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1.
A. Yokota  S. Kitaoka 《Planta》1987,170(2):181-189
The rate of glycolate excretion in Euglena gracilis Z and some microalgae grown at the atmospheric level of CO2 was determined using amino-oxyacetate (AOA). The extracellular O2 concentration was kept at 240 M by bubbling the incubation medium with air. Glycolate, the main excretion product, was excreted by Euglena at 6 mol·h-1·(mg chlorophyll (Chl))-1. Excretion depended on the presence of AOA, and was saturated at 1 mM AOA. A substituted oxime formed from glyoxylate and AOA was also excreted. Bicarbonate added at 0.1 mM did not prevent the excretion of glycolate. The excretion of glycolate increased with higher O2 concentrations in the medium, and was competitively inhibited by much higher concentrations of bicarbonate. Aminooxyacetate also caused excretion of glycolate from the green algae, Chlorella pyrenoidosa, Scenedesmus obliquus and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii grown on air, at the rates of 2–7 mol·h-1·(mg Chl)-1 in the presence of 0.2–0.6 mM dissolved inorganic carbon, but the cyanobacterium, Anacystis nidulans, grown in the same way did not excrete glycolate. The efficiency of the CO2-concentrating mechanism to suppress glycolate formation is discussed on the basis of the magnitude of glycolate formation in these low-CO2-grown cells.Abbreviations AOA aminooxyacetate - Chl chlorophyll - DIC dissolved inorganic carbon - HPLC high-pressure liquid chromatography - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase This is the 16th paper in a series on the metabolism of glycolate in Euglena gracilis. The 15th paper is Yokota et al. (1985c)  相似文献   

2.
H. Stabenau  W. Säftel 《Planta》1982,154(2):165-167
Microbodies of the algaMougeotia were isolated in a linear sucrose gradient. The organelles, which moved to the density 1.24 g cm–3, contained about 70% of the glycolate oxidase (EC 1.1.3.1) found in this alga. The enzyme oxidized glycolate, utilizing either oxygen or 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol (DCPIP) as the electron acceptor. L-Lactate was an alternate substrate; almost no D-lactate was utilized. In the presence of O2, a Km of 415 M was determined for glycolate, whereas the Km for L-lactate was about 5,000 M. In the presence of DCPIP, lower concentrations of glycolate and L-lactate were sufficient to obtain the highest rates of enzyme activity.Abbreviations DCPIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol Supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft  相似文献   

3.
U. Lüttge  K. Fischer 《Planta》1980,149(1):59-63
Light-dependent CO-evolution by the green leaves of C3 and C4 plants depends on the CO2/O2 ratio in the ambient atmosphere. This and other physiological responses suggest that CO-evolution is a byproduct of photorespiration. At CO2/O2 ratios up to 10-3, the ratio of CO evolved: CO2 fixed in photosynthesis is significantly higher in C3 than in C4 plants. This discrepancy disappears when a correction is made for the CO2-concentrating mechanism in C4 photosynthesis, by which CO2-concentration at the site of ribulose-bis-phosphate carboxylase/oxygenase in the bundle sheaths is raised significantly as compared to the ambient atmosphere. Since the oxygenase function of this enzyme is responsible for glycolate synthesis, i.e., the substrate of photorespiration, this result seems to support the conclusion that CO-evolution is a consequence of photorespiration. CO-evolution may turn out to be a useful and rather straightforward indicator for photorespiration in ecophysiological studies.Abbreviations CAM crassulacean acid metabolism - CO net CO-evolution - CO2 net CO2-fixation - PEP-C phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase - RubP-C ribulose-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase Dedicated to Professor André Pirson on the occasion of his 70th birthday  相似文献   

