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1.
Mesophyll protoplasts and bundle sheath strands were isolated from maize leaves. Light microscopic observation showed the preparations were pure and without cross contamination. Protein blot analysis of mesophyll and bundle sheath cell soluble protein showed that the concentration of pyruvate orthophosphate dikinase (EC 2.7.9.1) is about one-tenth as much in the bundle sheath cells as in mesophyll cells, but about eight times greater than that found in wheat leaves, on the basis of soluble protein. Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.31) was barely detectable in the bundle sheath cells, while ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.39) and NADP-dependent malic enzyme (EC 1.3.1.37) were exclusively present in the bundle sheath cells and were absent in the mesophyll cells. Whereas pyruvate, Pi dikinase was previously considered localized only in mesophyll cells of C4 plants, these results clearly demonstrate the presence of appreciable quantities of the enzyme in the bundle sheath cells of the C4 species maize.  相似文献   

2.
Engineering C4 photosynthesis into rice has been considered a promising strategy to increase photosynthesis and yield. A question that remains to be answered is whether expressing a C4 metabolic cycle into a C3 leaf structure and without removing the C3 background metabolism improves photosynthetic efficiency. To explore this question, we developed a 3D reaction diffusion model of bundle‐sheath and connected mesophyll cells in a C3 rice leaf. Our results show that integrating a C4 metabolic pathway into rice leaves with a C3 metabolism and mesophyll structure may lead to an improved photosynthesis under current ambient CO2 concentration. We analysed a number of physiological factors that influence the CO2 uptake rate, which include the chloroplast surface area exposed to intercellular air space, bundle‐sheath cell wall thickness, bundle‐sheath chloroplast envelope permeability, Rubisco concentration and the energy partitioning between C3 and C4 cycles. Among these, partitioning of energy between C3 and C4 photosynthesis and the partitioning of Rubisco between mesophyll and bundle‐sheath cells are decisive factors controlling photosynthetic efficiency in an engineered C3–C4 leaf. The implications of the results for the sequence of C4 evolution are also discussed.  相似文献   

3.
4.
The intercellular distribution of assimilatory sulfate reduction enzymes between mesophyll and bundle sheath cells was analyzed in maize (Zea mays L.) and wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) leaves. In maize, a C4 plant, 96 to 100% of adenosine 5′-phosphosulfate sulfotransferase and 92 to 100% of ATP sulfurylase activity (EC 2.7.7.4) was detected in the bundle sheath cells. Sulfite reductase (EC 1.8.7.1) and O-acetyl-l-serine sulfhydrylase (EC 4.2.99.8) were found in both bundle sheath and mesophyll cell types. In wheat, a C3 species, ATP sulfurylase and adenosine 5′-phosphosulfate sulfotransferase were found at equivalent activities in both mesophyll and bundle sheath cells. Leaves of etiolated maize plants contained appreciable ATP sulfurylase activity but only trace adenosine 5′-phosphosulfate sulfotransferase activity. Both enzyme activities increased in the bundle sheath cells during greening but remained at negligible levels in mesophyll cells. In leaves of maize grown without addition of a sulfur source for 12 d, the specific activity of adenosine 5′-phosphosulfate sulfotransferase and ATP sulfurylase in the bundle sheath cells was higher than in the controls. In the mesophyll cells, however, both enzyme activities remained undetectable. The intercellular distribution of enzymes would indicate that the first two steps of sulfur assimilation are restricted to the bundle sheath cells of C4 plants, and this restriction is independent of ontogeny and the sulfur nutritional status of the plants.  相似文献   

