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1.
The depressions of photosynthetic CO2 uptake following O3 exposures of 200 and 400 nmol mol-1 for between 4 and 16 h were compared between Pisum sativum, Quercus robur and Triticum aestivum, and the potential causes of change identified in vivo. Photosynthetic change was examined by analysis of CO2, O2, O3 and water vapour exchanges together with chlorophyll fluorescence in controlled environments. Under identical fumigation conditions, each species showed very similar rates of O3 consumption. The light-saturated rate of CO2 uptake showed a statistically significant decrease in each species with increasing O3 dose. Although stomatal conductance declined in parallel with CO2 uptake this did not account for the observed decrease in photosynthesis. The decrease in mesophyll conductance resulted primarily from a decrease in the apparent carboxylation capacity, implying in decreased activity of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase. The maximum capacity of carboxylation was consequently reduced by over 30% and 50% after 16 h fumigation with 200 and 400 nmol mol-1 O3 respectively. Additionally, in Q. robur, a statistically significant inhibition of the CO2 saturated rate of photosynthesis occurred after 16 h with 400 nmol mol-1 O3, suggesting that the ability to regenerate ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate was also impaired. None of the species showed any significant decrease in the efficiency of light-limited photosynthesis following fumigation at 200 nmol mol-1 O3, but effects were apparent at 400 nmol mol-1 O3. The common feature in all three species was a decline in carboxylation capacity which preceded any other change in the photosynthetic apparatus.Abbreviations Asat net CO2 uptake rate per unit leaf area at light saturation - A net CO2 uptake rate per unit leaf area - Amax net CO2 uptake rate per unit leaf area at CO2 and light saturation - ci mole fraction of CO2 in the intercellular air space - gs stomatal conductance to CO2 - Fm maximum chlorophyll fluorescence - Fv variable chlorophyll fluorescence - c quantum yield of CO2 uptake for absorbed light - 0 quantum yield of oxygen evolution for incident light - PPFD photosynthetically active radiation - Rubisco ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - RuBP ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate - Vcmax maximum rate of carboxylation  相似文献   

2.
Net photosynthesis in the submersed angiosperms Myriophyllum spicatum L. and Hydrilla verticillata (L.f.) Royal was inhibited by 21% O2, but the degree of inhibition was greater for plants in the high than in the low photorespiratory state. Increasing the CO2 concentration from 50 through 2,500 l l-1 decreased the O2 inhibition of the high-photorespiration plants in a competitive manner, but it had no effect on the O2 inhibition of plants in the low photorespiratory state. Carbonic-anhydrase activity increased by almost threefold with the induction of the low photorespiratory state. Ethoxyzolamide, an inhibitor of carbonic anhydrase, reduced the net photosynthesis of low-photorespiration Myriophyllum and Hydrilla plants by 40%, but their dark respiration was unaffected. This ethoxyzolamide inhibition of net photosynthesis exhibited a competitive response to CO2 concentration, resulting in a decrease in the apparent affinity of photosynthesis for CO2. The net photosynthesis of plants in the high photorespiratory state was inhibited only slightly by ethoxyzolamide, and this inhibition was independent of the CO2 level. Ethoxyzolamide treatment caused an increase in the O2 inhibition of net photosynthesis of plants in the low photorespiratory state. Ethoxyzolamide increased the low CO2 compensation points of low-photorespiration Myriophyllum and Hydrilla, but the values for the high-photorespiration plants were unchanged. In comparison, the CO2 compensation points of the terrestrial plants Sorghum bicolor (C4), Moricandia arvensis (C3-C4 intermediate) and Nicotiana tabacum (C3) were unaltered by ethoxyzolamide treatment. These data indicate that the low photorespiratory state in Myriophyllum and Hydrilla is repressed by ethoxyzolamide treatment, thus implicating carbonic anhydrase as a component of the photorespiration-reducing mechanism in these plants. The competitive interaction of CO2 with ethoxyzolamide provides evidence that the low photorespiratory state in submersed angiosperms is the result of some type or types of CO2 concentrating mechanism. In Myriophyllum it may be via bicarbonate utilization, but in Hydrilla it probably takes the form of an inducible C4-type system.Abbreviations PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - RuBP ribulose bisphosphate  相似文献   