4.
Osamu Ueno 《Planta》1996,199(3):394-403
Eleocharis vivipara link, an amphibious leafless sedge, develops traits of C4 photosynthesis and Kranz anatomy in the terrestrial form but develops C3-like traits with non-Kranz anatomy when submerged. The cellular localization of C3 and C4 enzymes in the photosynthetic cells of the two forms was investigated by immunogold labeling and electron microscopy. The terrestrial form has mesophyll cells and three kinds of bundle sheath cell, namely, parenchyma sheath cells, non-chlorophyllous mestome sheath cells, and Kranz cells. Phosphoenol-pyruvate carboxylase (PEPCase) was present in the cytosol of both the mesophyll cells and the parenchyma sheath cells, with higher-density labeling in the latter, but not in the Kranz cells. Pyruvate, Pi dikinase (PPDK) was found at high levels in the chloroplasts of both the mesophyll cells and the parenchyma sheath cells with some-what stronger labeling in the latter. This enzyme was also absent from the Kranz cells. Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) was found in the chloroplasts of all types of photosynthetic cell, but labeling was significantly less intense in the parenchyma sheath cells than in other types of cell. The submerged form also has three types of photosynthetic cell, as well as non-chlorophyllous mestome sheath cells, but it lacks the traits of Kranz anatomy as a consequence of modification of the cells. Rubisco was densely distributed in the chloroplasts of all the photosynthetic cells. However, PEPCase and PPDK were found in both the mesophyll cells and the parenchyma sheath cells but at lower levels than in the terrestrial form. These data reveal that the terrestrial form has a unique pattern of cellular localization of C3 and C4 enzymes, and they suggest that this pattern and the changes in the extent of accumulation of the various enzymes are the main factors responsible for the difference in photosynthetic traits between the two forms.Abbreviations CAM crassulacean acid metabolism - MC meso phyll cell - PSC parenchyma sheath cell - KC Kranz cell - PEP-Case phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase - PPDK pyruvate, Pi dikinase - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - LS large subunit - RuBP ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate This study was supported by Grants-in-Aid from the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries of Japan (Integrated Research Program for the Use of Biotechnological Procedures for Plant Breeding) and from the Science and Technology Agency of Japan (Enhancement of Center-of-Excellence, the Special Coordination Funds for Promoting Science and Technology). The author is grateful to Drs M. Matsuoka and S. Muto for providing the antisera and Dr. M. Samejima for his advice at the early stages of this study.  相似文献   

5.
Cytosolic and vacuolar pH changes caused by illumination or a changed composition of the gas phase were monitored in leaves of the NAD malic-enzyme-type C4 plant Amaranthus caudatus L. and the C3 plant Vicia faba L. by recording changes in the fluorescence of pH-indicating dyes which had been fed to the leaves. Light-dependent cytosolic alkalization and vacuolar acidification were maximal in the mesophyll cells under high-fluence-rate illumination and in the absence of CO2. Under the same conditions, measurements of light scattering and electrochromic absorption changes at 518 nm revealed maximum thylakoid energization. The results show an intimate relationship between the energization of the photosynthetic apparatus by light, an increase in cytosolic pH and a decrease in vacuolar pH. This was true for both the C4 and the C3 plant, although kinetics, extent and even direction of cytosolic pH changes differed considerably in these plants, reflecting the differences in photosynthetic carbon metabolism. Darkening produced rapid acidification in Vicia, but not in Amaranthus. Continued alkalization in Amaranthus is interpreted to be the result of the decarboxylation of a C4 intermediate and the release of liberated CO2. In the presence of CO2, energy consumption by carbon reduction decreased thylakoid energization, cytosolic alkalization and vacuolar acidification. Under low-fluence-rate illumination, thylakoid energization and light-dependent cytosolic and vacuolar pH changes were decreased in CO2-free air compared with thylakoid energization and pH changes in 1% oxygen/99% nitrogen not only in the C3 plant, but also in Amaranthus. Since oxygenation of ribulose bisphosphate initiates energy-consuming photorespiratory reactions in 21% oxygen, but not in 1% oxygen, this shows that photorespiratory reactions are active not only in the C3 but also in the C4 plant in the absence of external CO2. Photorespiratory conditions appeared to decrease energization not only in the chloroplasts, but also in the cytosol. This is indicated by decreased transfer of protons from the cytosol into the vacuole, a process which is energy-dependent.Abbreviations CDCF 5-(and 6-)carboxy-2,7-dichlorofluorescein - P700 electron-donor pigment in the reaction center of photosystem I - RuBP ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate This work was supported, within the framework of the Sonderforschungsbereiche 176 and 251 of the University of Würzburg, by the Gottfried-Wilhelm-Leibniz Program of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft. A.S.R. was the recipient of a fellowship from the Alexander-von-Humboldt-Foundation. We are grateful to Mr. Carsten Werner and Mrs. Spidola Neimanis for cooperation.  相似文献   

