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1.
Peñuelas  J.  Estiarte  M.  Kimball  B.A. 《Photosynthetica》2000,37(4):615-619
We compared flavonoids in green, mature, and senescing flag leaves of wheat grown under ambient (AC - 370 mol mol-1) and elevated (EC - 550 mol mol-1) concentrations of CO2 in a FACE (Free Air CO2 Enrichment) system. The concentrations of flag leaf flavonoids (e.g., isoorientin and tricin) decreased to one third in mature leaves, and the majoritary isoorientin almost disappeared in senescing leaves. Flavonoid concentrations increased in green well-developed flag leaves under EC (46 % isoorientin and 55 % tricin), whereas the differences disappeared in mature and senescing flag leaves. Predictions of changes in litter phenolic concentrations and their effects on decomposition rates under EC based on changes in green leaves need to be revised.  相似文献   

2.
The effects of CO2 concentration and the effects of growth-light conditions on Ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) deactivation were examined for Spinacea oleracea (spinach). Rubisco deactivation kinetics and the degree that Rubisco activation limited the rise in photosynthesis following an increase in photon flux density (PFD) were determined from gas-exchange time courses. There were no significant differences in the apparent relaxation time for Rubisco deactivation among leaves exposed to high or low CO2 (50 or 1000 mol mol-1) and low PFD (170 mol m-2 s-1) or darkness. However, when PFD was increased to 1700 mol m-2 s-1 following a period of low PFD or darkness, leaves exposed to low CO2 × low PFD showed a lower contribution to the photosynthetic induction process by the activation of Rubisco than leaves exposed to the other treatments. For the growth-light experiments, spinach was grown under high PFD × high red:far-red ratio (R:FR), low PFD × high R:FR, or low PFD × low R:FR light environments. Leaves that matured under the low PFD × low R:FR treatment showed a lower percent change in photosynthesis due to Rubisco activation than leaves exposed to the other growth-light treatments. However, there were no significant differences among the growth-light treatments in the maximum contribution of Rubisco activation to the induction response or in the apparent relaxation time for Rubisco deactivation during shade events.  相似文献   

3.
Acclimation of photosynthetic capacity to elevated CO2 involves a decrease of the leaf Rubisco content. In the present study, it was hypothesized that nitrogen uptake and partitioning within the leaf and among different aboveground organs affects the down-regulation of Rubisco. Given the interdependence of nitrogen and cytokinin signals at the whole plant level, it is also proposed that cytokinins affect the nitrogen economy of plants under elevated CO2, and therefore the acclimatory responses. Spring wheat received varying levels of nitrogen and cytokinin in field chambers with ambient (370 μmol mol−1) or elevated (700 μmol mol−1) atmospheric CO2. Gas exchange, Rubisco, soluble protein and nitrogen contents were determined in the top three leaves in the canopy, together with total nitrogen contents per shoot. Growth in elevated CO2 induced decreases in photosynthetic capacity only when nitrogen supply was low. However, the leaf contents of Rubisco, soluble protein and total nitrogen on an area basis declined in elevated CO2 regardless of nitrogen supply. Total nitrogen in the shoot was no lower in elevated than ambient CO2, but the fraction of this nitrogen located in flag and penultimate leaves was lower in elevated CO2. Decreased Rubisco: chlorophyll ratios accompanied losses of leaf Rubisco with CO2 enrichment. Cytokinin applications increased nitrogen content in all leaves and nitrogen allocation to senescing leaves, but decreased Rubisco contents in flag leaves at anthesis and in all leaves 20 days later, together with the amount of Rubisco relative to soluble protein in all leaves at both growth stages. The results suggest that down regulation of Rubisco in leaves at elevated CO2 is linked with decreased allocation of nitrogen to the younger leaves and that cytokinins cause a fractional decrease of Rubisco and therefore do not alleviate acclimation to elevated CO2.  相似文献   

