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1.
Ocean acidification (OA) is a reduction in oceanic pH due to increased absorption of anthropogenically produced CO2. This change alters the seawater concentrations of inorganic carbon species that are utilized by macroalgae for photosynthesis and calcification: CO2 and HCO3? increase; CO32? decreases. Two common methods of experimentally reducing seawater pH differentially alter other aspects of carbonate chemistry: the addition of CO2 gas mimics changes predicted due to OA, while the addition of HCl results in a comparatively lower [HCO3?]. We measured the short‐term photosynthetic responses of five macroalgal species with various carbon‐use strategies in one of three seawater pH treatments: pH 7.5 lowered by bubbling CO2 gas, pH 7.5 lowered by HCl, and ambient pH 7.9. There was no difference in photosynthetic rates between the CO2, HCl, or pH 7.9 treatments for any of the species examined. However, the ability of macroalgae to raise the pH of the surrounding seawater through carbon uptake was greatest in the pH 7.5 treatments. Modeling of pH change due to carbon assimilation indicated that macroalgal species that could utilize HCO3? increased their use of CO2 in the pH 7.5 treatments compared to pH 7.9 treatments. Species only capable of using CO2 did so exclusively in all treatments. Although CO2 is not likely to be limiting for photosynthesis for the macroalgal species examined, the diffusive uptake of CO2 is less energetically expensive than active HCO3? uptake, and so HCO3?‐using macroalgae may benefit in future seawater with elevated CO2.  相似文献   

2.
Carbon uptake in the green macroalga Cladophora glomerata (L.) Kütz. from the brackish Baltic Sea was studied by recording changes in pH, alkalinity, and inorganic carbon concentration of the seawater medium during photosynthesis. The use of specific inhibitors identified three uptake mechanisms: 1) dehydration of HCO3 ? into CO2 by periplasmic carbonic anhydrase, followed by diffusion of CO2 into the cell; 2) direct uptake of HCO3 ? via a 4,4′‐diisothiocyanato‐stilbene‐2,2′‐disulfonate‐sensitive mechanism; and 3) uptake of inorganic carbon by the involvement of a vanadate‐sensitive P‐type H + ‐ATPase (proton pump). A decrease in the alkalinity of the seawater medium during carbon uptake, except when treated with vanadate, indicated a net uptake of the ionic species contributing to alkalinity (i.e. HCO3 ? , CO32 ? , and OH ? ) from the medium, where OH ? influx is equivalent to H + efflux. This would suggest that the proton pump is involved in HCO3 ? transport. We also show that the proton pump can be induced by carbon limitation. The inducibility of carbon uptake in C. glomerata may partly explain why this species is so successful in the upper littoral zone of the Baltic Sea. Usually, carbon limitation is not a problem in the upper littoral of the sea. However, it may occur frequently within dense Cladophora belts with high photosynthetic rates that create high pH and low carbon concentrations in the alga's microenvironment.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
Some physiological characteristics of photosynthetic inorganic carbon uptake have been examined in the marine diatoms Phaeodactylum tricornutum and Cyclotella sp. Both species demonstrated a high affinity for inorganic carbon in photosynthesis at pH7.5, having K1/2(CO2) in the range 1.0 to 4.0mmol m?3 and O2? and temperature-insensitive CO2 compensation concentrations in the range 10.8 to 17.6 cm3 m?3. Intracellular accumulation of inorganic carbon was found to occur in the light; at an external pH of 7.5 the concentration in P. tricornutum was twice, and that in Cyclotella 3.5 times, the concentration in the suspending medium. Carbonic anhydrase (CA) was detected in intact Cyclotella cells but not in P. tricornutum, although internal CA was detected in both species. The rates of photosynthesis at pH 8.0 of P. tricornutum cells and Cyclotella cells treated with 0.1 mol m?3 acetazolamide, a CA inhibitor, were 1.5- to 5-fold the rate of CO2 supply, indicating that both species have the capacity to take up HCO3? as a source of substrate for photosynthesis. No Na+ dependence for HCO3? could be detected in either species. These results indicate that these two marine diatoms have the capacity to accumulate inorganic carbon in the light as a consequence, in part, of the active uptake of bicarbonate.  相似文献   