6.
The potential for C4 photosynthesis was investigated in five C3-C4 intermediate species, one C3 species, and one C4 species in the genus Flaveria, using 14CO2 pulse-12CO2 chase techniques and quantum-yield measurements. All five intermediate species were capable of incorporating 14CO2 into the C4 acids malate and aspartate, following an 8-s pulse. The proportion of 14C label in these C4 products ranged from 50–55% to 20–26% in the C3-C4 intermediates F. floridana Johnston and F. linearis Lag. respectively. All of the intermediate species incorporated as much, or more, 14CO2 into aspartate as into malate. Generally, about 5–15% of the initial label in these species appeared as other organic acids. There was variation in the capacity for C4 photosynthesis among the intermediate species based on the apparent rate of conversion of 14C label from the C4 cycle to the C3 cycle. In intermediate species such as F. pubescens Rydb., F. ramosissima Klatt., and F. floridana we observed a substantial decrease in label of C4-cycle products and an increase in percentage label in C3-cycle products during chase periods with 12CO2, although the rate of change was slower than in the C4 species, F. palmeri. In these C3-C4 intermediates both sucrose and fumarate were predominant products after a 20-min chase period. In the C3-C4 intermediates, F. anomala Robinson and f. linearis we observed no significant decrease in the label of C4-cycle products during a 3-min chase period and a slow turnover during a 20-min chase, indicating a lower level of functional integration between the C4 and C3 cycles in these species, relative to the other intermediates. Although F. cronquistii Powell was previously identified as a C3 species, 7–18% of the initial label was in malate+aspartate. However, only 40–50% of this label was in the C-4 position, indicating C4-acid formation as secondary products of photosynthesis in F. cronquistii. In 21% O2, the absorbed quantum yields for CO2 uptake (in mol CO2·[mol quanta]-1) averaged 0.053 in F. cronquistii (C3), 0.051 in F. trinervia (Spreng.) Mohr (C4), 0.052 in F. ramosissima (C3-C4), 0.051 in F. anomala (C3-C4), 0.050 in F. linearis (C3-C4), 0.046 in F. floridana (C3-C4), and 0.044 in F. pubescens (C3-C4). In 2% O2 an enhancement of the quantum yield was observed in all of the C3-C4 intermediate species, ranging from 21% in F. ramosissima to 43% in F. pubescens. In all intermediates the quantum yields in 2% O2 were intermediate in value to the C3 and C4 species, indicating a co-function of the C3 and C4 cycles in CO2 assimilation. The low quantum-yield values for F. pubescens and F. floridana in 21% O2 presumably reflect an ineffcient transfer of carbon from the C4 to the C3 cycle. The response of the quantum yield to four increasing O2 concentrations (2–35%) showed lower levels of O2 inhibition in the C3-C4 intermediate F. ramosissima, relative to the C3 species. This indicates that the co-function of the C3 and C4 cycles in this intermediate species leads to an increased CO2 concentration at the site of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase and a concomitant decrease in the competitive inhibition by O2.Abbreviations PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - PGA 3-phosphoglycerate - RuBP ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate  相似文献   

7.
The formation and metabolism of glycolate in the cyanobacterium Coccochloris peniocystis was investigated and the activities of enzymes of glycolate metabolism assayed. Photosynthetic 14CO2 incorporation was O2 insensitive and no labelled glycolate could be detected in cells incubated at 2 and 21% O2. Under conditions of 100% O2 glycolate comprised less than 1% of the acid-stable products indicating ribulose 1,5 bisphosphate (RuBP) oxidation only occurs under conditions of extreme O2 stress. Metabolism of [1-14C] glycolate indicated that as much as 62% of 14C metabolized was released as 14CO2 in the dark. Metabolism of labelled glycolate, particularly incorporation of 14C into glycine, was inhibited by the amino-transferase inhibitor amino-oxyacetate. Metabolism of [2-14C] glycine was not inhibited by the serine hydroxymethyltransferase inhibitor isonicotinic acid hydrazide and little or no labelled serine was detected as a result of 14C-glycolate metabolism. These findings indicate that a significant amount of metabolized glycolate is totally oxidized to CO2 via formate. The remainder is converted to glycine or metabolized via a glyoxylate cycle. The conversion of glycine to serine contributes little to glycolate metabolism and the absence of hydroxypyruvate reductase confirms that the glycolate pathway is incomplete in this cyanobacterium.Abbreviations AAN aminoacetonitrile - AOA aminooxyacetate - DIC dissolved inorganic carbon - INH isonicotinic acid hydrazide - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - PEPcase phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase - PG phosphoglycolate - PGA phosphoglyceric acid - PGPase phosphoglycolate phosphatase - PR photorespiration - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase oxygenase - TCA trichloroacetic acid - RuBP ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate  相似文献   

