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

2.
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   

3.
Photon yields of oxygen evolution at saturating CO2 were determined for 44 species of vascular plants, representing widely diverse taxa, habitats, life forms and growth conditions. The photonyield values on the basis of absorbed light ( a) were remarkably constant among plants possessing the same pathway of photosynthetic CO2 fixation, provided the plants had not been subjected to environmental stress. The mean a value ±SE for 37 C3 species was 0.106±0.001 O2·photon-1. The five C4 species exhibited lower photon yields and greater variation than the C3 species ( a=0.0692±0.004). The a values for the two Crassulaceanacid-metabolism species were similar to those of C3 species. Leaf chlorophyll content had little influence on a over the range found in normal, healthy leaves. Chlorophyll fluorescence characteristics at 77 K were determined for the same leaves as used for the photon-yield measurements. Considerable variation in fluorescence emission both at 692 nm and at 734 nm, was found 1) among the different species; 2) between the upper and lower surfaces of the same leaves; and 3) between sun and shade leaves of the same species. By contrast, the ratio of variable to maximum fluorescence emission at 692 nm (Fv/FM, 692) remained remarkably constant (The mean value for the C3 species was 0.832±0.004). High-light treatments of shade leaves resulted in a reduction in both a and the Fv/FM, 692 ratio. The extent of the reductions increased with time of exposure to bright light. A linear relationship was obtained when a was plotted against Fv/FM, 692. The results show that determinations of the photon yield of O2 evolution and the Fv/FM, 692 ratio can serve as excellent quantitative measures of photoinhibition of overall photosynthetic energy-conversion system and of photochemistry of photosystem II, respectively. This is especially valuable in field work where it is often impossible to obtain appropriate controls.Abbreviations and symbols CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism - PFD photon flux density (photon fluence rate) - PSI, PSII photosystem I, II - Fo, FM, Fv instantaneous, maximum, variable fluorescence emission - absorptance - a photon yield (absorbed light) - i photon yield (incident light) C.I.W.-D.P.B. Publication No. 923  相似文献   

4.
Susanne von Caemmerer 《Planta》1989,178(4):463-474
A model of leaf, photosynthesis has been developed for C3–C4 intermediate species found in the generaPanicum, Moricandia, Parthenium andMollugo where no functional C4 pathway has been identified. Model assumptions are a functional C3 cycle in both mesophyll and bundle-sheath cells and that glycine formed in the mesophyll, as a consequence of the oxygenase activity of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase (Rubisco, EC 4.1.1.39), diffuses to the bundle sheath, where most of the photorespiratory CO2 is released. The model describes the observed gas-exchange characteristics of these C3–C4 intermediates, such as low CO2-compensation points () at an O2 pressure of 200 mbar, a curvilinear response of to changing O2 pressures, and typical responses of CO2-assimilation rate to intercellular CO2 pressure. The model predicts that bundle-sheath CO2 concentration is highest at low mesophyll CO2 pressures and decreases as mesophyll CO2 pressure increases. A partitioning of 5–15% of the total leaf Rubisco into the bundle-sheath cells and a bundlesheath conductance similar to that proposed for C4 species best mimics the gas-exchange results. The model predicts C3-like carbon-isotope discrimination for photosynthesis at atmospheric levels of CO2, but at low CO2 pressures it predicts a higher discrimination than is typically found during C3 photosynthesis at lower CO2 pressures.Abbreviations and symbols PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase (EC 4.1.1.39) - RuBP ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate - p(CO2) partial pressure of CO2 - p(O2) partial pressure of O2. See also p. 471  相似文献   

