricarboxylic acid cycle activity and from decarboxylation of glycine in any photorespiratory carbon oxidation cycle activity which is not suppressed by the carbon concentrating mechanism. If there is a HCO3 channel in the inner mitochondrial membrane then almost all of the inorganic carbon leaves the mitochondria as HCO3, thus limiting the potential for CO2 leakage through the plasmalemma. This mechanism could increase inorganic C supply to ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase by some 10% at the energetic expense of less than 1% of the total ATP generation by plastids plus mitochondria.  相似文献   

20.
Marine macroalgae possess a range of mechanisms to increase the availability of CO2 for fixation by ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase. Of these, possession of a periplasmic or external carbonic anhydrase and the ability to use bicarbonate ions is widely distributed. The mechanisms of carbon acquisition were studied in two estuarine red macroalgae Bostrychia scorpioides and Catenella caespitosa using a range of techniques. pH-drift and CO2-depletion experiments at constant pH suggested that CO2 is the main source of inorganic carbon in both species. Inhibitors indicated that internal and external carbonic anhydrase were present in both species. Inhibitors also suggested that uptake of bicarbonate is unlikely to be present (P < 0.05).  相似文献   

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