8.
Osamu Ueno 《Planta》1996,199(3):382-393
Eleocharis vivipara Link is a unique amphibious leafless sedge. The terrestrial form has Kranz anatomy and the biochemical traits of C4 plants while the submerged form develops structural and biochemical traits similar to those of C3 plants. The structural features of the culms, which are the photosynthetic organs, of the two forms were examined and compared. The culms of the terrestrial form have mesophyll cells and three bundle sheaths which consist of three kinds of cell, namely, the innermost Kranz cells that contain large numbers of organelles, the middle mestome sheath cells that lack chloroplasts, and the outermost parenchyma sheath cells that contain chloroplasts. The culms of the submerged form had a tendency towards reduction in numbers and size of Kranz cells and vascular bundles, as compared to the terrestrial form, and they had spherical mesophyll cells that were tightly packed without intercellular spaces inside the epidermis. The submerged form had a higher ratio of cross-sectional area of mesophyll cells plus parenchyma sheath cells to that of Kranz cells than the terrestrial form. The difference was mainly due to a decrease in the number and the size of the Kranz cells and to a marked increase in the size of the mesophyll cells and the parenchyma sheath cells in the submerged form, as compared to the terrestrial form. The Kranz cells of the terrestrial form had basically the structural characteristics of plants of the NAD-malic enzyme type, with the exception of the intracellular location of organelles. The Kranz cells of the submerged form included only a few organelles, and the percentage of organelles partitioned to the Kranz cells was significantly smaller in the submerged form than in the terrestrial form. In addition, the size of chloroplasts of the Kranz cells was 60–70% of that of the terrestrial form. These structural differences between the two forms may be related to the functional differences in their mechanisms of photosynthesis.Abbreviations KC Kranz cell - MC mesophyll cell - PSC parenchyma sheath cell - NAD-ME NAD-malic enzyme - VB vascular bundle This study was supported by Grants-in-Aid from the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries of Japan (Integrated Research Program for the Use of Biotechnological Procedures for Plant Breeding) and from the Science and Technology Agency of Japan (Enhancement of Center-of-Excellence, the Special Coordination Funds for Promoting Science and Technology).  相似文献   

9.
The natural abundance hydrogen-isotope composition of leaf water ( ) and leaf organic matter ( D org ) was measured in leaves of C3 and C4 dicotyledons and monocotyledons. The value of leaf water showed a marked diurnal variation, greatest enrichment being observed about midday. However, this variation was greater in the more slowly transpiring C4 plants than in C3 plants under comparable environmental conditions. A model based on analogies with a constant feed pan of evaporating water was developed and the difference between C3 and C4 plants expressed in terms of either differences in kinetic enrichment or different leaf morphology. Microclimatic and morphological features of the leaves which may be associated with this factor are discussed. There was no daily excursion in the D org value in leaves of either C3 or C4 plants. When D org values were referenced to the mean values during the period of active photosynthesis, the discrimination against deuterium during photosynthetic metabolism (D) was greater in C3 plants (-117 to -121) than in C4 plants (-86 to -109).These results show that the different water use strategies of C3 and C4 plants are responsible for the measured difference in deuterium-isotope composition of leaf water. However, it is unlikely that these physical processes account fully for the differences in hydrogen-isotope composition of the products of C3 and C4 photosynthetic metabolism.Symbols Hydrogen-isotope composition of leaf water - D org hydrogen-isotope composition of leaf organic matter  相似文献   