4.
Atmospheric ammonia (NH3) from various anthropogenic sources has become a serious problem for natural vegetation. Ammonia not only causes changes in plant nitrogen metabolism, but also affects the acid-base balance of plants. Using the pH-sensitive fluorescent dyes pyranine and esculin, cytosolic and vacuolar pH changes were measured in leaves of C3 and C4 plants exposed for brief periods to concentrations of NH3 in air ranging from 1.33 to 8.29 mol NH3 · mol-1 gas (0.94–5.86 mg · m-3). After a lag phase, uptake of NH3 from air at a rate of 200 nmol NH3 · m - 2 leaf area · s- 1 into leaves of Zea mays L. increased pyranine fluorescence indicating cytosolic alkalinisation. The increase was much larger in the dark than in the light. In illuminated leaves of the C3 plant Pelargonium zonale L. and the C4 plants Z. mays and Amaranthus caudatus L., NH3-dependent cytosolic alkalinisation was particularly pronounced when CO2 was supplied at very low levels (16 or 20 mol CO2 · mol- 1 gas, containing 210 mmol O2 · mol- 1 gas). An increase in esculin fluorescence, which was smaller than that of pyranine, was indicative of trapping of some of the NH3 in the vacuoles of leaves of Spinacia oleracea L. and Z. mays. Photosynthesis and transpiration remained unchanged during exposure of illuminated leaves to NH3, yielding an influx of 200 nmol NH3 · m-2 leaf area · s-1 for up to 30 min, the longest exposure time used. Both CO2 and O2 influenced the extent of cytosolic alkalinisation. At 500 mol CO2 · mol-1 gas the cytosolic alkalinisation was suppressed more than at 16 or 20 mol CO2 · mol-1 gas. The suppressing effect of CO2 on the NH3induced alkalinisation was larger in illuminated leaves of the C4 plants Z. mays and A. caudatus than in leaves of the C3 plant P. zonale. A reduction of the O2 concentration from 210 to 10 mmol O2 · mol -1 gas, which inhibits photorespiration, increased the NH3induced cytosolic alkalinisation in C3 plants. Suppression by CO2 or O2 of the alkaline pH shift caused by the dissolution and protonation of NH3 in queous leaf compartments, and possibly by the production of organic compounds synthesised from atmospheric NH3, indicates that NH3 which enters leaves is rapidly assimilated if photosynthesis or photorespiration provide nitrogen acceptor molecules.This work was supported by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council and the Deutsche Forschungsgemein-schaft within the framework of the research of Sonderforschun-gsbreich 251 of the University of Würzburg. We are grateful to Dr. B. Wollenweber (The Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University, Denmark) for discussions.  相似文献   

5.
Tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) plants transformed with antisense rbcS to decrease the expression of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase (Rubisco) have been used to investigate the contribution of Rubisco to the control of photosynthesis in plants growing at different irradiances. Tobacco plants were grown in controlled-climate chambers under ambient CO2 at 20°C at 100, 300 and 750 mol·m–2·s–1 irradiance, and at 28°C at 100, 300 and 1000 mol·m–2·s–1 irradiance. (i) Measurement of photosynthesis under ambient conditions showed that the flux control coefficient of Rubisco (C infRubisco supA ) was very low (0.01–0.03) at low growth irradiance, and still fairly low (0.24–0.27) at higher irradiance. (ii) Short-term changes in the irradiance used to measure photosynthesis showed that C infRubisco supA increases as incident irradiance rises, (iii) When low-light (100 mol·m–2·s–1)-grown plants are exposed to high (750–1000 mol·m–2·s–1) irradiance, Rubisco is almost totally limiting for photosynthesis in wild types. However, when high-light-grown leaves (750–1000 mol·m–2·s–1) are suddenly exposed to high and saturating irradiance (1500–2000 mol·m–2·s–1), C infRubisco supA remained relatively low (0.23–0.33), showing that in saturating light Rubisco only exerts partial control over the light-saturated rate of photosynthesis in sun leaves; apparently additional factors are co-limiting photosynthetic performance, (iv) Growth of plants at high irradiance led to a small decrease in the percentage of total protein found in the insoluble (thylakoid fraction), and a decrease of chlorophyll, relative to protein or structural leaf dry weight. As a consequence of this change, high-irradiance-grown leaves illuminated at growth irradiance avoided an inbalance between the light reactions and Rubisco; this was shown by the low value of C infRubisco supA (see above) and by measurements showing that non-photochemical quenching was low, photochemical quenching high, and NADP-malate dehydrogenase activation was low at the growth irradiance. In contrast, when a leaf adapted to low irradiance was illuminated at a higher irradiance, Rubisco exerted more control, non-photochemical quenching was higher, photochemical quenching was lower, and NADP-malate dehydrogenase activation was higher than in a leaf which had grown at that irradiance. We conclude that changes in leaf composition allow the leaf to avoid a one-sided limitation by Rubisco and, hence, overexcitation and overreduction of the thylakoids in high-irradiance growth conditions, (v) Antisense plants with less Rubisco contained a higher content of insoluble (thylakoid) protein and chlorophyll, compared to total protein or structural leaf dry weight. They also showed a higher rate of photosynthesis than the wild type, when measured at an irradiance below that at which the plant had grown. We propose that N-allocation in low light is not optimal in tobacco and that genetic manipulation to decrease Rubisco may, in some circumstances, increase photosynthetic performance in low light.Abbreviations A rate of photosynthesis - C infRubisco supA flux control coefficient of Rubisco for photosynthesis - ci internal CO2 concentration - qE energy-dependent quenching of chlorophyll fluorescense - qQ photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence - NADP-MDH NADP-dependent malate dehydrogenase - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase - RuBP ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (SFB 137).  相似文献   