5.
Chloroplast photorelocation movement is extensively studied in C3 but not C4 plants. C4 plants have two types of photosynthetic cells: mesophyll and bundle sheath cells. Mesophyll chloroplasts are randomly distributed along cell walls, whereas bundle sheath chloroplasts are located close to the vascular tissues or mesophyll cells depending on the plant species. The cell-specific C4 chloroplast arrangement is established during cell maturation, and is maintained throughout the life of the cell. However, only mesophyll chloroplasts can change their positions in response to environmental stresses. The migration pattern is unique to C4 plants and differs from that of C3 chloroplasts. in this mini-review, we highlight the cell-specific disposition of chloroplasts in C4 plants and discuss the possible physiological significances.Key words: abscisic acid, aggregative movement, avoidance movement, blue light, bundle sheath cell, C4 plant, chloroplast, cytoskeleton, environmental stress, mesophyll cellChloroplasts can change their intracellular positions to optimize photosynthetic activity and/or reduce photodamage occurring in response to light irradiation. On treating with high-intensity light, the chloroplasts move away from the light to minimize photodamage (avoidance response). Meanwhile, on irradiating with low-intensity light, they move toward the light source to maximize photosynthesis (accumulation response). These chloroplast-photorelocation movements are observed in a wide variety of plant species from green algae to seed plants,13 although little attention has been paid to C4 plants. There is a report stating that monocotyledonous C4 plants showed changes in the light transmission of leaves in response to blue light,4 although the direction of migration of the chloroplasts is not described.C4 plants have two types of photosynthetic cells: mesophyll (M) cells and bundle sheath (BS) cells, which have numerous well-developed chloroplasts. BS cells surround the vascular tissues, while M cells encircle the cylinders of the BS cells (Fig. 1). The C4 dicarboxylate cycle of photosynthetic carbon assimilation is distributed between the two cell types, and acts as a CO2 pump to concentrate CO2 in the BS chloroplasts.5,6 C4 plants are divided into three subtypes on the basis of decarboxylating enzymes: NADP-malic enzyme (ME), NAD-ME and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase. Although the M chloroplasts of all C4 species are randomly distributed along the cell walls, BS chloroplasts are located either in a centripetal (close to the vascular tissue) or in a centrifugal (close to M cells) position, depending on the species (Fig. 1A).7 Thus, C4 M and BS cells have different systems for chloroplast positioning: an M cell-specific system for dispersing chloroplasts and a BS cell-specific system for holding chloroplasts in a centripetal or centrifugal disposition.Open in a separate windowFigure 1The intracellular arrangement of chloroplasts in finger millet (Eleusine coracana), an NAD-ME-type C4 plant. (A) Light micrograph of a transverse section of a leaf blade from a control plant. Bundle sheath (BS) cells surround the vascular tissues, while mesophyll (M) cells encircle the cylinders of the BS cells. BS chloroplasts are well developed, and are located in a centripetal position, whereas M chloroplasts are randomly distributed along the cell walls. B, bundle sheath cell; M, mesophyll cell; V, vascular bundle. (B) Transverse section of a leaf blade from a drought-stressed plant. Most M chloroplasts are aggregatively distributed toward the BS side, while the centripetal arrangement of BS chloroplasts is unchanged. (C and D) Transverse sections of leaf segments irradiated with blue light of intensity 500 µmol m−2 s−1 with or without 30 µM ABA for 8 h (C and D, respectively). The adaxial side of each leaf section (upper side in the photograph) was illuminated. In the absence of ABA, M chloroplasts exhibited avoidance movement on the illuminated side and aggregative movement on the opposite side. In the presence of ABA, aggregative movement was observed on both sides. Scale bars = 50 µm.  相似文献   

6.
Mayne BC 《Plant physiology》1971,47(5):600-605
Isolated mesophyll cells and bundle sheath cells of Digitaria sanguinalis were used to study the light-absorbing pigments and electron transport reactions of a plant which possesses the C4-dicarboxylic acid cycle of photosynthesis. Absorption spectra and chlorophyll determinations are presented showing that mesophyll cells have a chlorophyll a-b ratio of about 3.0 and bundle sheath cells have a chlorophyll a-b ratio of about 4.5. The absorption spectrum of bundle sheath cells has a greater absorption in the 700 nm region at liquid nitrogen temperature, and there is a relatively greater amount of a pigment absorbing at 670 nm in the bundle sheath cells compared to the mesophyll cells. Fluorescence emission spectra, at liquid nitrogen temperature, of mesophyll cells have a fluorescence 730 nm-685 nm ratio of about 0.82 and bundle sheath cells have a ratio of about 2.84. The reversible light-induced absorption change in the region of P700 absorption is similar in both cell types but bundle sheath cells exhibit about twice as much total P700 change as mesophyll cells on a total chlorophyll basis. The delayed light emission of bundle sheath cells is about one-half that of mesophyll cells. Both mesophyll cells and bundle sheath cells evolve oxygen in the presence of Hill oxidants with the mesophyll cells exhibiting about twice the activity of bundle sheath cells, and both activities are inhibited by 1 μM 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethylurea. Ferredoxin nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate reductase is present in both cells although it is about 3- or 4-fold higher in mesophyll cells than in bundle sheath cells. Glyceraldehyde 3-P dehydrogenases, both nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate, are equally distributed in the two cell types on a chlorophyll basis. Malic enzyme is localized in the bundle sheath cells.  相似文献   