10.
Species in the Laxa and Grandia groups of the genus Panicum are adapted to low, wet areas of tropical and subtropical America. Panicum milioides is a species with C3 photosynthesis and low apparent photorespiration and has been classified as a C3/C4 intermediate. Other species in the Laxa group are C3 with normal photorespiration. Panicum prionitis is a C4 species in the Grandia group. Since P. milioides has some leaf characteristics intermediate to C3 and C4 species, its photosynthetic response to irradiance and temperature was compared to the closely related C3 species, P. laxum and P. boliviense and to P. prionitis. The response of apparent photosynthesis to irradiance and temperature was similar to that of P. laxum and P. boliviense, with saturation at a photosynthetic photo flux density of about 1 mmol m-2 s-1 at 30°C and temperature optimum near 30°C. In contrast, P. prionitis showed no light saturation up to 2 mmol m-2 s-1 and an optimum temperature near 40°C. P. milioides exhibited low CO2 loss into CO2-free air in the light and this loss was nearly insensitive to temperature. Loss of CO2 in the light in the C3 species, P. laxum and P. boliviense, was several-fold higher than in P. milioides and increased 2- to 5-fold with increases in temperature from 10 to 40°C. The level of dark respiration and its response to temperature were similar in all four Panicum species examined. It is concluded that the low apparent photorespiration in P. milioides does not influence its response of apparent photosynthesis to irradiance and temperature in comparison to closely related C3 Panicum species.Abbreviations AP apparent photosynthesis - I CO2 compensation point - gl leaf conductance; gm, mesophyll conductance - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density - PR apparent photorespiration rate - RuBPC sibulose bisphosphate carboxylase  相似文献   

11.
Eva Melzer  Marion H. O'Leary 《Planta》1991,185(3):368-371
In a previous study (Melzer and O'Leary, 1987, Plant Physiol. 84, 58–60), we used isotopic methods to show that a substantial fraction of protein-bound aspartic acid in tobacco is derived from anaplerotic synthesis via phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase. Similar studies in soybean (Glycine max L.) and spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) showed a similar pattern, and this pattern persists with age because of slow protein turnover. A more quantitative analysis indicates that about 40% of protein-bound aspartate is derived in this manner. Analyses of free aspartic and malic acids show that contribution of PEP carboxylase to the synthesis of these acids decreases with increasing age. The C4 plant Zea mays L. did not show this pattern.Abbreviations and Symbols RuBP ribulose bisphosphate - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - OAA oxaloacetic acid - PGA 3-phosphoglyceric acid - 13C carbon-13 - isotopic content [R(sample)/R(standard)-1] × 1000, where R = [13CO2]/[12CO2] This work was supported by contract DE-ACO2-83ER 13076 and grant DE-FGO2-86ER13534 from the U.S. Department of Energy. E. M. was supported by a fellowship from Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft. We are grateful to Isabel Treichel for assistance with isotopic analyses.  相似文献   

12.
Glycollate dehydrogenase and NADFH-glyoxylate reductase are constitutive enzymes in Percoll-purified mitochondria from phototrophic, mixotrophic and organotrophic cells of Euglena gracilis Klebs strain z Pringsheim. Glycollate oxidation by isolated mitochondria is stimulated four-fold by the addition of glutamate but rates of glycine oxidation are low in mitochondria from all cell types, the ratio of malate to glycine oxidation always being greater than 4:1. Measurement of the rate of NADPH oxidation in intact mitochondria and mitoplasts showed that the outer mitochondrial membrane is impermeable to NADPH and in the absence of NADPH-dehydrogenase activity the oxidation of NADPH by mitoplasts is dependent on the presence of glyoxylate for NADPH-glyoxylate-reductase activity. It is concluded that glycollate oxidation in the mitochondrion provides glyoxylate which, in the presence of a suitable amino-donor, can be converted to glycine by glutamate-glyoxylate amino-transferase so providing essential intermediates for biosynthesis. Glycollate oxidation outside the mitochondrion is concerned with photorespiratory metabolism and the inability of mitochondria to oxidise exogenous glycine at appreciable rates means that the separation of photorespiratory metabolism from the biosynthesis of essential intermediates is effected.  相似文献   