6.
Transgenic tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) plants transformed with antisense rbcS to produce a series of plants with a progressive decrease in the amount of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) have been used to investigate the contribution of Rubsico to the control of photosynthesis at different irradiance, CO2 concentrations and vapour-pressure deficits. Assimilation rates, transpiration, the internal CO2 concentration and chlorophyll fluorescence were measured in each plant. (i) The flux-control coefficient of Rubisco was estimated from the slope of the plot of Rubisco content versus assimilation rate. The flux-control coefficient had a value of 0.8 or more in high irradiance, (1050 mol·m–2·s–1), low-vapour pressure deficit (4 mbar) and ambient CO2 (350 bar). Control was marginal in enhanced CO2 (450 bar) or low light (310 mol·m–2·s–1) and was also decreased at high vapour-pressure deficit (17 mbar). No control was exerted in 5% CO2. (ii) The flux-control coefficients of Rubisco were compared with the fractional demand placed on the calculated available Rubisco capacity. Only a marginal control on photosynthetic flux is exerted by Rubisco until over 50% of the available capacity is being used. Control increases as utilisation rises to 80%, and approaches unity (i.e. strict limitation) when more than 80% of the available capacity is being used. (iii) In low light, plants with reduced Rubisco have very high energy-dependent quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence (qE) and a decreased apparent quantum yield. It is argued that Rubisco still exerts marginal control in these conditions because decreased Rubisco leads to increased thylakoid energisation and high-energy dependent dissipation of light energy, and lower light-harvesting efficiency. (iv) The flux-control coefficient of stomata for photosynthesis was calculated from the flux-control coefficient of Rubisco and the internal CO2 concentration, by applying the connectivity theorem. Control by the stomata varies between zero and about 0.25. It is increased by increased irradiance, decreased CO2 or decreased vapour-pressure deficit. (v) Photosynthetic oscillations in saturating irradiance and CO2 are suppressed in decreased-activity transformants before the steady-state rate of photosynthesis is affected. This provides direct evidence that these oscillations reveal the presence of excess Rubisco. (vi) Comparison of the flux-control coefficients of Rubisco with mechanistic models of photosynthesis provides direct support for the reliability of these models in conditions where Rubisco has a flux-control coefficient approach unity (i.e. limits photosynthesis), but also indicates that these models are less useful in conditions where control is shared between Rubisco and other components of the photosynthetic apparatus.Abbreviations A assimilation rate - Ci intercellular CO2 concentration in the leaf - CR flux-control coefficient of Rubisco for photosynthesis - qE high-energy-state-dependent quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence - QA primary acceptor of PSII - rbc S gene for the nuclear-encoded small subunit of Rubisco - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase - Ru1,5bisP ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate - VPD vapour-pressure deficit  相似文献   