5.
The freshwater secondarily aquatic plants, most of which are higher plants, are those returned to the water environment after spending a period of time living on land. The readaptation to living underwater has made it necessary for these plants to put in place morphological and functional strategies to cope with some major problems due to features of the aquatic environment, but also deriving from the specialized organization of their “terrestrial” bodies. The poor O2 availability underwater accounted for the evolution of wide aerenchyma tissues throughout the plant organs to improve the photosynthetic O2 flux from the shoot to the roots buried in anoxic sediments and to the neighboring rhizosphere. This favors sediment oxygenation, sustains the aerobic metabolism of roots, and improves the availability and uptake of mineral nutrients, whose delivery to the entire plants, without a transpirational flux, is ensured by an acropetal mass transport depending on root pressure, guttation from hydathodes and channeling by apoplast closure around the vascular tissues. A great expansion of leaf surfaces and an enhanced surface:volume ratio of chloroplast-rich photosynthetic cells help to contact the water medium and to increase the cell/environment exchanges to gain inorganic carbon. Furthermore, different physiological mechanisms operate to cope with the scarce availability of CO2 and the prevalence of HCO3 ? as inorganic carbon form in water. Some of them, like cell wall acidification through H+ extrusion by a light-dependent APTase or activation of an apoplastic carbonic anhydrase, operate outside the cells, leading to a conversion of HCO3 ? to CO2, which then diffuses into the cells. Others, on the contrary, act inside the cells to load the active site of Rubisco with CO2, thus favoring photosynthesis and lowering photorespiration. Aquatic macrophytes with isoetid life form, moreover, can obtain most ot the fixed CO2 from sediments. In submerged species, in additin to the C3 cycle, the C4 and CAM-like photosynthetic metabolisms can also operate, and are modulated by the environmental inorganic carbon availability and the plant photosynthetic demand. Interestingly, in the aquatic plants the C4 pathway, which can be concomitant with the C3 one, does not depend on the Kranz anatomy of leaves, but relies on the intracellular compartmentation of carboxylative and decarboxylative enzymes. The CAM-like pathway, defined AAM, which also coexists with the C3, allows the submerged plants to fix CO2 in the dark, thus exploiting the higher CO2 availability in the water medium during the night, and extending to 24?h the period of inorganic carbon assimilation. In almost all the aquatic macrophytes the AAM is only expressed in the submersion state, whereas it is quickly inactivated in emerging leaves in a cell by cell way.  相似文献   

6.
We sought to characterize the inorganic carbon pool (CO2 plus HCO3) formed in the leaves of C4 plants when C4 acids derived from CO2 assimilation in mesophyll cells are decarboxylated in bundle sheath cells. The size and kinetics of labeling of this pool was determined in six species representative of the three metabolic subgroups of C4 plants. The kinetics of labeling of the inorganic carbon pool of leaves photosynthesizing under steady state conditions in 14CO2 closely paralleled those for the C-4 carboxyl of C4 acids for all species tested. The inorganic carbon pool size, determined from its 14C content at radioactivity saturation, ranged between 15 and 97 nanomoles per milligram of leaf chlorophyll, giving estimated concentrations in bundle sheath cells of between 160 and 990 micromolar. The size of the pool decreased, together with photosynthesis, as light was reduced from 900 to 95 microeinsteins per square meter per second or as external CO2 was reduced from 400 to 98 microliters per liter. A model is developed which suggests that the inorganic carbon pool existing in the bundle sheath cells of C4 plants during steady state photosynthesis will comprise largely of CO2; that is, CO2 will only partially equlibrate with bicarbonate. This predominance of CO2 is believed to be vital for the proper functioning of the C4 pathway.  相似文献   

7.
The mechanism of inorganic carbon (Ci) acquisition by the economic brown macroalga, Hizikia fusiforme (Harv.) Okamura (Sargassaceae), was investigated to characterize its photosynthetic physiology. Both intracellular and extracellular carbonic anhydrase (CA) were detected, with the external CA activity accounting for about 5% of the total. Hizikia fusiforme showed higher rates of photosynthetic oxygen evolution at alkaline pH than those theoretically derived from the rates of uncatalyzed CO2 production from bicarbonate and exhibited a high pH compensation point (pH 9.66). The external CA inhibitor, acetazolamide, significantly depressed the photosynthetic oxygen evolution, whereas the anion‐exchanger inhibitor 4,4′‐diisothiocyano‐stilbene‐2,2′‐disulfonate had no inhibitory effect on it, implying the alga was capable of using HCO3? as a source of Ci for its photosynthesis via the mediation of the external CA. CO2 concentrations in the culture media affected its photosynthetic properties. A high level of CO2 (10,000 ppmv) resulted in a decrease in the external CA activity; however, a low CO2 level (20 ppmv) led to no changes in the external CA activity but raised the intracellular CA activity. Parallel to the reduction in the external CA activity at the high CO2 was a reduction in the photosynthetic CO2 affinity. Decreased activity of the external CA in the high CO2 grown samples led to reduced sensitiveness of photosynthesis to the addition of acetazolamide at alkaline pH. It was clearly indicated that H. fusiforme, which showed CO2‐limited photosynthesis with the half‐saturating concentration of Ci exceeding that of seawater, did not operate active HCO3? uptake but used it via the extracellular CA for its photosynthetic carbon fixation.  相似文献   