3.
The carbon-dioxide response of photosynthesis of leaves of Quercus suber, a sclerophyllous species of the European Mediterranean region, was studied as a function of time of day at the end of the summer dry season in the natural habitat. To examine the response experimentally, a standard time course for temperature and humidity, which resembled natural conditions, was imposed on the leaves, and the CO2 pressure external to the leaves on subsequent days was varied. The particular temperature and humidity conditions chosen were those which elicited a strong stomatal closure at midday and the simultaneous depression of net CO2 uptake. Midday depression of CO2 uptake is the result of i) a decrease in CO2-saturated photosynthetic capacity after light saturation is reached in the early morning, ii) a decrease in the initial slope of the CO2 response curve (carboxylation efficiency), and iii) a substantial increase in the CO2 compensation point caused by an increase in leaf temperature and a decrease in humidity. As a consequence of the changes in photosynthesis, the internal leaf CO2 pressure remained essentially constant despite stomatal closure. The effects on capacity, slope, and compensation point were reversed by lowering the temperature and increasing the humidity in the afternoon. Constant internal CO2 may aid in minimizing photoinhibition during stomatal closure at midday. The results are discussed in terms of possible temperature, humidity, and hormonal effects on photosynthesis.Abbreviations and symbols CE carboxylation efficiency - NP net photosynthesis rate - PAR photosynthetically active radiation - Pi leaf internal CO2 partial pressure - W water vapor mole fraction difference between leaf and air - T CO2 compensation pressure Dedicated to Professor Dr. Hubert Ziegler on the occasion of his 60th birthday  相似文献   

4.
A biochemical model of C 3photosynthesis has been developed by G.D. Farquhar et al. (1980, Planta 149, 78–90) based on Michaelis-Menten kinetics of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) carboxylase-oxygenase, with a potential RuBP limitation imposed via the Calvin cycle and rates of electron transport. The model presented here is slightly modified so that parameters may be estimated from whole-leaf gas-exchange measurements. Carbon-dioxide response curves of net photosynthesis obtained using soybean plants (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) at four partial pressures of oxygen and five leaf temperatures are presented, and a method for estimating the kinetic parameters of RuBP carboxylase-oxygenase, as manifested in vivo, is discussed. The kinetic parameters so obtained compare well with kinetic parameters obtained in vitro, and the model fits to the measured data give r 2values ranging from 0.87 to 0.98. In addition, equations developed by J.D. Tenhunen et al. (1976, Oecologia 26, 89–100, 101–109) to describe the light and temperature responses of measured CO2-saturated photosynthetic rates are applied to data collected on soybean. Combining these equations with those describing the kinetics of RuBP carboxylase-oxygenase allows one to model successfully the interactive effects of incident irradiance, leaf temperature, CO2 and O2 on whole-leaf photosynthesis. This analytical model may become a useful tool for plant ecologists interested in comparing photosynthetic responses of different C3 plants or of a single species grown in contrasting environments.Abbreviations PCO photorespiratory carbon oxidation - PCR photosynthetic carbon reduction - PPFD photosynthetic photon-flux density - RuBP ribulose bisphosphate  相似文献   

5.
Photosystem II chlorophyll fluorescence and leaf net gas exchanges (CO2 and H2O) were measured simultaneously on bean leaves (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) submitted either to different ambient CO2 concentrations or to a drought stress. When leaves are under photorespiratory conditions, a simple fluorescence parameter F/ Fm (B. Genty et al. 1989, Biochem. Biophys. Acta 990, 87–92; F = difference between maximum, Fm, and steady-state fluorescence emissions) allows the calculation of the total rate of photosynthetic electron-transport and the rate of electron transport to O2. These rates are in agreement with the measurements of leaf O2 absorption using 18O2 and the kinetic properties of ribulose-1,5bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase. The fluorescence parameter, F/Fm, showed that the allocation of photosynthetic electrons to O2 was increased during the desiccation of a leaf. Decreasing leaf net CO2 uptake, either by decreasing the ambient CO2 concentration or by dehydrating a leaf, had the same effect on the partitioning of photosynthetic electrons between CO2 and O2 reduction. It is concluded that the decline of net CO2 uptake of a leaf under drought stress is only due, at least for a mild reversible stress (causing at most a leaf water deficit of 35%), to stomatal closure which leads to a decrease in leaf internal CO2 concentration. Since, during the dehydration of a leaf, the calculated internal CO2 concentration remained constant or even increased we conclude that this calculation is misleading under such conditions.Abbreviations Ca, Ci ambient, leaf internal CO2 concentrations - Fm, Fo, Fs maximum, minimal, steady-state fluorescence emission - Fv variable fluorescence emission - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density - qp, qN photochemical, non-photochemical fluorescence quenching - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase  相似文献   