7.
Radioisotope techniques were used to compare photosynthetic CO2 fixation, activities of carboxylating enzymes, and the composition of photosynthates in 42 species of aquatic plants (emergent, floating, and submersed hydrophytes) collected from rivers Sysert' and Iset' in Sverdlovsk oblast (Russia). The submersed leaves, in comparison with the emergent and floating leaves, featured lower rates of potential photosynthesis (by 2.2 mg CO2/(dm2 h) on average), low content of the fraction I protein, and low activity of Rubisco and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC). The averaged activities of Rubisco and PEPC were diminished in submersed leaves by 10 and 1 mg/(dm2 h), respectively. Different hydrophyte groups showed similar composition of assimilates accumulated after 5-min photosynthesis and did not differ in this respect from terrestrial plants. However, the incorporation of 14C into sucrose and starch in submersed leaves (30 and 9% of total labeling, respectively) was lower than in emergent and floating leaves (45 and 15%, respectively). At the same time, the incorporation of 14C into C4 acids (malate and aspartate) was 1.5 times higher in submersed leaves than in other leaf types. Analysis of leaf differentiation, the Rubisco/PEPC activity ratio, the PEPC activity, and the composition of primary photosynthates in the pulse–chase experiments revealed no evidence of the C4 effect in the submersed hydrophytes examined. The adaptation of hydatophytes to specific conditions of an aquatic environment was structurally manifested in the reduction (by a factor of 3–5) in the number of chloroplasts per 1 cm2 leaf area. This small number of chloroplasts was responsible for low photosynthetic rates in submersed leaves, although metabolic activities of individual chloroplasts were similar for all three hydrophyte groups.  相似文献   

8.
Data for the maximum carboxylation velocity of ribulose-1,5-biosphosphate carboxylase, Vm, and the maximum rate of whole-chain electron transport, Jm, were calculated according to a photosynthesis model from the CO2 response and the light response of CO2 uptake measured on ears of wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv. Arkas), oat (Avena sativa L. cv. Lorenz), and barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Aramir). The ratio Jm/Vm is lower in glumes of oat and awns of barley than it is in the bracts of wheat and in the lemmas and paleae of oat and barley. Light-microscopy studies revealed, in glumes and lemmas of wheat and in the lemmas of oat and barley, a second type of photosynthesizing cell which, in analogy to the Kranz anatomy of C4 plants, can be designated as a bundle-sheath cell. In wheat ears, the CO2-compensation point (in the absence of dissimilative respiration) is between those that are typical for C3 and C4 plants.A model of the CO2 uptake in C3–C4 intermediate plants proposed by Peisker (1986, Plant Cell Environ. 9, 627–635) is applied to recalculate the initial slopes of the A(pc) curves (net photosynthesis rate versus intercellular partial pressure of CO2) under the assumptions that the Jm/Vm ratio for all organs investigated equals the value found in glumes of oat and awns of barley, and that ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase is redistributed from mesophyll to bundle-sheath cells. The results closely match the measured values. As a consequence, all bracts of wheat ears and the inner bracts of oat and barley ears are likely to represent a C3–C4 intermediate type, while glumes of oat and awns of barley represent the C3 type.Abbreviations A net photosynthesis rate (mol·m-2·s-1) - Jm maximum rate of whole-chain electron transport (mol·e-·m-2·s-1) - pc (bar) intercellular partial pressure of CO2 - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density (mol quanta·m-2·s-1) - RuBPCase ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - RuBP ribulose bisphosphate - Vm maximum carboxylation velocity of RuBPCase (mol·m-2·s-1) - T* CO2 compensation point in the absence of dissimilative respiration (bar)  相似文献   

9.
Wheat leaves were exposed to light treatments that excite preferentially Photosystem I (PS I) or Photosystem II (PS II) and induce State 1 or State 2, respectively. Simultaneous measurements of CO2 assimilation, chlorophyll fluorescence and absorbance at 820 nm were used to estimate the quantum efficiencies of CO2 assimilation and PS II and PS I photochemistry during State transitions. State transitions were found to be associated with changes in the efficiency with which an absorbed photon is transferred to an open PS II reaction centre, but did not correlate with changes in the quantum efficiencies of PS II photochemistry or CO2 assimilation. Studies of the phosphorylation status of the light harvesting chlorophyll protein complex associated with PS II (LHC II) in wheat leaves and using chlorina mutants of barley which are deficient in this complex demonstrate that the changes in the effective antennae size of Photosystem II occurring during State transitions require LHC II and correlate with the phosphorylation status of LHC II. However, such correlations were not found in maize leaves. It is concluded that State transitions in C3 leaves are associated with phosphorylation-induced modifications of the PS II antennae, but these changes do not serve to optimise the use of light absorbed by the leaf for CO2 assimilation.Abbreviations Fm, Fo, Fv maximal, minimal and variable fluorescence yields - Fm, Fv maximal and variable fluorescence yields in a light adapted state - LHC II light harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein complex associated with PS II - qP photochemical quenching - A820 light-induced absorbance change at 820 nm - PS I, PS II relative quantum efficiencies of PS I and PS II photochemistry - CO 2 quantum yield of CO2 assimilation  相似文献   