7.
The C4 pathway: an efficient CO2 pump   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The C4 pathway is a complex combination of both biochemical and morphological specialisation, which provides an elevation of the CO2 concentration at the site of Rubisco. We review the key parameters necessary to make the C4 pathway function efficiently, focussing on the diffusion of CO2 out of the bundle sheath compartment. Measurements of cell wall thickness show that the thickness of bundle sheath cell walls in C4 species is similar to cell wall thickness of C3 mesophyll cells. Furthermore, NAD-ME type C4 species, which do not have suberin in their bundle sheath cell walls, do not appear to compensate for this with thicker bundle sheath cell walls. Uncertainties in the CO2 diffusion properties of membranes, such as the plasmalemma, choroplast and mitochondrial membranes make it difficult to estimate bundle sheath diffusion resistance from anatomical measurements, but the cytosol itself may account for more than half of the final calculated resistance value for CO2 leakage. We conclude that the location of the site of decarboxylation, its distance from the mesophyll interface and the physical arrangement of chloroplasts and mitochondria in the bundle sheath cell are as important to the efficiency of the process as the properties of the bundle sheath cell wall. Using a mathemathical model of C4 photosynthesis, we also examine the relationship between bundle sheath resistance to CO2 diffusion and the biochemical capacity of the C4 photosynthetic pathway and conclude that bundle sheath resistance to CO2 diffusion must vary with biochemical capacity if the efficiency of the C4 pump is to be maintained. Finally, we construct a mathematical model of single cell C4 photosynthesis in a C3 mesophyll cell and examine the theoretical efficiency of such a C4 photosynthetic CO2 pump. This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

8.
Compared to the large number of studies focused on the factors controlling C3 photosynthesis efficiency, there are relatively fewer studies of the factors controlling photosynthetic efficiency in C4 leaves. Here, we used a dynamic systems model of C4 photosynthesis based on maize (Zea mays) to identify features associated with high photosynthetic efficiency in NADP-malic enzyme (NADP-ME) type C4 photosynthesis. We found that two additional factors related to coordination between C4 shuttle metabolism and C3 metabolism are required for efficient C4 photosynthesis: (1) accumulating a high concentration of phosphoenolpyruvate through maintaining a large PGA concentration in the mesophyll cell chloroplast and (2) maintaining a suitable oxidized status in bundle sheath cell chloroplasts. These identified mechanisms are in line with the current cellular location of enzymes/proteins involved in the starch synthesis, the Calvin–Benson cycle and photosystem II of NADP-ME type C4 photosynthesis. These findings suggested potential strategies for improving C4 photosynthesis and engineering C4 rice.

High levels of PGA and PEP in mesophyll cell chloroplasts and a suitable oxidation state in bundle sheath cell chloroplasts are the requirements for efficient C4 photosynthesis.  相似文献   

9.
Sulfate assimilation and glutathione synthesis were traditionally believed to be differentially compartmentalised in C4 plants with the synthesis of cysteine and glutathione restricted to bundle sheath and mesophyll cells, respectively. Recent studies, however, showed that although ATP sulfurylase and adenosine 5′ phosphosulfate reductase, the key enzymes of sulfate assimilation, are localised exclusively in bundle sheath in maize and other C4 monocot species, this is not true for the dicot C4 species of Flaveria. On the other hand, enzymes of glutathione biosynthesis were demonstrated to be active in both types of maize cells. Therefore, in this review the recent findings on compartmentation of sulfate assimilation and glutathione metabolism in C4 plants will be summarised and the consequences for our understanding of sulfate metabolism and C4 photosynthesis will be discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Mature leaves of Cyperus rotundus, Cyperus polystachyos, Digitaria decumbens, and Digitaria sanguinalis were separated, using pectinase and cellulase, into pure preparations of mesophyll cells and bundle sheath strands. Assays on these distinct leaf cell types show a clear compartmentation of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase, >98%, into mesophyll cells and of ribulose-1, 5-diphosphate carboxylase and malic enzyme, >98%, into the bundle sheath strands. The results clearly establish that the major CO2 uptake in mesophyll cells is via a β-carboxylation and that both a decarboxylation and a carboxylation reaction occurs in the bundle sheath strands of plants using C4-dicarboxylic acid photosynthesis.  相似文献   