6.
Summary The rate of CO2 assimilation at light saturation and an intercellular CO2 concentration of 350 l l-1 (photosynthetic capacity), measured in leaves of Eucalyptus pauciflora, E. behriana, E. delegatensis and Acacia melanoxylon, declined over the course of cloudless days under naturally varying environmental conditions as well as under constant optimal conditions for high CO2 uptake. Since the capacity did not recover during the light period, it was different from the midday depression of gas exchange. The change appeared to be caused neither by the diurnal variation of total leaf water potential, by photoinhibition of redox-reaction centres in photosystems nor by changes in the intrinsic properties of Ribulose-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase. The decline was more pronounced in winter than in summer. It was related to the duration of illumination or the cumulative carbon gain. It was reversible in the following dark phase, and it did not occur on changeable days with short peaks of high light.Despite the decline in photosynthetic capacity, the initial slope of the CO2 response of net photosynthesis, as obtained at low intercellular CO2 concentrations, remained constant during the day, but declined at night when photosynthetic capacity recovered. In all cases stomatal conductance varied in parallel with photosynthetic capacity. The relevance of changes in photosynthetic capacity for the intercellular CO2 concentration is discussed.Abbreviations and symbols A CO2 assimilation - ABA abscisic acid - Ac350 photosynthetic capacity at ci=350l l-1 - ci intercellular CO2 concentration - g leaf conductance to water vapour - I photon flux density (irradiance) - P air pressure - Pi inorganic phosphate - Rd net CO2 release at * - Rubisco Ribulose-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase - RuBP Ribulose-bisphosphate - T leaf temperature - w leaf-to-air water vapour concentration difference - A/ci carboxylation efficiency at low ci - * light-independent CO2 compensation point - total leaf water potential  相似文献   