10.
Transgenic tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv. W38) with an antisense gene directed against the mRNA of the ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) small subunit was used to determine the kinetic properties of Rubisco in vivo. The leaves of these plants contained only 34% as much Rubisco as those of the wild type, but other photosynthetic components were not significantly affected. Consequently, the rate of CO2 assimilation by the antisense plants was limited by Rubisco activity over a wide range of CO2 partial pressures. Unlike in the wild-type leaves, where the rate of regeneration of ribulose bisphosphate limited CO2 assimilation at intercellular partial pressures above 400 ubar, photosynthesis in the leaves of the antisense plants responded hyperbolically to CO2, allowing the kinetic parameters of Rubisco in vivo to be inferred. We calculated a maximal catalytic turnover rate, kcat, of 3.5+0.2 mol CO2·(mol sites)–1·s–1 at 25° C in vivo. By comparison, we measured a value of 2.9 mol CO2·(mol sites)–1·–1 in vitro with leaf extracts. To estimate the Michaelis-Menten constants for CO2 and O2, the rate of CO2 assimilation was measured at 25° C at different intercellular partial pressures of CO2 and O2. These measurements were combined with carbon-isotope analysis (13C/12C) of CO2 in the air passing over the leaf to estimate the conductance for transfer of CO2 from the substomatal cavities to the sites of carboxylation (0.3 mol·m–2·s–1·bar–1) and thus the partial pressure of CO2 at the sites of carboxylation. The calculated Michaelis-Menten constants for CO2 and O2 were 259 ±57 bar (8.6±1.9M) and 179 mbar (226 M), respectively, and the effective Michaelis-Menten constant for CO2 in 200 mbar O2 was 549 bar (18.3 M). From measurements of the photocompensation point (* = 38.6 ubar) we estimated Rubisco's relative specificity for CO2, as opposed to O2 to be 97.5 in vivo. These values were dependent on the size of the estimated CO2-transfer conductance.Abbreviations and Symbols A CO2-assimilation rate - gw conductance for CO2 transfer from the substomatal cavities to the sites of carboxylation - Kc, Ko Michaelis-Menten constants for carboxylation, oxygenation of Rubisco - kcat Vcmax/[active site] - O partial pressure of O2 at the site of carboxylation - pc partial pressure of CO2 at the site of carboxylation - pi intercellular CO2 partial pressure - Rd day respiration (non-photorespiratory CO2 evolution) - Rubisco ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - RuBP ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate - Sc/o relative specificity factor for Rubisco - SSu small subunit of Rubisco - Vcmax, Vomax maximum rates of Rubisco carboxylation, oxygenation - * partial pressure of CO2 in the chloroplast at which photorespiratory CO2 evolution equals the rate of carboxylation  相似文献   

11.
B. Rothermel  R. Alscher 《Planta》1985,166(1):105-110
The effects of light and several photosynthetic inhibitors on the rate of sulfite metabolism in cells obtained from Cucumis sativus L. cotyledons was studied. The cells were treated with 200 M Na2SO3 and the disappearance of sulfite was monitored using either dithiobisnitrobenzoic acid or fuchsin. The rate of sulfite disappearance in light was double the dark rate. Disalicylidene propanediamine at 1 mM increased this light-enhanced metabolism approx. 50%; neither 1 M 3,4-dichlorophenyl-N,N-dimethylurea nor 0.1 mM cyanazine, which completely inhibited CO2-dependent oxygen evolution, affected the rate of sulfite metabolism. Addition of 200 M Na2SO3 to the cells partially inhibited 14CO2 fixation. The rate of sulfite consumption by the cells did not affect this inhibition. We conclude that light-dependent sulfite metabolism is cucumber cells may utilize reduced ferredoxin generated as a result of photosynthetic electron transport. An injurious interaction between CO2 fixation and sulfite appears to occur independently of the sulfite-metabolism process.Abbreviations DCMU 3,4-dichlorophenyl-N,N-dimethylurea - DSPD disalicylidene propanediamine - DTNB 5,5-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid)  相似文献   