11.
12.
13.
Light microscopic examination of leaf cross-sections showed that Flaveria brownii A. M. Powell exhibits Kranz anatomy, in which distinct, chloroplast-containing bundle sheath cells are surrounded by two types of mesophyll cells. Smaller mesophyll cells containing many chloroplasts are arranged around the bundle sheath cells. Larger, spongy mesophyll cells, having fewer chloroplasts, are located between the smaller mesophyll cells and the epidermis. F. brownii has very low CO2 compensation points at different O2 levels, which is typical of C4 plants, yet it does show about 4% inhibition of net photosynthesis by 21% O2 at 30°C. Protoplasts of the three photosynthetic leaf cell types were isolated according to relative differences in their buoyant densities. On a chlorophyll basis, the activities of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase and pyruvate, Pi dikinase (carboxylation phase of C4 pathway) were highest in the larger mesophyll protoplasts, intermediate in the smaller mesophyll protoplasts, and lowest, but still present, in the bundle sheath protoplasts. In contrast, activities of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase, other C3 cycle enzymes, and NADP-malic enzyme showed a reverse gradation, although there were significant activities of these enzymes in mesophyll cells. As indicated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the banding pattern of certain polypeptides of the total soluble proteins from the three cell types also supported the distribution pattern obtained by activity assays of these enzymes. Analysis of initial 14C products in whole leaves and extrapolation of pulse-labeling curves to zero time indicated that about 80% of the CO2 is fixed into C4 acids (malate and aspartate), whereas about 20% of the CO2 directly enters the C3 cycle. This is consistent with the high activity of enzymes for CO2 fixation by the C4 pathway and the substantial activity of enzymes of the C3 cycle in the mesophyll cells. Therefore, F. brownii appears to have some capacity for C3 photosynthesis in the mesophyll cells and should be considered a C4-like species.  相似文献   

14.
Tashima  Maho  Yabiku  Takayuki  Ueno  Osamu 《Photosynthesis research》2021,147(2):211-227

C4-like plants represent the penultimate stage of evolution from C3 to C4 plants. Although Coleataenia prionitis (formerly Panicum prionitis) has been described as a C4 plant, its leaf anatomy and gas exchange traits suggest that it may be a C4-like plant. Here, we reexamined the leaf structure and biochemical and physiological traits of photosynthesis in this grass. The large vascular bundles were surrounded by two layers of bundle sheath (BS): a colorless outer BS and a chloroplast-rich inner BS. Small vascular bundles, which generally had a single BS layer with various vascular structures, also occurred throughout the mesophyll together with BS cells not associated with vascular tissue. The mesophyll cells did not show a radial arrangement typical of Kranz anatomy. These features suggest that the leaf anatomy of C. prionitis is on the evolutionary pathway to a complete C4 Kranz type. Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) and pyruvate, Pi dikinase occurred in the mesophyll and outer BS. Glycine decarboxylase was confined to the inner BS. Ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) accumulated in the mesophyll and both BSs. C. prionitis had biochemical traits of NADP-malic enzyme type, whereas its gas exchange traits were close to those of C4-like intermediate plants rather than C4 plants. A gas exchange study with a PEPC inhibitor suggested that Rubisco in the mesophyll could fix atmospheric CO2. These data demonstrate that C. prionitis is not a true C4 plant but should be considered as a C4-like plant.