7.
The extent of photorespiration, the inhibition of apparent photosynthesis (APS) by 21% O2, and the leaf anatomical and ultrastructural features of the naturally occurring C3–C4 intermediate species in the diverse Panicum, Moricandia, and Flaveria genera are between those features of representative C3 and C4 plants. The greatest differences between the photosynthetic/photorespiratory CO2 exchange characteristics of the C3–C4 intermediates and C3 plants occur for the parameters which are measured at low pCO2 (i.e., the CO2 compensation concentration and rates of CO2 evolution into CO2-free air in the light). The rates of APS by the intermediate species at atmospheric pCO2 are similar to those of C3 plants.The mechanisms which are responsible for reducing photorespiration in the C3–C4 intermediate species are poorly understood, but two proposals have been advanced. One emphasizes the importance of limited C4 photosynthesis which reduces O2 fixation by ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase, and, thus, reduces photorespiration by a CO2-concentrating mechanism, while the other emphasizes the importance of the internal recycling of photorespiratory CO2 evolved from the chloroplast/mitochondrion-containing bundle-sheath cells. There is no evidence from recent studies that limited C4 photosynthesis is responsible for reducing photorespiration in the intermediate Panicum and Moricandia species. However, preliminary results suggest that some, but not all, of the intermediate Flaveria species may possess a limited C4 cycle. The importance of a chlorophyllous bundle-sheath layer in the leaves of intermediate Panicum and Moricandia species in a mechanism based on the recycling of photorespiratory CO2 is uncertain.Therefore, although they have yet to be clearly delineated, different strategies appear to exist in the C3–C4 intermediate group to reduce photorespiration. Of major importance is the finding that some mechanism(s) other than Crassulacean acid metabolism or C4 photosynthesis has (have) evolved in at least the majority of these terrestrial intermediate species to reduce the seemingly wasteful metabolic process of photorespiration.Abbreviations APS apparent (net) photosynthesis - CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism - CE carboxylation efficiency - T CO2 compensation concentration - IRGA infrared gas analysis - Pi orthophosphate - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - RuBP ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate Published as Paper No. 7383, Journal Series, Nebraska Agricultural Experiment Station.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Thalli of Ramalina maciformis were moistened to their maximal water holding capacity, thus, simulating actual conditions following a heavy rainfall. Time courses of net photosynthesis at 17° C and 750 E m-2 s-1 light intensity (PAR) were obtained during drying of the thalli. At ambient CO2 concentrations from 200 to 1,000 ppm, CO2 uptake of the moist lichens was depressed at high water content. After a certain water loss, net photosynthesis increased to a maximal value and decreased again with further drying of the thalli. The degree of initial depression of photosynthesis decreased with increasing ambient CO2 concentration, and it was fully absent at 1,600 ppm ambient CO2. Under these conditions of CO2 saturation, net photosynthesis remained constant at maximum for many hours and decreased only when substantial amounts of water had been lost. We conclude that the carboxylation capacity of the lichen is not affected by high contents of liquid water. Therefore, the depression of CO2 uptake of the water saturated lichen at lower (e.g. natural) ambient CO2 must be due exclusively to increased resistance to CO2 diffusion from the external air to the sites of carboxylation.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Gas exchange characteristics in leaves of the sclerophyll shrub Quercus coccifera were studied in the natural habitat in Portugal during spring and during the summer dry period. Compared to other sclerophyll species growing at the same site, photosynthesis in leaves of Quercus coccifera was less affected by water stress. Moderate water stress after six weeks of drought led to large decreases in stomatal conductance but no change in mesophyll photosynthetic capacity as compared to late spring. Leaf internal CO2 pressure remained near 220 bar during diurnal courses in the spring. On midsummer days, leaf internal CO2 decreased from a late morning value of 200 bar to a late afternoon value of approximately 150 bar. In contrast to Quercus suber (Tenhunen et al. 1984), restriction of CO2 supply due to stomatal closure reduced net CO2 uptake at midday and in the afternoon during midsummer. A decrease in leaf carboxylation efficiency and an increase in CO2 compensation point at midday also played an important role in determining the diurnal course of net photosynthesis. During the late stages of drought in September, severe water stress led to reduction in mesophyll photosynthetic capacity and further reduction in leaf conductance. The observed decrease in mesophyll photosynthetic capacity was correlated with decrease in the daily minimum leaf water potential to greater negative values than-30 bar. At this time, CO2 saturated photosynthetic rates decreased as much as 50% over the course of a day when measured at constant saturating light, 32° C leaf temperature, and a water vapor mole fraction difference between leaf and air of 30 mbar bar-1.  相似文献   

10.
Summary A physiologically based steady-state model of whole leaf photosynthesis (WHOLEPHOT) is detailed which describes the functional dependence of net photosynthesis in C 3 leaves on [CO2], [O2], incident radiant flux (PhAR), and leaf temperature. The model simulates among other phenomena a) observed [CO2], [O2], and temperature effects on the initial slope of light response curves, b) a C 3 type temperature response curve of net photosynthesis, c) a shift of the optimum temperature of net photosynthesis to higher temperatures with increasing light intensity, and d) observed temperature and [O2] effects on the CO2 compensation point. Model parameters are derived from published response data of several C 3 species. Simulations also demonstrate that parameter changes based on literature data result in acclimation-like changes in net photosynthesis response with respect to light intensity and temperature. The advantages of this model are that the number of parameters is minimized in order to focus on environmental effects and that all parameters can be determined from measured net photosynthesis responses.  相似文献   

11.
Supra-optimal levels of zinc in primary leaves of Phaseolus vulgaris increased the CO2 compensation point and inhibited net photosynthesis. Leaf morphology was modified: mesophyll intercellular area, stomatal slit length and interstomatal distance were reduced, but stomatal density increased. Internal and stomatal conductances to CO2 diffusion decreased. These changes are discussed in relation to the observed effects on leaf gas exchange and to the previously reported inhibition of different photosynthetic and photorespiratory enzymes.  相似文献   