12.
Measurement of the light response of photosynthetic CO2 uptake is often used as an implement in ecophysiological studies. A method is described to calculate photosynthetic parameters, such as the maximum rate of whole electron transport and dissimilative respiration in the light, from the light response of CO2 uptake. Examples of the light-response curves of flag leaves and ears of wheat (Triticum aestivum cv. ARKAS) are shown.Abbreviations and symbols A net photosynthesis rate - D 1 rate of dissimilative respiration occurring in the light - f loss factor - I incident PPFD - I effective absorbed PPFD - J rate of whole electron transport - J m maximum rate of whole electron transport - p c intercellular CO2 partial pressure - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density - q effectivity factor for the use of light (electrons/quanta) - absorption coefficient - I * CO2 compensation point in the absence of dissimilative respiration (bar) - II conversion factor for calculation of CO2 uptake from the rate of whole electron transport - convexity factor Gas-exchange rates relate to the projective area and are given in mol·m-2·s-1. Electron-transport rates are given in mol electrons·m-2·s-1; PPFD is given in mol quanta·m-2·s-1.  相似文献   

13.
One cultivar each of spring wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv. Arkas), oat (Avena sativa L. cv. Lorenz), and barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Aramir) was chosen in order to study the relative contributions of individual bracts to the gas exchange of whole ears. The distribution and frequency of the stomata on the bracts were examined. Gas exchange was measured at normal atmospheric CO2 (330 bar) and at high CO2 (2000 bar) on intact ears and on ears from which glumes or lemmas and pleae (wheat and oat) or awns (barley) had been removed.The relative contribution to the gas exchange of the whole organ is highest for the awns of barley ears. In wheat, the contribution of the glumes is slightly higher than that of the inner bracts before anthesis. Two weeks after anthesis the inner bracts contribute more than the glumes. This tendency of increasing importance of the inner bracts is also found in oat ears, but the relative amount of CO2 uptake by the glumes is higher than in wheat. These changes during ontogeny result from the better supply of light to the inner bracts caused by opening of the ears' structures during grain filling, which in part compensates for the decreasing photosynthetic capacity.The ratio of the photosynthesis rate at high CO2 to that at normal CO2 is lower for the glumes of oat and for the awns of barley than for the other bracts.Abbreviations A330, A2000 net photosynthesis rate, A330 at normal atmospheric CO2 (330 bar), A2000 at high CO2 (2000 bar) - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density - pc intercellular partial pressure of CO2  相似文献   

14.
The photosynthetic properties of a yellow lethal mutant, Oy/oy, and two yellow-green mutants of maize which are allelic (a homozygous recessive oy/oy and a heterozygous dominant Oy/+) were examined. Although Oy/oy had little or no chlorophyll or capacity for CO2 fixation compared to normal siblings, it had 28% as much ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase oxygenase (Rubisco) activity, and from 40% to near normal activities of C4 cycle enzymes.Both yellow-green mutants had only half as much chlorophyll per leaf area as normal green seedlings in greenhouse-grown plants in winter and spring. However, the absorbance of light by the mutants was relatively high, as their transmittance was only 5 to 8% greater than normal leaves. In winter-grown greenhouse plants, the activities of Rubisco and several C4 cycle enzymes in the mutants were unaffected and similar to those of normal seedlings on a leaf area basis. After allowing for small differences in leaf absorbance, the light response curves for photosynthesis in the mutants were similar on a leaf area basis but much higher on a chlorophyll basis than those of the normal seedlings. In spring-grown greenhouse plants the enzyme activities and photosynthesis rates were about 30% lower per leaf area in the yellow-green mutant leaves compared to the wild type. The maximum carboxylation efficiency (measured under low CO2 and 1000 mol quanta m-2 s-1) in the mutants and normal leaves was similar on a Rubisco protein basis. The results indicate that maize can undergo a 50% reduction in chlorophyll content without a corresponding reduction in enzymes of carbon assimilation, and still maintain a high capacity for photosynthesis.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - PEP phosphoenolypruvate - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase oxygenase This research was supported by CSIRO and by USDA Competitive Grant 86-CRCR-1-2036.  相似文献   