  相似文献   

15.
A theoretical model of the composition of the inorganic carbon pool generated in C4 leaves during steady-state photosynthesis was derived. This model gives the concentrations of CO2 and O2 in the bundle sheath cells for any given net photosynthesis rate and inorganic carbon pool size. The model predicts a bundle sheath CO2 concentration of 70 micromolar during steady state photosynthesis in a typical C4 plant, and that about 13% of the inorganic carbon generated in bundle sheath cells would leak back to the mesophyll cells, predominantly as CO2. Under these circumstances the flux of carbon through the C4 acid cycle would have to exceed the net rate of CO2 assimilation by 15.5%. With the calculated O2 concentration of 0.44 millimolar, the potential photorespiratory CO2 loss in bundle sheath cells would be about 3% of CO2 assimilation. Among the factors having a critical influence on the above values are the permeability of bundle sheath chloroplasts to HCO3, the activity of carbonic anhydrase within these chloroplasts, the assumed stromal volume, and the permeability coefficients for CO2 and O2 diffusion across the interface between bundle sheath and mesophyll cells. The model suggests that as the net photosynthesis rate changes in C4 plants, the level and distribution of the components of the inorganic carbon pool change in such a way that C4 acid overcycling is maintained in an approximately constant ratio with respect to the net photosynthesis rate.  相似文献   

16.
Two-dimensional electrophoresis was performed on proteins of bundle sheath and mesophyll cells isolated from the C4 grass Digitaria sanguinalis (L.) Scop. Two-dimensional maps of these proteins were constructed and ribulose-1,5-biphosphate carboxylase and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase were identified. Of the total number of proteins found in both cell types, 36% were found only in bundle sheath cells, 17% only in mesophyll cells, and 47% in both cell types. By comparison, the distributions of 48 enzymes assayed in these cell types were 35%, 21%, and 44%, respectively.

Protein patterns were also compared with C4 plants exhibiting different decarboxylation pathways and, in both bundle sheath and mesophyll cells, proteins were found which were unique to each species. Bundle sheath proteins of one C4 species were found to be more like bundle sheath proteins of another C4 species than like mesophyll proteins of the same species.

  相似文献   

17.
Mesophyll cells and bundle sheath strands were isolated from Cyperus rotundus L. leaf sections infiltrated with a mixture of cellulase and pectinase followed by a gentle mortar and pestle grind. The leaf suspension was filtered through a filter assembly and mesophyll cells and bundle sheath strands were collected on 20-μm and 80-μm nylon nets, respectively. For the isolation of leaf epidermal strips longer leaf cross sections were incubated with the enzymes and gently ground as above. Loosely attached epidermal strips were peeled off with forceps. The upper epidermis, which lacks stomata, could be clearly distinguished from the lower epidermis which contains stomata. Microscopic evidence for identification and assessment of purity is provided for each isolated tissue.Enzymes related to the C4-dicarboxylic acid cycle such as phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase, malate dehydrogenase (NADP+), pyruvate, Pi dikinase were found to be localized, ≥98%, in mesophyll cells. Enzymes related to operating the reductive pentose phosphate cycle such as RuDP carboxylase, phosphoribulose kinase, and malic enzyme are distributed, ≥99%, in bundle sheath strands. Other photosynthetic enzymes such as aspartate aminotransferase, pyrophosphatase, adenylate kinase, and glyceraldehyde 3-P dehydrogenase (NADP+) are quite active in both mesophyll and bundle sheath tissues.Enzymes involved in photorespiration such as RuDP oxygenase, catalase, glycolate oxidase, hydroxypyruvate reductase (NAD+), and phosphoglycolate phosphatase are preferentially localized, ≥84%, in bundle sheath strands.Nitrate and nitrite reductase can be found only in mesophyll cells, while glutamate dehydrogenase is present, ≥96%, in bundle sheath strands.Starch- and sucrose-synthesizing enzymes are about equally distributed between the mesophyll and bundle sheath tissues, except that the less active phosphorylase was found mainly in bundle sheath strands. Fructose-1,6-diP aldolase, which is a key enzyme in photosynthesis and glycolysis leading to sucrose and starch synthesis, is localized, ≥90%, in bundle sheath strands. The glycolytic enzymes, phosphoglyceromutase and enolase, have the highest activity in mesophyll cells, while the mitochondrial enzyme, cytochrome c oxidase, is more active in bundle sheath strands.The distribution of total nutsedge leaf chlorophyll, protein, and PEP carboxylase activity, using the resolved leaf components, is presented. 14CO2 Fixation experiments with the intact nutsedge leaves and isolated mesophyll and bundle sheath tissues show that complete C4 photosynthesis is compartmentalized into mesophyll CO2 fixation via PEP carboxylase and bundle sheath CO2 fixation via RuDP carboxylase. These results were used to support the proposed pathway of carbon assimilation in C4-dicarboxylic acid photosynthesis and to discuss the individual metabolic characteristics of intact mesophyll cells, bundle sheath cells, and epidermal tissues.  相似文献   