12.
Effect of the D genome and of selection on photosynthesis in wheat   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Summary Photosynthesis and transpiration in wheats and in their progenitors were analyzed in relation to their genome, ploidy and selection. The values of these parameters markedly depend on a specific effect of the D genome and on leaf enlargement in the course of evolution in wheats. Leaf enlargement has had a marked effect on photosynthesis in the genotypes that are devoid of the D genome; in addition, their photosynthetic capacity is greater in forms with lower leaf area. The increase in the mesophyll resistance rm to CO2 transfer is in relation to the increase in leaf area and is mainly responsible for the decrease in photosynthesis rate.Owing to its stomatal regulation, Triticum aestivum L. is characterized by good water use efficiency in spite of its large leaves and of its low net photosynthesis. On the basis of the photosynthesis rate, the large leaf factor does not appear to be a good selection criterion for the Triticum durum genotypes that are devoid of the D genome.  相似文献   

13.
S. B. Ku  G. E. Edwards 《Planta》1980,147(4):277-282
In the C4 plant, Amaranthus graecizans, increasing [O2] from 2% up to 100% inhibited photosynthesis, quantum yield, and the carboxylation efficiency, and increased the CO2 compensation point () from 2 to about 12 l/l. The O2 inhibition of photosynthesis was fully reversible. When changing from 2.5 to 40% O2 and vice versa, about 1 h was required for full equilibration with an O2 inhibition of 18%; whereas in wheat, a C3 species, inhibition of photosynthesis and its reversal occurs within minutes after changing [O2], resulting in 63% inhibition of photosynthesis by 45% O2. These differences in O2 inhibition between a C4 and C3 species can be explained by high diffusive resistance across bundle-sheath cells of C4 plants and the increased CO2/O2 ratio in bundle-sheath cells which is the consequence of the C4 cycle. In A. graecizans, increased with increasing [O2] but tended to reach a maximum at relatively high O2 levels. The lack of a linear increase in as previously observed for C3 species indicates that a considerable amount of photorespired CO2 may be re-fixed with increasing levels of O2. In comparison to previous reports with other C4 species, photosynthesis of A. graecizans shows greater sensitivity to O2, with a noticeable inhibition occurring with shifts from 2 to 21% O2. A. graecizans has characteristics of other C4 species with respect to Kranz anatomy, localization of PEP carboxylase in mesophyll cells and RuBP carboxylase in bundle-sheath cells, and little fractionation among carbon isotopes during CO2 fixation. The basis for the higher sensitivity of photosynthesis of A. graecizans to O2 may be based upon a lower diffusive resistance of gases across bundle-sheath cells than in some other C4 species.Abbreviations CE carboxylation efficiency - RuBP ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate - CO2 compensation point  相似文献   

14.
Photosynthesis was studied in relation to the carbohydrate status in intact leaves of the C4 plant Amaranthus edulis. The rate of leaf net CO2 assimilation, stomatal conductance and intercellular partial pressure of CO2 remained constant or showed little decline towards the end of an 8-h period of illumination in ambient air (340 bar CO2, 21% O2). When sucrose export from the leaf was inhibited by applying a 4-h cold-block treatment (1°C) to the petiole, the rate of photosynthesis rapidly decreased with time. After the removal of the cold block from the petiole, further reduction in photosynthetic rate occurred, and there was no recovery in the subsequent light period. Although stomatal conductance declined with time, intercellular CO2 partial pressure remained relatively constant, indicating that the inhibition of photosynthesis was not primarily caused by changes in stomatal aperture. Analysis of the leaf carbohydrate status showed a five- to sixfold increase in the soluble sugar fraction (mainly sucrose) in comparison with the untreated controls, whereas the starch content was the same. Leaf osmotic potential increased significantly with the accumulation of soluble sugars upon petiole chilling, and leaf water potential became slightly more negative. After 14 h recovery in the dark, photosynthesis returned to its initial maximum value within 1 h of illumination, and this was associated with a decline in leaf carbohydrate levels overnight. These data show that, in Amaranthus edulis, depression in photosynthesis when translocation is impaired is closely related to the accumulation of soluble sugars (sucrose) in source leaves, indicating feedback control of C4 photosynthesis. Possible mechanisms by which sucrose accumulation in the leaf may affect the rate of photosynthesis are discussed with regard to the leaf anatomy of C4 plants.Abbreviations and symbols A net CO2 assimilation rate - Ci intercellular CO2 partial pressure - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - RuBP ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate - water potential - osmotic pressure  相似文献   