5.
Photosynthetic rates and related anatomical characteristics of leaves developed at three levels of irradiance (1200, 300 and 80 umol · m–2 · s–1) were determined in the C4-like species Flaveria brownii A.M. Powell, the C3–C4-intermediate species F. linearis Lag., and the F1 hybrid between them (F. brownii × F. linearis). In the C3–C4 and F1 plants, increases in photosynthetic capacity per unit leaf area were strongly correlated with changes in mesophyll area per unit leaf area. The C4-like plant F. brownii, however, showed a much lower correlation between photosynthetic capacity and mesophyll area per unit leaf area. Plants of F. brownii developed at high irradiance showed photosynthetic rates per unit of mesophyll cell area 50% higher than those plants developed at medium irradiance. These results along with an increase in water-use efficiency are consistent with an increase of C4 photosynthesis in high-irradiance-grown F. brownii plants, whereas in the other two genotypes such plasticity seems to be absent. Photosynthetic discrimination against 13C in the three genotypes was less at high than at low irradiance, with the greatest change occurring in F. brownii. Discrimination against 13C expressed as 13C was linearly correlated (r 2 = 0.81; P<0.001) with the ratio of bundle-sheath volume to mesophyll cell area when all samples from the three genotypes were combined. This tissue ratio increased for F. brownii and the F1 hybrid as growth irradiance increased, indicating a greater tendency towards Kranz anatomy. The results indicated that F. brownii had plasticity in its C4-related anatomical and physiological characteristics as a function of growth irradiance, whereas plasticity was less evident in the F1 hybrid and absent in F. linearis.Abbreviations A leaf surface area - Ama, Amn, Alm total ma, mn or lm cell surface area - bs vascular bundle sheath - lm large spongy-mesophyll cells - ma mesophyll cells adjacent to bundle sheath - mn mesophyll cells not adjacent to bundle sheath - Pn net photosynthesis - (H, M, L) PPFD (high, medium, low) photosynthetic photon flux density - SLDW specific leaf dry wight - Vbs bs volume - V(ma + mn + bs) total photosynthetic tissue volume - 13C 13C discrimination We thank Mrs. Lisa Smith for technical assistance in light microscopy and Dr. Ned Friedman (Department of Botany, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, USA) for the use of digitizing equipment. Participation of Dr. J.L. Araus in this work was supported by a grant Beca de Especialización para Doctores y Tecnólogos en el Extranjero, from Ministerio de Educatión y Ciencia, Spain.  相似文献   

6.
Short-term discrimination in assimilation of stable isotopes of carbon was measured for leaves of the C3 speciesPhaseolus vulgaris L. cv. Hawkesbury Wonder andFlaveria pringlei Gandoger, the C4 speciesAmaranthus edulis Speg., and the C3–C4 intermediate speciesPanicum milioides Nees ex. Trin,Flaveria floridana Johnson, andFlaveria anomala B.L. Robinson. Discriminations in the C3 and C4 species were similar to those expected from theoretical considerations. When ambient CO2 pressure was 330 bar the mean discriminations in the C3 species andPanicum milioides were similar, whereas the mean discriminations inF. floridana andF. anomala were less than discrimination in C3 species andPanicum milioides. When ambient CO2 pressure was 100 bar the mean discriminations inPanicum milioides andF. anomala were greater, and that inF. floridana was less, than that inPhaseolus vulgaris. We conclude that the pattern of discrimination inPanicum milioides is consistent with the presence of a glycine shuttle; inF. floridana andF. anomala, discrimination is consistent with the presence of a C4 pathway coupled with the operation of a glycine shuttle.Abbreviations and symbols PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - Rubisco ribulose, 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase (EC 4.1.1.39) - p a ambient CO2 pressure - p i intercellular CO2 pressure - carbon-isotope discrimination - carbonisotope composition relative to PeeDee Belemnite  相似文献   

7.
Immunogold labelling has been used to determine the cellular distribution of glycine decarboxylase in leaves of C3, C3–C4 intermediate and C4 species in the genera Moricandia, Panicum, Flaveria and Mollugo. In the C3 species Moricandia foleyi and Panicum laxum, glycine decarboxylase was present in the mitochondria of both mesophyll and bundle-sheath cells. However, in all the C3–C4 intermediate (M. arvensis var. garamatum, M. nitens, M. sinaica, M. spinosa, M. suffruticosa, P. milioides, Flaveria floridana, F. linearis, Mollugo verticillata) and C4 (P. prionitis, F. trinervia) species studied glycine decarboxylase was present in the mitochondria of only the bundle-sheath cells. The bundle-sheath cells of all the C3–C4 intermediate species have on their centripetal faces numerous mitochondria which are larger in profile area than those in mesophyll cells and are in close association with chloroplasts and peroxisomes. Confinement of glycine decarboxylase to the bundle-sheath cells is likely to improve the potential for recapture of photorespired CO2 via the Calvin cycle and could account for the low rate of photorespiration in all C3–C4 intermediate species.Abbreviation and symbol kDa kilodaltons - CO2 compensation point  相似文献   

