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1.
Macroalgae are generally used as indicators of coral reef status; thus, understanding the drivers and mechanisms leading to increased macroalgal abundance are of critical importance. Ocean acidification (OA) due to elevated carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations has been suggested to stimulate macroalgal growth and abundance on reefs. However, little is known about the physiological mechanisms by which reef macroalgae use CO2 from the bulk seawater for photosynthesis [i.e., (1) direct uptake of bicarbonate (HCO3 ?) and/or CO2 by means of carbon concentrating mechanisms (CCM) and (2) the diffusive uptake of CO2], which species could benefit from increased CO2 or which habitats may be more susceptible to acidification-induced algal proliferations. Here, we provide the first quantitative examination of CO2-use strategies in coral reef macroalgae and provide information on how the proportion of species and the proportional abundance of species utilising each of the carbon acquisition strategies varies across a gradient of terrestrial influence (from inshore to offshore reefs) in the Great Barrier Reef (GBR). Four macroalgal groups were identified based on their carbon uptake strategies: (1) CCM-only (HCO3 ? only users); (2) CCM-HCO3 ?/CO2 (active uptake HCO3 ? and/or CO2 use); (3) Non-CCM species (those relying on diffusive CO2 uptake); and (4) Calcifiers. δ13C values of macroalgae, confirmed by pH drift assays, show that diffusive CO2 use is more prevalent in deeper waters, possibly due to low light availability that limits activity of CCMs. Inshore shallow reefs had a higher proportion of CCM-only species, while reefs further away from terrestrial influence and exposed to better water quality had a higher number of non-CCM species than inshore and mid-shelf reefs. As non-CCM macroalgae are more responsive to increased seawater CO2 and OA, reef slopes of the outer reefs are probably the habitats most vulnerable to the impacts of OA. Our results suggest a potentially important role of carbon physiology in structuring macroalgal communities in the GBR.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
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   

4.
The mechanisms for acquisition of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) in the red macroalga Gracilaria gaditana nom. prov. have been investigated. The capacity for HCO3 use by an extracellular carbonic anhydrase (CA; EC 4.2.1.1), and by an anion exchanger with similar properties to that of red blood cells (AE1), has been quantified. It was illustrated by comparing O2 evolution rates with those theoretically supported by CO2, as well as by photosynthesis-pH curves. Both external and internal CA, and a direct uptake were involved in HCO3 use, since photosynthesis and pH evolution were affected by acetazolamide, 6-ethoxyzolamide (inhibitors of external and total CA, respectively) and 4,4′-diisothiocyanatostilbene-2,2′-disulfonate, (DIDS; an inhibitor of HCO3 exchanger protein). The activity of the external CA was detected by a potentiometric method and by an alternative method based on the study of O2 evolution after addition of CO2 and acetazolamide. The latter method showed a residual photosynthetic rate due to direct HCO3 use. Inhibitors caused a reduction in the pH compensation points in pH-drift experiments. The CO2 compensation points for photosynthesis increased when the inhibitors were applied, indicating a suppresion of the pathways involved in the carbon-concentrating mechanism. The net photosynthesis rates as a function of DIC concentration displayed a biphasic pattern that could be supported by the occurrence of the two mechanisms of HCO3 use. The potential contribution to HCO3 acquisition by the DIDS-sensitive mechanism was higher after culturing at a high pH. Our results suggest that the HCO3 use by Gracilaria gaditana is carried out by the two DIC uptake mechanisms. These operate simultaneously with different affinities for DIC, the indirect HCO3 use by an external CA activity being the main pathway. The presence of a carbon-concentrating mechanism confers eco-physiological advantages in a fluctuating ecosystem subjected daily to high pHs and low DIC concentrations. Received: 3 July 1998 / Accepted: 30 November 1998  相似文献   