15.
Explants excised from strawberry (Fragaria x ananassa Duch.) plantlets were cultured in vitro for 21 days on half-strength MS (Murashige & Skoog 1962) basal liquid medium with 20 g l-1 sucrose and without sugar in the vessels capped with gas permeable microporous polypropylene film. The experiments were conducted under CO2 nonenriched (350–450 mol mol-1 in the culture room) and CO2 enriched (2,000 mol mol-1 during the photoperiod in the culture room) conditions with a PPF (photosynthetic photon flux) of 200 mol m-2 s-1. The CO2 concentration in the vessels decreased to approximately 200 mol mol-1 during the photoperiod on day 21 under CO2 nonenriched conditions. The fresh and dry weight, net photosynthetic rate (NPR) per plantlet, NPR per g leaf fresh weight, NPR per g leaf dry weight, the number of unfolded leaves, and ion uptake of PO4 3-, NO3 -, Ca2+, Mg2+ and K+ on day 21 were the greatest under photoautotrophic (no sugar in the medium) and CO2 enriched conditions. The residual percent of PO4 3- was 3% on day 21 under photoautotrophic and CO2 enriched conditions.Abbreviations MS Murashige & Skoog (1962) basal medium composition - NPR net photosynthetic rate - PPF photosynthetic photon flux  相似文献   

16.
A. Laisk  O. Kiirats  V. Oja  U. Gerst  E. Weis  U. Heber 《Planta》1992,186(3):434-441
Exchange of CO2 and O2 and chlorophyll fluorescence were measured in the presence of 360 1 · 1–1 CO2 in nitrogen in Helianthus annuss L. leaves which had been preconditioned in the dark or at a photon flux density (PFD) of 24 mol · m–2 · s–1 either in 21 or 0% O2. An initial light-dependent O2 outburst of 6 mol · m–2 was measured after aerobic dark incubation. It was attributed to the reduction of electron carriers, predominantly plastoquinone. The maximum initial rate of O2 evolution at PFD 8000 mol · m–2 · s–1 was 170 mol · m–2 · s–2 or about four times the steady CO2-and light-saturated rate of photosynthesis. Fluorescence measurements showed that the rate was still acceptor-limited. Fast O2 evolution ceased after electron carriers were reduced in the dark-adapted leaf, but continued for a short time at the lower rate of 62 mol · m–2 · s–1 in the light-adapted leaf. The data are interpreted to show that enzymes involved in 3-phosphoglycerate reduction are dark-inhibited, but were fully active in low light. In a dark-adapted leaf, respiratory CO2 evolution continued under nitrogen; it was partially inhibited by illumination. Prolonged exposure of a leaf to anaerobic conditions caused reducing equivalents to accumulate. This was shown by a slowly increasing chlorophyll fluorescence yield which indicated the reduction of the PSII acceptor QA in the dark. When the leaf was illuminated, no O2 evolution was detected from short light pulses, although transient O2 production was appreciable during longer light pulses. This indicates that an electron donor (pool size about 2–3 e/PSII reaction center) became reduced in the dark and the first photons were used to oxidise this donor instead of water.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - CRC carbon reduction cycle - GAPDH NADP-glyceraldehyde-phosphate dehydrogenase - PFD photon flux density - PGA 3-phosphoglycerate - RuBP ribulose bisphosphate - TCA tricarboxylic acid cycle To whom correspondence should be addressedThis work received support by the Estonian Academy of Sciences, the Gottfried-Wilhelm-Leibniz Program of the Deutsche For-schungsgemeinschaft and the Sonderforschungsbereich 251 of the University of Würzburg.  相似文献   

17.
Onion (Allium cepa L.) plants were examined to determine the photosynthetic role of CO2 that accumulates within their leaf cavities. Leaf cavity CO2 concentrations ranged from 2250 L L–1 near the leaf base to below atmospheric (<350 L L–1) near the leaf tip at midday. There was a daily fluctuation in the leaf cavity CO2 concentrations with minimum values near midday and maximum values at night. Conductance to CO2 from the leaf cavity ranged from 24 to 202 mol m–2 s–1 and was even lower for membranes of bulb scales. The capacity for onion leaves to recycle leaf cavity CO2 was poor, only 0.2 to 2.2% of leaf photosynthesis based either on measured CO2 concentrations and conductance values or as measured directly by 14CO2 labeling experiments. The photosynthetic responses to CO2 and O2 were measured to determine whether onion leaves exhibited a typical C3-type response. A linear increase in CO2 uptake was observed in intact leaves up to 315 L L–1 of external CO2 and, at this external CO2 concentration, uptake was inhibited 35.4±0.9% by 210 mL L–1 O2 compared to 20 mL L–1 O2. Scanning electron micrographs of the leaf cavity wall revealed degenerated tissue covered by a membrane. Onion leaf cavity membranes apparently are highly impermeable to CO2 and greatly restrict the refixation of leaf cavity CO2 by photosynthetic tissue.Abbreviations Ca external CO2 concentration - Ci intercellular CO2 concentration - CO2 compensation concentration - PPFR photosynthetic photon fluence rate  相似文献   