13.
Comparative 14CO2 pulse-12CO2 chase studies performed at CO2 compensation ()-versus air-concentrations of CO2 demonstrated a four-to eightfold increase in assimilation of 14CO2 into the C4 acids malate and aspartate by leaves of the C3-C4 intermediate species Panicum milioides Nees ex Trin., P. decipiens Nees ex Trin., Moricandia arvensis (L.) DC., and M. spinosa Pomel at . Specifically, the distribution of 14C in malate and aspartate following a 10-s pulse with 14CO2 increases from 2% to 17% (P. milioides) and 4% to 16% (M. arvensis) when leaves are illuminated at the CO2 compensation concentration (20 l CO2/l, 21% O2) versus air (340 l CO2/l, 21% O2). Chasing recently incorporated 14C for up to 5 min with 12CO2 failed to show any substantial turnover of label in the C4 acids or in carbon-4 of malate. The C4-acid labeling patterns of leaves of the closely related C3 species, P. laxum Sw. and M. moricandioides (Boiss.) Heywood, were found to be relatively unresponsive to changes in pCO2 from air to . These data demonstrate that the C3-C4 intermediate species of Panicum and Moricandia possess an inherently greater capacity for CO2 assimilation via phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.31) at the CO2 compensation concentration than closely related C3 species. However, even at , CO2 fixation by PEP carboxylase is minor compared to that via ribulosebisphosphate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.39) and the C3 cycle, and it is, therefore, unlikely to contribute in a major way to the mechanism(s) facilitating reduced photorespiration in the C3-C4 intermediate species of Panicum and Moricandia.Abbreviations Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - CO2 compensation concentration - 3PGA 3-phosphoglycerate - SuP sugar monophosphates - SuP2 sugar bisphosphates Published as Paper No. 8249, Journal Series, Nebraska Agricultural Research Division  相似文献   

14.
Light-induced changes in the fluorescence of the pH-indicating dyes pyranine or 5-(and 6-)carboxy-2, 7-dichlorofluorescein (CDCF) which had been fed to leaves were examined to monitor cellular pH changes. After short-term feeding of pyranine (pK 7.3) to leaves of Amaranthus caudatus L., a NAD-malic-enzyme-type C4 plant, vascular bundles and surrounding cells became fluorescent. Fluorescence emission from mesophyll cells required longer feeding times. In CO2-free air, pyranine fluorescence increased much more on illumination after mesophyll cells had become fluorescent than when only the vascular bundles and the bundle sheath of Amaranthus leaves had been stained. After short feeding times and in the absence of actinic illumination, CO2 decreased pyranine fluorescence very slowly in Amaranthus and rapidly in C3 leaves. After prolonged feeding times, the extent of the light-dependent increase in pyranine fluorescence was several times greater in different C4 plants than in C3 species. The kinetics of the fluorescence changes were also remarkably different in C3 and C4 plants. Carbon dioxide (500 l · l–1) suppressed the light-induced increase in pyranine fluorescence more in C4 than in C3 leaves. Light-dependent changes in light scattering, which are indicative of chloroplast energization, and in 410-nm transmission, which indicate chloroplast movement, differed kinetically from those of the changes in pyranine fluorescence. Available evidence indicated that light-dependent changes in pyranine fluorescence did not originate from the apoplast of leaf cells. Microscopic observation led to the conclusion that, after prolonged feeding times or prolonged incubation, changes in pyranine fluorescence emitted from C4 leaves reflect pH changes mainly in the cytosol of mesophyll cells. A transient acidification reaction indicated by quenching of pyranine fluorescence in the dark-light transient and not observed in C3 species is attributed to the carboxylation of phosphoenolpyruvate. After short feeding times and in the absence of actinic illumination, CO2 (250 l l–1) decreased pyranine fluorescence very slowly in Amaranthus and more rapidly in C3 leaves. After prolonged feeding times, both the rate and the extent of CO2-dependent quenching of pyranine fluorescence increased, but the increase was insufficient to indicate the presence of highly active carbonic anhydrase in the compartment from which pyranine fluorescence was emitted. In contrast to pyranine, CDCF (pK 4.8) did not increase but rather decreased its fluorescence on illumination of an Amaranthus leaf, indicating acidification of an acidic compartment, most probably the vacuole of green leaf cells. The pattern of the acidification reaction was similar in C4 and C3 leaves. The remarkably large extent of the light-dependent increase in pyranine fluorescence from leaves of C4 species and its slow kinetics are proposed to be caused by an alkalization of the cytosol which in the absence of CO2 is larger in the mesophyll than in the bundle sheath. It gives rise to deprotonation of dye originally located in the mesophyll and, in addition, of dye which diffuses from the bundle sheath into the mesophyll following a pH gradient. Implications of slow diffusional transport of pyranine and CO2 between mesophyll and bundle-sheath cells and the fast metabolite transport required in C4 photosynthesis are discussed.Abbreviations CDCF 5-(and 6-)carboxy-2,7-dichlorofluorescein - DHAP dihydroxyacetone phosphate - PGA 3-phosphoglycerate This work was supported by the Sonderforschungsbereiche 176 and 251 of the University of Würzburg and by the Gottfried-Wilhelm-Leibniz Program of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft. A.S.R. was the recipient of a fellowship of the Alexander-von-Humboldt Foundation. We are grateful to Mrs. S. Neimanis for cooperation.  相似文献   