5.
Ulva lactuca, collected on the west coast of Sweden at the end of May, was able to utilize the HCO3 ? pool of seawater only through extracellular dehydration via carbonic anhydrase, followed by uptake of the CO2 formed. A decrease in the CO2 supply via this mechanism resulted in the gradual development of an additional method of HCO3 ? utilization, namely a direct uptake of HCO3 ? . Photosynthesis could then be supported by either a ‘HCO3 ? dehydration mechanism’ or a ‘HCO3 ? uptake mechanism’. Through selective inhibition of either of these mechanisms, the physiological properties of the other could be assessed. These properties suggest that the HCO3 ? uptake mechanism of U. lactuca is important under conditions when low concentrations of inorganic C, high pH and high external O2 concentrations would limit photosynthesis supported by the HCO3 ? dehydration mechanism. Such conditions may occur during intense irradiation of the alga in rockpools or in shallow bays with low rates of water exchange. The results are discussed in relation to a possible coupling between mechanisms for inorganic C acquisition and cell structure (or even morphology) of green macroalgae. They also illustrate some necessary precautions when using Michaelis–Menten kinetics for estimations of Vmax and K1/2 values.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
The ability of the morphologically complex cyanobacterium Chlorogloeopsis sp. ATCC 27193 to actively transport and accumulate inorganic carbon (C1= CO2+ HCO3?+ CO32?) for photosynthetic CO2 fixation was investigated. Mass-spectrometric assays revealed that Chlorogloeopsis cells grown under C1 limitation rapidly took up CO2 from the medium in a light-dependent reaction which was independent of CO2 fixation. Ethoxyzolamide, a carbonic anhydrase (CA) inhibitor, inhibited CO2 transport. Since electrometric and mass-spectrometric assays did not detect the presence of a periplasmic CA, it is suggested that CO2 transport was mediated by a CA-like activity which converted CO2 to HCO3? during passage across the membrane. Radiochemical assays, using H14CO3 as substrate, showed that C3-limited cells also had a high affinity (K0.5 HCO3?= 37 μM), Na+-independent HCO3? uptake mechanism. HCO3?uptake was light dependent and occurred against its electrochemical potential indicating a carrier-mediated, active transport process. The rate of Na+-independent HCO3? transport was sufficient to account for the steady state rate of CO2 fixation. Although not absolutely required. Na+ did specifically enhance the rate of HCO3? transport by up to 2-fold, but had no effect on the apparent affinity of the transport system for HCO3? Combined CO2 and HCO3? transport resulted in C1 accumulation as high as 25 mM and in excess of 300 times the external concentration. The C1 pool was the source of CO2 for photo-synthetic fixation and was generated, presumably, by the dehydration of HCO3? catalyzed by an intracellular CA. The collective evidence indicates that Chlorogloeopsis has a physiologically functional CO2-concentrating mechanism which is essential for photosynthesis.  相似文献   

8.
Mass spectromelry has been used to investigate the uptake of CO2 by two marine diatoms, Phaeodactylum tricornutum and Cyclotella sp. The time course of CO2 formation in the dark after addition of 100 mmol m?3 dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) to cell suspensions showed that external carbonic anhydrase (CA) was not present in cells of P. tricornutum but was present in Cyclotella sp. In the absence of external CA, or when it was inhibited by 5 mmol m?3 acetazolamide, cells of both species preincubated with 100 mmol m?3 DIG rapidly depleted almost all of the free CO2 (3·2mmol m?31 at pH7·5) from the suspending medium within seconds of illumination and prior to the onset of steady-state photosynthesis. Addition of bovine CA quickly restored the HCO3?–CO2 equilibrium in the medium, indicating that the initial depletion of CO2 resulted from the selective uptake of CO2 rather than uptake of all DIG species. Transfer of cells to the dark caused a rapid increase in the CO2 concentration in the medium, largely as a result of the efflux of unfixed inorganic carbon from the cells. The measured CO2 uptake rates for both species accounted for 50% of the total DIG uptake at HCO3?–CO2 equilibrium, indicating that HCOHCO3? was also being taken up. These results indicate that both Phaeodactylum tricornutum and Cyclotella sp. have the capacity to transport CO2 actively against concentration and pH gradients.  相似文献   

9.
Macrocystis pyrifera is a widely distributed, highly productive, seaweed. It is known to use bicarbonate (HCO3?) from seawater in photosynthesis and the main mechanism of utilization is attributed to the external catalyzed dehydration of HCO3? by the surface‐bound enzyme carbonic anhydrase (CAext). Here, we examined other putative HCO3? uptake mechanisms in M. pyrifera under pHT 9.00 (HCO3?: CO2 = 940:1) and pHT 7.65 (HCO3?: CO2 = 51:1). Rates of photosynthesis, and internal CA (CAint) and CAext activity were measured following the application of AZ which inhibits CAext, and DIDS which inhibits a different HCO3? uptake system, via an anion exchange (AE) protein. We found that the main mechanism of HCO3? uptake by M. pyrifera is via an AE protein, regardless of the HCO3?: CO2 ratio, with CAext making little contribution. Inhibiting the AE protein led to a 55%–65% decrease in photosynthetic rates. Inhibiting both the AE protein and CAext at pHT 9.00 led to 80%–100% inhibition of photosynthesis, whereas at pHT 7.65, passive CO2 diffusion supported 33% of photosynthesis. CAint was active at pHT 7.65 and 9.00, and activity was always higher than CAext, because of its role in dehydrating HCO3? to supply CO2 to RuBisCO. Interestingly, the main mechanism of HCO3? uptake in M. pyrifera was different than that in other Laminariales studied (CAext‐catalyzed reaction) and we suggest that species‐specific knowledge of carbon uptake mechanisms is required in order to elucidate how seaweeds might respond to future changes in HCO3?:CO2 due to ocean acidification.  相似文献   