18.
The development of soybean leaves grown at fluctuating photon flux density between 100 and 1500M m-2s-1 with a period of 160 sec were compared to leaves developed under continuous light with the same mean photon flux density. Number of epidermal cells and stomata, leaf area and specific leaf weight were not affected by the periodic fluctuation of photon flux density. Chloroplastic pigment concentration and chlorophyll fluorescence reveal some photoinhibitory effects of the high photon flux density phase. Stomatal and internal CO2 conductance and the quantum yield were not affected by the light regime. In contrast ribulose 1.5 bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase activity before in vitro activation by CO2 and Mg++ was stimulated by the periodic illumination whereas the total amount of the enzyme and the internal leaf CO2 conductance remained steady. In conclusion, there was no major difference between leaves of plant grown either under a steady or under a periodic fluctuation of the photon flux density except some photoinhibitory symptoms under fluctuating illumination, and a higher in vivo level of activation of the Rubisco.  相似文献   

19.
Growth at elevated CO2 often decreases photosynthetic capacity (acclimation) and leaf N concentrations. Lower-shaded canopy leaves may undergo both CO2 and shade acclimation. The relationship of acclimatory responses of flag and lower-shaded canopy leaves of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) to the N content, and possible factors affecting N gain and distribution within the plant were investigated in a wheat crop growing in field chambers set at ambient (360 μmol mol−1) and elevated (700 μmol mol−1) CO2, and with two amounts of N fertilizer (none and 70 kg ha−1 applied on 30 April). Photosynthesis, stomatal conductance and transpiration at a common measurement CO2, chlorophyll and Rubisco levels of upper-sunlit (flag) and lower-shaded canopy leaves were significantly lower in elevated relative to ambient CO2-grown plants. Both whole shoot N and leaf N per unit area decreased at elevated CO2, and leaf N declined with canopy position. Acclimatory responses to elevated CO2 were enhanced in N-deficient plants. With N supply, the acclimatory responses were less pronounced in lower canopy leaves relative to the flag leaf. Additional N did not increase the fraction of shoot N allocated to the flag and penultimate leaves. The decrease in photosynthetic capacity in both upper-sunlit and lower-shaded leaves in elevated CO2 was associated with a decrease in N contents in above-ground organs and with lower N partitioning to leaves. A single relationship of N per unit leaf area to the transpiration rate accounted for a significant fraction of the variation among sun-lit and shaded leaves, growth CO2 level and N supply. We conclude that reduced stomatal conductance and transpiration can decrease plant N, leading to acclimation to CO2 enrichment.  相似文献   

20.
There is continuing controversy over whether a degree of C4 photosynthetic metabolism exists in ears of C3 cereals. In this context, CO2 exchange and the initial products of photosynthesis were examined in flag leaf blades and various ear parts of two durum wheat (Triticum durum Desf.) and two six-rowed barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) cultivars. Three weeks after anthesis, the CO2 compensation concentration at 210 mmol mol?1 O2 in durum wheat and barley ear parts was similar to or greater than that in flag leaves. The O2 dependence of the CO2 compensation concentration in durum wheat ear parts, as well as in the flag leaf blade, was linear, as expected for C3 photosynthesis. In a complementary experiment, intact and attached ears and flag leaf blades of barley and durum wheat were radio-labelled with 14CO2 during a 10s pulse, and the initial products of fixation were studied in various parts of the ears (awns, glumes, inner bracts and grains) and in the flag leaf blade. All tissues assimilated CO2 mainly by the Calvin (C3) cycle, with little fixation of 14CO2 into the C4 acids malate and aspartate (about 10% or less). These collective data support the conclusion that in the ear parts of these C3 cereals C4 photosynthetic metabolism is nil.  相似文献   

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