15.
In order to study the location of enzymes of photorespiration in leaves of the C3–C4 intermediate species Moricandia arvensis (L.). DC, protoplast fractions enriched in mesophyll or bundlesheath cells have been prepared by a combination of mechanical and enzymic techniques. The activities of the mitochondrial enzymes fumarase (EC 4.2.1.2) and glycine decarboxylase (EC 2.1.2.10) were enriched by 3.0- and 7.5-fold, respectively, in the bundle-sheath relative to the mesophyll fraction. Enrichment of fumarase is consistent with the larger number of mitochondria in bundle-sheath cells relative to mesophyll cells. The greater enrichment of glycine decarboxylase indicates that the activity is considerably higher on a mitochondrial basis in bundle-sheath than in mesophyll cells. Serine hydroxymethyltransferase (EC 2.1.2.1) activity was enriched by 5.3-fold and glutamate-dependent glyoxylate-aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.4) activity by 2.6-fold in the bundle-sheath relative to the mesophyll fraction. Activities of serine- and alanine-dependent glyoxylate aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.45 and EC 2.6.1.4), glycollate oxidase (EC 1.1.3.1), hydroxypyruvate reductase (EC 1.1.1.81), glutamine synthetase (EC 6.3.1.2) and phosphoribulokinase (EC 2.7.1.19) were not significantly different in the two fractions. These data provide further independent evidence to complement earlier immunocytochemical studies of the distribution of photorespiratory enzymes in the leaves of this species, and indicate that while mesophyll cells of M. arvensis have the capacity to synthesize glycine during photorespiration, they have only a low capacity to metabolize it. We suggest that glycine produced by photorespiratory metabolism in the mesophyll is decarboxylated predominantly by the mitochondria in the bundle sheath.Abbreviation RuBP ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate  相似文献   

16.
Photorespiratory metabolism of the C3-C4 intermediate species Moricandia arvensis (L.) DC has been compared with that of the C3 species, Moricandia moricandioides (Boiss.) Heywood. Assays of glycollate oxidase (EC 1.1.3.1), glyoxylate aminotransferases (EC 2.6.1.4, EC 2.6.1.45) and hydroxypyruvate reductase (EC 1.1.1.29) indicate that the capacity for flux through the photorespiratory cycle is similar in both species. Immunogold labelling with monospecific antibodies was used to investigate the cellular locations of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (EC 4.1.1.39), glycollate oxidase, and glycine decarboxylase (EC 2.1.2.10) in leaves of the two species. Ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase was confined to the stroma of chloroplasts and glycollate oxidase to the peroxisomes of all photosynthetic cells in leaves of both species. However, whereas glycine decarboxylase was present in the mitochondria of all photosynthetic cells in M. moricandioides, it was only found in the mitochondria of bundle-sheath cells in M. arvensis. We suggest that localized decarboxylation of glycine in the leaves of M. arvensis will lead to improved recapture of photorespired CO2 and hence a lower rate of photorespiration.Abbreviations kDa kilodalton - RuBP ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate  相似文献   