10.
HCO3? utilization by the marine microalga Nannochloropsis oculata was investigated using a pH drift technique in a closed system. Light-dependent alkalization of the medium resulted in a final pH of 10.5, confirming substantial HCO3? use by this alga. Alkalinity remained constant throughout the pH drift. Measurement of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) or the uptake of H14CO3? showed that nearly 50% of the total DIC remained external to the plasma membrane on completion of a pH drift. The rate of light-driven alkalization was inhibited by 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) and thus was dependent on photosynthesis. Light-driven alkalization was not inhibited by a membrane-impermeable inhibitor of carbonic anhydrase (CA), dcxtran-bound sulphonamide (DBS), indicating that external CA was not involved in HCO3? utilization. The anion-cxchangc inhibitor 4′,4′-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2-disulphonic acid (DIDS) completely inhibited light-driven alkalization of the medium and H14CO3? uptake, providing unequivocal support for a direct uptake of H14CO3?. Chloride ions were essential for DIC-dependent photosynthetic oxygen evolution, suggesting that bicarbonate transport occurs by HCO3?/CI? exchange.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
Carbonic anhydrase (CA) is a zinc metalloenzyme that catalyzes the reversible hydration–dehydration reactions of CO2. It is present in high abundance in the cytoplasm of vertebrate red blood cells, where it contributes to CO2 excretion. A membrane-bound CA isoform (CA IV) is also present in the lungs of mammals and reptiles, but plays little role in CO2 excretion. The gills of teleost fish appear to lack plasma-accessible CA activity. In elasmobranchs, however, evidence gathered using a variety of physiological, biochemical and molecular approaches suggests that CA IV is present in the gills, and that at least in dogfish, this CA IV makes a significant contribution to CO2 excretion by catalyzing the dehydration of plasma HCO3?. The contribution of CA IV to CO2 excretion is favoured by unusually high relative plasma buffering that aids in the provision of protons for HCO3? dehydration. Moreover, reduced emphasis on HCO3? flux through the red blood cell may reflect the occurrence of a slower turnover cytosolic CA in dogfish. This model of CO2 excretion, in which HCO3? dehydration in the red blood cell catalyzed by cytosolic CA and HCO3? dehydration in the plasma catalyzed by membrane-bound CA IV are of comparable importance, has been described for the dogfish. Further work is required to determine whether it applies to elasmobranch fish as a group.  相似文献   

13.
CO2 uptake and transport in leaf mesophyll cells   总被引:1,自引:3,他引:1  
Abstract The acquisition of inorganic carbon for photosynthetic assimilation by leaf mesophyll cells and chloroplasts is discussed with particular reference to membrane permeation of CO2 and HCO?3. Experimental evidence indicates that at the apoplast pH normally experienced by leaf mesophyll cells (pH 6–7) CO2 is the principal species of inorganic carbon taken up. Uptake of HCO?3 may also occur under certain circumstances (i.e. pH 8.5), but its contribution to the net flux of inorganic carbon is small and HCO?3 uptake does not function as a CO2-concentrating mechanism. Similarly, CO2 rather than HCO?3 appears to be the species of inorganic carbon which permeates the chloroplast envelope. In contrast to many C3 aquatic plants and C4 plants, C3 terrestrial plants lack specialized mechanisms for the acquisition and transport of inorganic carbon from the intercellular environment to the site of photosynthetic carboxylation, but rely upon the diffusive uptake of CO2.  相似文献   

14.
A testable mechanism of CO2 accumulation in photolithotrophs, originally suggested by Pronina & Semenenko, is quantitatively analysed. The mechanism involves (as does the most widely accepted hypothesis) the delivery of HCO3? to the compartment containing Rubisco. It differs in proposing subsequent HCO3? entry (by passive uniport) to the thylakoid lumen, followed by carbonic anhydrase activity in the lumen; uncatalysed conversion of HCO3? to CO2, even at the low pH of the lumen, is at least 300 times too slow to account for the rate of inorganic C acquisition. Carbonic anhydrase converts the HCO3? to CO2 at the lower pH maintained in the illuminated thylakoid lumen by the light-driven H+ pump, generating CO2 at 10 times or more the thylakoid HCO3? concentration. Efflux of this CO2 can suppress Rubisco oxygenase activity and stimulate carboxylase activity in the stroma. This mechanism differs from the widely accepted hypotheses in the required location of carbonic anhydrase, i.e. in the thylakoid lumen rather than the stroma or pyrenoid, and in the need for HCO3? influx to thylakoids. The capacity for anion (assayed as Cl?) entry by passive uniport reported for thylakoid membranes is adequate for the proposed mechanism; if the Cl? channel does not transport HCO3?, HCO3? entry could be by combination of the Cl? channel with a Cl? HCO3? antiporter. This mechanism is particularly appropriate for organisms which lack overt accumulation of total inorganic C in cells, but which nevertheless have the gas exchange characteristics of an organism with a CO2-concentrating mechanism.  相似文献   