8.
The present work investigated the inorganic carbon (Ci) uptake, fluorescence quenching and photo‐inhibition of the edible cyanobacterium Ge‐Xian‐Mi (Nostoc) to obtain an insight into the role of CO2 concentrating mechanism (CCM) operation in alleviating photo‐inhibition. Ge‐Xian‐Mi used HCO3 in addition to CO2 for its photosynthesis and oxygen evolution was greater than the theoretical rates of CO2 production derived from uncatalysed dehydration of HCO3. Multiple transporters for CO2 and HCO3 operated in air‐grown Ge‐Xian‐Mi. Na+‐dependent HCO3 transport was the primary mode of active Ci uptake and contributed 53–62% of net photosynthetic activity at 250 µmol L?1 KHCO3 and pH 8.0. However, the CO2‐uptake systems and Na+‐independent HCO3 transport played minor roles in Ge‐Xian‐Mi and supported, respectively, 39 and 8% of net photosynthetic activity. The steady‐state fluorescence decreased and the photochemical quenching increased in response to the transport‐mediated accumulation of intracellular Ci. Inorganic carbon transport was a major factor in facilitating quenching during the initial stage and the initial rate of fluorescence quenching in the presence of iodoacetamide, an inhibitor of CO2 fixation, was 88% of control. Both the initial rate and extent of fluorescence quenching increased with increasing external dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and saturated at higher than 200 µmol L?1 HCO3. The operation of the CCM in Ge‐Xian‐Mi served as a means of diminishing photodynamic damage by dissipating excess light energy and higher external DIC in the range of 100–10000 µmol L?1 KHCO3 was associated with more severe photo‐inhibition under strong irradiance.  相似文献   

9.
The intertidal macroalga Enteromorpha compressa showed the ability to use HCO3? as an exogenous inorganic carbon (Ci) source for photosynthesis. However, although the natural seawater concentration of this carbon form was saturating, additional CO2 above ambient Ci levels doubled net photosynthetic rates. Therefore, the productivity of this alga, when submerged, is likely to be limited by Ci. When plants were exposed to air, photosynthetic rates saturated at air-levels of CO2 during mild desiccation. Based on carbon fixing enzyme activities and Ci pulsechase incorporation patterns, it was found that Enteromorpha is a C3 plant. However, this alga did not show O2 inhibited photosynthetic rates at natural seawater Ci conditions. It is suggested that such a C4- like gas exchange response is due to the HCO3? utilization system concentrating CO2 intracellularly, thus alleviating apparent photorespiration.  相似文献   

10.
The green marine macroalga Ulva lactuca L. was found to be able to utilize HCO3? from sea water in two ways. When grown in flowing natural sea water at 16°C under constant dim irradiance, photosynthesis at pH8.4 was suppressed by acetazolamide but unaffected by 4,4′-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2′-disulphonate. These responses indicate that photosynthetic HCO3? utilization was via extracellular carbonic anhydrase (CA) -mediated dehydration followed by CO2 uptake. The algae were therefore described as being in a ‘CA state’. If treated for more than 10 h in a sea water flow-through system at pH9.8, these thalli became insensitive to acetazolamide but sensitive to 4,4′-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2′-disulphonate. This suggests the involvement of an anion exchanger (AE) in the direct uptake of HCO3?, and these plants were accordingly described as being in an ‘AE state’. Such thalli showed an approximately 10-fold higher apparent affinity for HCO3? (at pH9.4) than those in the ‘CA state’, while thalli of both states showed a very high apparent affinity for CO2. These results suggest that the two modes of HCO3? utilization constitute two ways in which inorganic carbon may enter the Ulva lactuca cells, with the direct entry of HCO3?, characterizing the ‘AE state’, being inducible and possibly functioning as a complementary uptake system at high external pH values (e.g. under conditions conducive to high photosynthetic rates). Both mechanisms of entry appear to be connected to concentrating CO2 inside the cell, probably via a separate mechanism operating intracellularly.  相似文献   