17.
Carbon-isotope ratios were examined as 13C values in several C3, C4, and C3–C4 Flaveria species, and compared to predicted 13C, values generated from theoretical models. The measured 13C values were within 4 of those predicted from the models. The models were used to identify factors that contribute to C3-like 13C values in C3–C4 species that exhibit considerable C4-cycle activity. Two of the factors contributing to C3-like 13C values are high CO2 leakiness from the C4 pathway and pi/pa values that were higher than C4 congeners. A marked break occurred in the relationship between the percentage of atmospheric CO2 assimilated through the C4 cycle and the 13C value. Below 50% C4-cycle assimialtion there was no significant relationship between the variables, but above 50% the 13C values became less negative. These results demonstrate that the level of C4-cycle expression can increase from, 0 to 50% with little integration of carbon transfer from the C4 to the C3 cycle. As expression increaces above 50%, however, increased integration of C3- and C4-cycle co-function occurs.Abbreviations and symbols RuBP carboxylase ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.39) - PEP carboxylase phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.31) - pa atmospheric CO2 partial pressure - pi intercellular CO2 partial pressure - isotope ratio - quantum yield for CO2 uptake  相似文献   

18.
The maximum quantum yields (a,c) for CO2 uptake in low-oxygen atmospheres were determined for 11 species of C3 vascular plants of diverse taxa, habitat and life form using an Ulbricht-sphere leaf chamber. Comparisons were also made between tissues of varied age within species. The species examined were Psilotum nudum (L.) P. Beauv., Davallia bullata Wall. ex Hook., Cycas revoluta Thunb., Araucaria heterophylla (Salisb.) Franco, Picea abies (L.) Karst., Nerium oleander L., Ruellia humilis Nutt., Pilea microphylla (L.) Karst., Beaucarnea stricta Lem., Oplismenus hirtellus (L.) P. Beauv. and Poa annua L. Quantum yields were calculated from the initial slopes of the response of CO2 uptake to the quantity of photons absorbed in conditions of diffuse lighting. Regression analysis of variance of the initial slopes of the response of CO2 uptake to photon absorption failed to show any statistically significant differences between age classes within species or between the mature photosynthetic organs of different species. The constancy of a,c was apparent despite marked variation in the light-saturated rates of CO2 uptake within and between species. The mean a,c was 0.093±0.003 for 11 species. By contrast, surface absorptance varied markedly between species from 0.90 to 0.60, producing proportional variation in the quantum yield calculated on an incidentlight basis. The ratio of variable to maximum fluorescence emission at 695 nm for the same tissues also failed to show any statistically significant variation between species, with a mean of 0.838±0.008. Mean values of a,c reported here for C3 species, in the absence of photorespiration, are higher than reported in previous surveys of vascular plants, but consistent with recent estimates of the quantum yields of O2 evolution.Abbreviations and Symbols A rate of CO2 uptake per unit projected area (mol · m–2 · s–1) - Fm the maximum fluorescence emission at 695 nm in saturating excitation light when closure of PSII reaction centres is maximal (relative units) - Fo the ground fluorescence at 695 nm when all PSII reaction centres are assumed open (relative units) - Fv the difference between Fm and Fo - JQ rate of CO2 uptake by the sample (nmol · s–1) - JQ rate of photon absorption by the sample (nmol · s–1) - Q absorbed photon flux per unit of projected area (nmol · m–2 · s–1) - 1 the light absorptance of photosynthetic organs (dimensionless) - s1 and s'1 the total and projected surface areas of the photosynthetic organs examined (m2) - a,c and i,c the quantum yields for CO2 uptake on an absorbed- and incident-light basis, respectively (dimensionless) - a,o the quantum yield for O2 evolution on an absorbed-light basis (dimensionless) This work was supported by grant PI7179-BIO, FWF, Austria to H.B-N. and by a British Council travel award to S.P.L. This work was completed under the auspices of U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC02-76CH00016. We also thank Dr. K.J. Parkinson of PP Systems, Hitchin, UK for the loan of a prototype of a commercial integrating-sphere leaf chamber developed from our design.  相似文献   

19.
20.
The activities of the carboxylating enzymes ribulose-1,5-biphosphate (RuBP) carboxylase and phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase in leaves of three-week old Zea mays plants grown under phytotron conditions were found to vary according to leaf position. In the lower leaves the activity of PEP carboxylase was lower than that of RuBP carboxylase, while the upper leaves exhibited high levels of PEP carboxylase. Carbon dioxide compensation points and net photosynthetic rates also differed in the lower and upper leaves. Differences in the fine structure of the lowermost and uppermost leaves are shown. The existence of both the C3 and C4 photosynthetic pathways in the same plant, in this and other species, is discussed.Abbreviations PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - RuBP ribulose-1,5-biphosphate  相似文献   

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