15.
External carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity in Chlorella saccharophila is suppressed by growth at high dissolved inorganic carbon and at acid pH. External CA activity was shown to be suppressed by growth at pHs below 7.0, with total repression at pH5.0. Growth in the presence of the buffer 3-[N-Morpholino]propane-sulphonic acid (MOPS) between pH 7 and 8 suppressed CA activity. Cells grown at pH8.0 aerated at 6 dm3 h?1 exhibited external CA activity of 5 units mg?1 Chl once the dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) was reduced to 300 mmol m?3, and this increased to 30 units mg?1 Chl over a period of 3d while the DIC dropped to 30mmol m?3. Cells aerated at 180 dm3 h?1 showed a similar trend in CA activity, although the onset was delayed by 1 d and the DIC did not drop below 300 mmol m?3. Cells grown at pH 7.8 near an air equilibrium DIC of 300 mmol m?3had no detectable external CA activity. It is probable that it is the CO2 supply to the cell, and not total DIC or HCO?3 which controls external CA activity. Cells grown at pH 5.0 had no detectable activity, although they reduced the CO2 concentration to 0.6 mmol m?3. The loss of CA upon transfer of air-grown cells to 10 mmol mol?1 CO2 took place over 48 h and was light dependent, while the loss upon transfer from alkaline pH to acid pH look place over 12 h and was independent of light. The effects of pH are independent of the response to CO2.  相似文献   

16.
Prior analysis of inorganic carbon (Ci) fluxes in the diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum has indicated that transport of Ci into the chloroplast from the cytoplasm is the major Ci flux in the cell and the primary driving force for the CO2 concentrating mechanism (CCM). This flux drives the accumulation of Ci in the chloroplast stroma and generates a CO2 deficit in the cytoplasm, inducing CO2 influx into the cell. Here, the “chloroplast pump” model of the CCM in P. tricornutum is formalized and its consistency with data on CO2 and HCO3 ? uptake rates, carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity, intracellular Ci concentration, intracellular pH, and RubisCO characteristics is assessed. The chloroplast pump model can account for the major features of the data. Analysis of photosynthetic and Ci uptake rates as a function of external Ci concentration shows that the model has the most difficulty obtaining sufficiently low cytoplasmic CO2 concentrations to support observed CO2 uptake rates at low external Ci concentrations and achieving high rates of photosynthesis. There are multiple ways in which model parameters can be varied, within a plausible range, to match measured rates of photosynthesis and CO2 uptake. To increase CO2 uptake rates, CA activity can be increased, kinetic characteristics of the putative chloroplast pump can be enhanced to increase HCO3 ? export, or the cytoplasmic pH can be raised. To increase the photosynthetic rate, the permeability of the pyrenoid to CO2 can be reduced or RubisCO content can be increased.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
The use of stable isotope natural abundance measurements in plant ecophysiological research is discussed in the context of studies of 13C/12C ratios in marine plants, with emphasis on the uniqueness of the information given by natural abundance measurements and of the importance of complementary data obtained by other techniques in making full use of the natural abundance data. (1) Inorganic C acquisition and assimilation in marine plants can involve diffusive entry of CO2, or the occurrence of a CO2-concentrating mechanism frequently involving active HCO3? influx. For diffusive CO2 entry, the δ13C measurements can give unique information on the fractional limitation of photosynthesis by CO2 transport which, with photosynthetic rate measurements, can be used to compute transport conductances. For active HCO3?, influx, the δ13C values uniquely permit computation of the ratio of the bidirection fluxes (influx/efflux) which, with photon yield data, can be used to given information on the mechanism of the efflux. The analyses are absolutely dependent on external (non-δ13C) data distinguishing between diffusive CO2 entry and the occurrence of a CO2 concentrating mechanism. (2) δ13C measurements on marine photolithotrophs and on members of other trophic levels collected from the sea can give unique data on food webs, with measurements of δ values for other isotopes and compositional data adding precision to the interpretations. (3) Measurements of in situδ13C values for extant marine photolithotrophs, compared with δ13C values for ancient atmospheric CO2, can give unique information on the mechanism of atmospheric CO2 draw-down at the start of glacials; other information permits more concrete conclusions to be drawn.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
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   

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