15.
Chollet R 《Plant physiology》1978,61(6):929-932
Preincubation of illuminated tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) leaf disks in glycidate (2,3-epoxypropionate) or glyoxylate inhibited photorespiration by about 40% as determined by the ratio of 14CO2 evolved into CO2-free air in light and in darkness. However, under identical preincubation conditions used for the light/dark 14C assays, the compounds failed to reduce photorespiration or stimulate net photosynthesis in tobacco leaf disks based on other CO2 exchange parameters, including the CO2 compensation concentration in 21% O2, the inhibitory effect of 21% O2 on net photosynthesis in 360 microliters per liter of CO2 and the rate of net photosynthetic 14CO2 uptake in air.

The effects of both glycidate and glyoxylate on the 14C assay are inconsistent with other measures of photorespiratory CO2 exchange in tobacco leaf disks, and thus these data question the validity of the light to dark ratio of 14CO2 efflux as an assay for relative rates of photorespiration (Zelitch 1968, Plant Physiol 43: 1829-1837). The results of this study specifically indicate that neither glycidate nor glyoxylate reduces photorespiration or stimulates net photosynthesis by tobacco leaf disks under physiological conditions of pO2 and pCO2, contrary to previous reports.

  相似文献   

16.
Summary During five different periods between Nov. 1982 and Aug. 1983, the diurnal patterns exhibited in photosynthetic CO2 uptake and stomatal conductance were observed under natural conditions on twigs of Cistus salvifolius, a Mediterranean semi-deciduous shrub which retains a significant proportion of its leaves through the summer drought. During the same periods, net photosynthesis at saturating CO2 partial pressure was measured on the same twigs as a function of irradiance at different temperatures. From these data, photosynthetic capacity, defined here as the CO2- and light-saturated net photosynthesis rate, was obtained as a function of leaf temperature. C. salvifolius is a winter growing species, shoot growth being initiated in Nov. and continuing through May. Photosynthetic capacity was quite high in Nov., March and June, exceeding 40 mol m-2 s-1 at optimum temperature. In Dec., photosynthetic capacity was somewhat reduced, perhaps due to low night-time temperatures (<5°C) during the measurement period. In Aug., capacity in oversummering shoots at optimum temperature fell to less than 8 mol m-2 s-1, due to water trees and perhaps leaf aging. Seasonal changes in maximal photosynthetic rates under ambient conditions were similar, and like those found in co-occurring evergreen sclerophylls. Like the evergreens, Cistus demonstrated considerable stomatal control of transpirational water loss, particularly in oversummering leaves. During each measurement period except Aug. when capacity was quite low, the maximum rates of net photosynthesis measured under ambient conditions were less than half the measured photosynthetic capacities at comparable temperatures, suggesting an apparent excess nitrogen investment in the photosynthetic apparatus.  相似文献   

17.
Effects of environmental conditions on isoprene emission from live oak   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
Live-oak plants (Quercus virginiana Mill.) were subjected to various levels of CO2, water stress or photosynthetic photon flux density to test the hypothesis that isoprene biosynthesis occurred only under conditions of restricted CO2 availability. Isoprene emission increases as the ambient CO2 concentration decreased, independent of the amount of time that plants had photosynthesized at ambient CO2 levels. When plants were water-stressed over a 4-d period photosynthesis and leaf conductance decreased 98 and 94%, respectively, while isoprene emissions remained constant. Significant isoprene emissions occurred when plants were saturated with CO2, i.e., below the light compensation level for net photosynthesis (100 mol m-2 s-1). Isoprene emission rates increased with photosynthetic photon flux density and at 25 and 50 mol m-2 s-1 were 7 and 18 times greater than emissions in the dark. These data indicate that isoprene is a normal plant metabolite and not — as has been suggested — formed exclusively in response to restricted CO2 or various stresses.Abbreviation PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density  相似文献   