18.
Mesophyll cells and bundle sheath strands were isolated rapidly from leaves of the C4 species Digitaria pentzii Stent. (slenderstem digitgrass) by a chopping and differential filtration technique. Rates of CO2 fixation in the light by mesophyll and bundle sheath cells without added exogenous substrates were 6.3 and 54.2 micromoles of CO2 per milligram of chlorophyll per hour, respectively. The addition of pyruvate or phosphoenolpyruvate to the mesophyll cells increased the rates to 15.2 and 824.6 micromoles of CO2 per milligram of chlorophyll per hour, respectively. The addition of ribose 5-phosphate increased the rate for bundle sheath cells to 106.8 micromoles of CO2 per milligram of chlorophyll per hour. These rates are comparable to those reported for cells isolated by other methods. The Km(HCO3) for mesophyll cells was 0.9 mm; for bundle sheath cells it was 1.3 mm at low, and 40 mm at higher HCO3 concentrations. After 2 hours of photosynthesis by mesophyll cells in 14CO2 and phosphoenolpyruvate, 88% of the incorporated 14C was found in organic acids and 0.8% in carbohydrates; for bundle sheath cells incubated in ribose 5-phosphate and ATP, more than 58% of incorporated 14C was found in carbohydrates, mainly starch, and 32% in organic acids. These findings, together with the stimulation of CO2 fixation by phosphoenolpyruvate for mesophyll cells and by ribose 5-phosphate plus ATP for bundle sheath cells, and the location of phosphoenolpyruvate and ribulose bisphosphate carboxylases in mesophyll and bundle sheath cells, respectively, are in accord with the scheme of C4 photosynthesis which places the Calvin cycle in the bundle sheath and C4 acid formation in mesophyll cells.  相似文献   

19.
Further evidence has been provided that C4-pathway species characterized by having low malic enzyme activity contain exceptionally high activities of aspartate and alanine aminotransferases. The total activity of both enzymes is distributed about equally between mesophyll and bundle sheath cells. However, the activity in the two cell types is due to different isoenzymes. In addition to the one quantitatively major isoenzyme associated with each cell type there were at least two additional isozymes of each aminotransferase detectable in the different species examined. Increases in activity of both aminotransferases of ten-fold or more were observed during greening of leaves of dark-grown plants. This increased activity was due specifically to the two quantitatively major isoenzymes associated, respectively, with the mesophyll and bundle sheath cells of green leaves, providing further evidence for their specific role in photosynthesis. Apparently, neither the aspartate nor alanine aminotransferases of mesophyll cells was associated with chloroplasts or other subcellular organelles. However, the major aspartate aminotransferase isoenzyme of bundle sheath cells was associated with mitochondria. These findings are discussed in relation to the probable role of aspartate and alanine aminotransferases in C4-pathway photosynthesis.  相似文献   

20.
Rapid metabolite diffusion across the mesophyll (M) and bundle sheath (BS) cell interface in C4 leaves is a key requirement for C4 photosynthesis and occurs via plasmodesmata (PD). Here, we investigated how growth irradiance affects PD density between M and BS cells and between M cells in two C4 species using our PD quantification method, which combines three‐dimensional laser confocal fluorescence microscopy and scanning electron microscopy. The response of leaf anatomy and physiology of NADP‐ME species, Setaria viridis and Zea mays to growth under different irradiances, low light (100 μmol m?2 s?1), and high light (1,000 μmol m?2 s?1), was observed both at seedling and established growth stages. We found that the effect of growth irradiance on C4 leaf PD density depended on plant age and species. The high light treatment resulted in two to four‐fold greater PD density per unit leaf area than at low light, due to greater area of PD clusters and greater PD size in high light plants. These results along with our finding that the effect of light on M‐BS PD density was not tightly linked to photosynthetic capacity suggest a complex mechanism underlying the dynamic response of C4 leaf PD formation to growth irradiance.  相似文献   

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