11.
The possibility of HCO3 transport into isolated leaf mesophyll cells of Asparagus sprengeri Regel has been investigated. Measurement of the inorganic carbon pool in these cells over an external pH range 6.2 to 8.0, using the silicone-fluid filtration technique, indicated that the pool was larger than predicted by passive 14CO2 distribution, suggesting that HCO3 as well as CO2 crosses the plasmalemma. Intracellular pH values, calculated from the distribution of 14CO2 between the cells and the medium, were found to be higher (except at pH 8.0) than those previously determined by 5,5-dimethyl[2-14C]oxazolidine-2,4-dione distribution. It is suggested that the inorganic carbon accumulated above predicted concentrations may be bound to proteins and membranes and thus may not represent inorganic carbon actively accumulated by the cells, inasmuch as in a closed system at constant CO2 concentration, the photosynthetic rates at pH 7.0 and 8.0 were 5 to 8 times lower than the maximum rate which could be supported by CO2 arising from the spontaneous dehydration of HCO3. Furthermore, CO2 compensation points of the cells in liquid media at 21% O2 at pH 7.0 and 8.0, and the K½ CO2 (CO2 concentration supporting the half maximal rate of O2 evolution) at 2% O2 at pH 7.0 and 8.0 are not consistent with HCO3 transport. These results indicate that the principal inorganic carbon species crossing the plasmalemma in these cells is CO2.  相似文献   

12.
Inorganic carbon acquisition has been investigated in the marine haptophyte Isochrysis galbana. External carbonic anhydrase (CA) was present in air‐grown (0.034% CO2) cells but completely repressed in high (3%) CO2‐grown cells. External CA was not inhibited by 1.0 mM acetazolamide. The capacity of cells to take up bicarbonate was examined by comparing the rate of photosynthetic O2 evolution with the calculated rate of spontaneous CO2 supply; at pH 8.2 the rates of O2 evolution exceeded the CO2 supply rate 14‐fold, indicating that this alga was able to take up HCO3 ? . Monitoring CO2 concentrations by mass spectrometry showed that suspensions of high CO2‐grown cells caused a rapid drop in the extracellular CO2 in the light and addition of bovine CA raised the CO2 concentration by restoring the HCO3 ? ‐CO2 equilibrium, indicating that cells were maintaining the CO2 in the medium below its equilibrium value during photosynthesis. A rapid increase in extracellular CO2 concentration occurred on darkening the cells, indicating that the cells had accumulated an internal pool of unfixed inorganic carbon. Active CO2 uptake was blocked by the photosynthetic electron transport inhibitor 3‐(3′,4′‐dichlorphenyl)‐1,1‐dimethylurea, indicating that CO2 transport was supported by photosynthetic reactions. These results demonstrate that this species has the capacity to take up HCO3 ? and CO2 actively as sources of substrate for photosynthesis and that inorganic carbon transport is not repressed by growth on high CO2, although external CA expression is regulated by CO2 concentration.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Protoplasts were prepared from Ulva fasciata Delile, and their photosynthetic performance was measured and compared with that of thalli discs. These protoplasts maintained maximal rates of photosynthesis as high as those of thalli (up to 300 μmol O2·mg chlorophyll?1·h?1) for several hours after preparation and were therefore considered suitable for kinetic studies of inorganic carbon utilization. The photosynthetic K1/2(inorganic carbon) at pH 6.1 was 3.8 μM and increased to 67, 158, and 1410 μM at the pH values 7.0, 7.9, and 8.9, respectively. Compared with these protoplasts, thalli had a much lower affinity for CO2 but approximately the same affinity for HCO3?. Comparisons between rates of photosynthesis and the spontaneous dehydration of HCO3? (at 50 μM inorganic carbon) revealed that photosynthesis of both protoplasts (which lacked apparent activity of extracellular/surface-bound carbonic anhydrase) and thalli (which were only 25% inhibited by the external carbonic anhydrase inhibitor acetazolamide) could not be supported by CO2 formation in the medium at the higher pH values, indicating HCO3? uptake. Since both protoplasts and thalli were sensitive to 4,4′-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2′-disulfonate, we suggest that HCO3? transport was facilitated by the membrane-located anion exchange protein recently reported to function in certain Ulva thalli. These findings suggest that the presence of a cell wall may constitute a diffusion barrier for CO2, but not for HCO3?, utilization under natural seawater conditions.  相似文献   

