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Carbon Metabolism in Seagrasses: III. ACTIVITIES OF CARBON-FIXING ENZYMES IN RELATION TO INTERNAL SALT CONCENTRATIONS
Authors:BEER  SVEN; ESHEL  AMRAM; WAISEL  YOAV
Abstract:The internal salt content and distribution in photosynthetictissues as well as the effect of NaCl on photosynthetic carbonfixation enzymes was investigated in two seagrass species fromthe Red Sea. Concentrations of both Na+ and Cl were lower in the chloroplast-richepidermis than in underlying cell layers in Halophila stipulacea.In Halodule uninervis, the concentration of Na+ was lower inthe epidermis than in the underlying cells, while K+ was evenlydistributed between cell layers. The epidermal concentrationsof Na+ were estimated to be 0.17 and 0.10 M for Halophila stipulaceaand Halodule uninervis, respectively, which were about 1/3 to 1/2the average leaf concentrations. Epidermal Cl concentrationof Halophila stipulacea was estimated to be 0.08 M, a valueonly about 1/4of the overall leaf concentration. Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPcase) extracted from leavesof these seagrasses showed increased activity at 0.05–0.3M NaCl in vitro. Ribulose-l, 5-bisphosphate carboxylase (RuBPcase)activity, on the other hand, was inhibited by NaCl at all testedconcentrations. At epidermal NaCl concentrations, PEPcase activitywas thus stimulated while RuBPcase was inhibited. The reducedRuBPcase activity at such concentrations compared to salt-freeconditions was still sufficient to account for observed photosyntheticrates. We conclude that these seagrasses have adapted to a saline environmentboth by maintaining relatively low ion concentrations in theepidermis where photosynthesis occurs and by having carbon-fixingenzymes capable of functioning in the presence of salt.
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