18.
The effect of leaf temperature on stomatal conductance and net CO2 uptake was studied on French bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) using either dehydrated attached leaves (25–40% water deficit) or cut leaves supplied with 10–4 M abscisic acid (ABA) solution to the transpiration stream. Decreasing leaf temperature caused stomatal opening and increased net CO2 uptake (which was close to zero at around 25° C) to a level identical to that of control leaves (without water deficit) at around 15° C. (i) The ABA effect on stomatal closure was modulated by temperature and, presumably, ABA is at least partly responsible for stomatal closure of french bean submitted to a drought stress. (ii) For leaf temperatures lower than 15° C, net CO2 uptake was no longer limited by water deficit even on very dehydrated leaves. This shows that dehydrated leaves retain a substantial part of their photosynthetic capacity which can be revealed at normal CO2 concentrations when stomata open at low temperature. In contrast to leaves fed with ABA, decreasing the O2 concentration from 21% to 1% O2 did not increase either the rate of net CO2 uptake or the thermal optimum for photosynthesis of dehydrated leaves. The quantum yield of PSII electron flow (measured by F/Fm) was lower in 1% O2 than in 21% O2 for each leaf pretreatment given (non-dehydrated leaves, dehydrated leaves, and leaves fed with ABA) even within a temperature range in which leaf photosynthesis at normal CO2 concentration was the same in these two O2 concentrations. It is concluded that this probably indicates an heterogeneity of photosynthesis, since this difference in quantum yield disappears when using high CO2 concentrations during measurements.Abbreviations and Symbols ABA abscisic acid - Fm maximum chlorophyll fluorescence - F difference between steady-state chlorophyll fluorescence and Fm - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density We would like to thank Dr. J.-M. Briantais (Laboratoire d'écologie végétale, Orsay, France) for help during fluorescence measurements and Ms. J. Liebert for technical assistance.  相似文献   

19.
Net CO2 exchange was monitored through a dark-light-dark transition, under 2% and 21% O2 in the presence and absence of CO2, in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii wild type and the high-CO2-requiring mutant ca-1-12-1C. Upon illumination at 350 l/l CO2, ca-1-12-1C cell exhibited a large decrease in net CO2 uptake following an initial surge of CO2 uptake. Net CO2 uptake subsequently attained a steady-state rate substantially lower than the maximum. A large, O2-enchanced post-illumination burst of CO2 efflux was observed after a 10-min illumination period, corresponding to a minimum in the net CO2 uptake rate. A smaller, but O2-insensitive post-illumination burst was observed following a 30-min illumination period, when net CO2 uptake was at a steady-state rate. These post-illumination bursts appeared to reflect the release of an intracellular pool of inorganic carbon, which was much larger following the initial surge of net CO2 uptake than during the subsequent steady-state CO2 uptake period.With the mutant in CO2-free gas, O2-stimulated, net CO2 efflux was observed in the light, and a small, O2-dependent post-illumination burst was observed. With wild-type cells no CO2 efflux was observed in the light in CO2-free gas under either 2% or 21% O2, but a small, O2-dependent post-illumination burst was observed. These results were interpreted as indicating that photorespiratory rates were similar in the mutant and wild-type cells in the absence of CO2, but that the wild-type cells were better able to scavenge the photorespiratory CO2.  相似文献   

20.
R. T. Sayre  R. A. Kennedy 《Planta》1977,134(3):257-262
Four populations of Mollugo verticillata L. were compared on the basis of their photosynthetic products, photosynthetic rates, enhancement under low oxygen concentration, and CO2 compensation points. In addition, pulse-chase labeling experiments were conducted using one of the four populations. Depending on the plant population, C4 acids ranged from 40% to 11% of the primary products under short-term exposure to 14CO2. These compounds were also metabolized during pulse-chase experiments. All four populations had significantly different photosynthetic rates and those rates were correlated with the amounts of labelled C4 acids produced and C4-acid turnover. Three populations of M. verticillata had similar compensation points (40 l/l) and degrees of photosynthetic enhancement under low [O2] (20%), the fourth population was much lower in both characteristics (CO2 compensation, 25 l/l; low-O2 enhancement, 12%). The results verify the intermediate nature of photosynthesis in this species, and illustrate populational differences in its photosynthetic and photorespiratory carbon metabolism.Abbreviations PGA 3-phosphoglyceric acid - Kan Kansas - Mass Massachusetts - Mex Mexico  相似文献   

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