15.
Uptake, efflux and utilization of inorganic carbon were investigated in the marine eustigmatophyte Nannochloropsis sp. grown under an air level of CO2. Maximal photosynthetic rate was hardly affected by raising the pH porn 5.0 to 9.0. The apparent photosynthetic affinity for dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) was 35 μM DIC between pH 6.5 to 9.0, but increased approximately threefold at pH 5.0 suggesting that HCO3- was the main DIC species used from the medium. No external carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity could be detected by the pH drift method. However, application of ethoxyzolamide (an inhibitor of CA) resulted an a significant inhibition of photosynthetic O2 evolution and carbon utilization, suggesting involvement of internal CA or CA-like activity in DIC utilization. Under high light conditions, the rate of HCO3? uptake and its internal conversion to CO2 apparently exceeded the rate of carbon fixation, resulting in a large leak of CO2 from the cells to the external medium. When the cells were exposed to low DIC concentrations, the ratio of internal to external DIC concentration was about eight. On the other hand, in the presence of 2 mM DIC, conditions prevailing in the marine environment, the internal concentration of DIC was only 50% higher than the external one.  相似文献   

16.
The utilization of inorganic carbon by three species of marine diatom, Skeletonema costatum (Grev.) Cleve. Ditylum brightwellii (West) Grun., and Chaetoceros calcitrans Paulsen was investigated using an inorganic carbon isotopic disequilibnum technique and inorganic carbon dose-response curves. Stable carbon isotope data of the diatoms are also presented. Observed rates of photosynthetic oxygen evolution were greater than could be accounted for by the theoretical rate of CO2 supply from the uncatalyzed dehydration of HCO3? in the external medium, suggesting use of HCO3? as an inorganic carbon source. Data from the isotopic disequilibrium experiment demonstrate the use of both HCO3? and CO2 for photosynthesis. Carbon isotope discrimination values support the use of HCO3? by the diatoms.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract Results obtained with Hydrodictyon africanum, and data from the literature, show that most green algae of the chlorophyte type (e.g. Chlorella, Chlamydomonas, Hydrodictyon) differ in their photosynthetic C fixation characteristics from most green algae of the charophyte type (e.g. Spirogyra, Chara) and from C3 higher plants. The chlorophyte algae fix inorganic carbon by the photosynthetic carbon reduction cycle pathway, but have a low CO2 compensation point in 250 μM O2, a low inhibition of CO2 fixation from 10 μM CO2/250 μM O2 when compared with 10 μM CO2/zero O2, and a low half-saturation constant for CO2. These three characteristics are different from those of charophytes and C3 higher plants, and resemble those of C4 higher plants. It is suggested that these characteristics of chlorophyte algae are the result of a ‘CO2 concentrating mechanism’ which increases the CO2/O2 ratio at the site of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase action in a similar way to that achieved by the C4?C3 acid cycle in C4 plants. In the chlorophyte algae, however, CO2 concentration probably involves active HCO3? transport at the inner membrane of the chloroplast envelope. Active HCO3? transport can occur at the plasmalemma of charophyte algae and submerged aquatic higher plants as well as chlorophyte algae, so it is unlikely to explain the differences between the two groups of aquatic green plants. Differences in the properties of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase, and differences in CO2 production in the light, also seem inadequate to account for the different photosynthetic characteristics. The chlorophyte type of ‘C02 concentrating mechanism’ appears to be common in other classes of eukaryotic algae, and in cyanophytes. Some of the ‘advanced’ members of these eukaryotic algal classes (including the chlorophytes) may lack the mechanism, while some ‘primitive’ charophytes may retain the mechanism which their ancestors presumably possessed.  相似文献   

18.
Hydrilla verticillata (L.f.) Royle exhibits an inducible C4-type photosynthetic cycle, but lacks Kranz anatomy. Leaves in the C4-type state (but not C3-type) contained up to 5-fold higher internal dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) concentrations than the medium, indicating that they possessed a CO2-concentrating mechanism (CCM). Several lines of evidence indicated that the chloroplast was the likely site of CO2 generation. From C4-type leaf [DIC] measurements, the estimated chloroplastic free [CO2] was 400 mmol m?3. This gave a calculated 2% O2 inhibition of photosynthesis, which was identical to the measured value, and provided independent evidence that the estimated [CO2] was close to the true value. A homogeneous distribution of DIC in the C4-type leaf could not account for such a high [CO2], or the resultant low O2 inhibition. For C3-type leaves the estimated chloroplastic [CO2] was only 7 mmol m?3, which gave high, and similar, calculated and measured O2 inhibition values of 22 and 26%, respectively. The CCM did not appear to be located at the plasma membrane, as it operated at low and high pH, indicating that it was independent of use of HCO3? from the medium. Also, both C3? and C4-type Hydrilla leaves showed pH polarity in the light, with abaxial and adaxial boundary layer values of about pH 4·0 and 10·5, respectively. Thus, pH polarity was not a direct component of the CCM, though it probably improved access to HCO3. Additionally, iodoacetamide and methyl viologen greatly reduced abaxial acidification, but not the steady-state CCM. Inhibitor studies suggested that the CCM required photosynthetically generated ATP, but Calvin cycle activity was not essential. Both leaf types accumulated DIC in the dark by an ATP-requiring process, possibly respiration, and C4-type leaves fixed CO2 at 11·8% of the light rate. The operation of a CCM to minimize photorespiration, and the ability to recapture respiratory CO2 at night, would conserve DIC in a densely vegetated lake environment where daytime [CO2] is severely limiting, while [O2] and temperatures are high.  相似文献   

19.
The leakage of various inorganic carbon species from air-grown cells of Synechococcus UTEX 625 was investigated after a light to dark transition or during a light period using a mass spectrometer under a wide variety of experimental conditions. Total inorganic carbon efflux and CO2 efflux during the initial period of darkness were measured with or without carbonic anhydrase in the reaction medium respectively. The HCO3? efflux after a light to dark transition was estimated by difference. Carbon dioxide efflux in the light was measured by inhibiting CO2 transport with either Na2S or COS3 or quenching the 13C inorganic carbon transport by the addition of 12C inorganic carbon in excess. In cells in which CO2 fixation was inhibited, when only the HCO3? transport system was fully operative, CO2 effluxed continuously during the light period at a rate equal to about 25% of that in darkness. When only the CO2 transport system was operative, HCO3? effluxed during the light period. The difference between the light and dark efflux rates was consistent with a 0.6 unit decrease in the intracellular pH upon darkening the cells. The permeabilities of the cell for CO2 (2.94 ± 0.14 ± 10?8ms?1; mean ± SE, n=137) and HCO3? (1.4–1.7 ± 10?9 ms?1) were calculated.  相似文献   

20.
Mechanisms of inorganic carbon assimilation were investigated in the deep-water alga Phyllariopsis purpurascens (C. Agardh) Henry et South (Laminariales, Phaeophyta). The gross photosynthetic rate as a function of external pH, at a constant concentration of 2 mM dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC), decreased sharply from pH 7.0 to 9.0, and was not substantially different from 0 above pH 9.0. These data indicate that P. purpurascens is inefficient in the use of external HCO3 as a carbon source in photosynthesis. Moreover, the photosynthetic rate as a function of external DIC and the highest pH (9.01 ± 0.07) that this species can achieve in a closed system were consistent with a low capacity to use HCO3 , in comparison to many other species of seaweeds. The role of external carbonic anhydrase (CA; EC 4.2.1.1) on carbon uptake was investigated by measuring both the HCO3 -dependent O2 evolution and the CO2 uptake, at pH 5.5 and 8.0, and the rate of pH change in the external medium, in the presence of selected inhibitors of extra- and intracellular CA. Photosynthetic DIC-dependent O2 evolution was higher at pH 5.5 (where CO2 is the predominant form of DIC) than at pH 8.0 (where the predominant chemical species is HCO3 ). Both intra- and extracellular CA activity was detected. Dextran-bound sulfonamide (DBS; a specific inhibitor of extracellular CA) reduced the photosynthetic O2 evolution and CO2 uptake at pH 8.0, but there was no effect at pH 5.5. The pH-change rate of the medium, under saturating irradiance, was reduced by DBS. Phyllariopsis purpurascens has a low efficiency in the use of HCO3 as carbon source in photosynthesis; nevertheless, the ion can be used after dehydration, in the external medium, catalyzed by extracellular CA. This mechanism could explain why the photosynthetic rate in situ was higher than that supported solely by the diffusion of CO2 from seawater. Received: 6 March 1998 / Accepted: 22 June 1998  相似文献   

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