8.
The assimilation of 14CO2 into the C4 acids malate and aspartate by leaves of C3, C4 and C3–C4 intermediate Flaveria species was investigated near the CO2 compensation concentration * in order to determine the potential role of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.31) in reducing photorespiration in the intermediates. Relative to air concentrations of CO2, the proportion of CO2 fixed by PEP carboxylase at * increased in all six C3–C4 intermediate species examined. However, F. floridana J.R. Johnston and F. ramosissima Klatt were shown to be markedly less responsive to reduced external CO2, with only about a 1.6-fold enhancement of CO2 assimilation by PEP carboxylase, as compared to a 3.0- to 3.7-fold increase for the other C3–C4 species examined, namely, F. linearis Lag., F. anomala B.L. Robinson, F. chloraefolia A. Gray and F. pubescens Rydb. The C3 species F. pringlei Gandoger and F. cronquistii A.M. Powell exhibited a 1.5- and 2.9-fold increase in labeled malate and aspartate, respectively, at *. Assimilation of CO2 by PEP carboxylase in the C4 species F. trinervia (Spreng.) C. Mohr, F. australasica Hook., and the C4-like species F. brownii A.M. Powell was relatively insensitive to subatmospheric levels of CO2. The interspecific variation among the intermediate Flaverias may signify that F. floridana and F. ramosissima possess a more C4-like compartmentation of PEP carboxylase and ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (EC 4.1.1.39) between the mesophyll and bundle-sheath cells. Chasing recently labeled malate and aspartate with 12CO2 for 5 min at * resulted in an apparent turnover of 25% and 30% of the radiocarbon in these C4 acids for F. ramosissima and F. floridana, respectively. No substantial turnover was detected for F. linearis, F. anomala, F. chloraefolia or F. pubescens. With the exception of F. floridana and F. ramosissima, it is unlikely that enhanced CO2 fixation by PEP carboxylase at the CO2 compensation concentration is a major mechanism for reducing photorespiration in the intermediate Flaveria species. Moreover, these findings support previous related 14CO2-labeling studies at air-levels of CO2 which indicated that F. floridana and F. ramosissima were more C4-like intermediate species. This is further substantiated by the demonstration that F. floridana PEP carboxylase, like the enzyme in C4 plants, undergoes a substantial activation (2.2-fold) upon illuminating dark-adapted green leaves. In contrast, light activation was not observed for the enzyme in F. linearis or F. chloraefolia.Abbreviations and symbols PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - CO2 compensation concentration - * a subatmospheric level of CO2 approximating Published as Paper No. 8832, Journal Series, Nebraska Agricultural Research Division  相似文献   

9.
Summary Detailed growth analysis in conjunction with information on leaf display and nitrogen uptake was used to interpret competition between Abutilon theophrasti, a C3 annual, and Amaranthus retroflexus, a C4 annual, under ambient (350 l l-1) and two levels of elevated (500 and 700 l l-1) CO2. Plants were grown both individually and in competition with each other. Competition caused a reduction in growth in both species, but for different reasons. In Abutilon, decreases in leaf area ratio (LAR) were responsible, whereas decreased unit leaf rate (ULR) was involved in the case of Amaranthus. Mean canopy height was lower in Amaranthus than Abutilon which may explain the low ULR of Amaranthus in competition. The decrease in LAR of Abutilon was associated with an increase in root/shoot ratio implying that Abutilon was limited by competition for below ground resources. The root/shoot ratio of Amaranthus actually decreased with competition, and Amaranthus had a much higher rate of nitrogen uptake per unit of root than did Abutilon. These latter results suggest that Amaranthus was better able to compete for below ground resources than Abutilon. Although the growth of both species was reduced by competition, generally speaking, the growth of Amaranthus was reduced to a greater extent than that of Abutilon. Regression analysis suggests that the success of Abutilon in competition was due to its larger starting capital (seed size) which gave it an early advantage over Amaranthus. Elevated CO2 had a positive effect upon biomass in Amaranthus, and to a lesser extent, Abutilon. These effects were limited to the early part of the experiment in the case of the individually grown plants, however. Only Amaranthus exhibited a significant increase in relative growth rate (RGR). In spite of the transitory effect of CO2 upon size in individually grown plants, level of CO2 did effect final biomass of competitively grown plants. Abutilon grown in competition with Amaranthus had a greater final biomass than Amaranthus at ambient CO2 levels, but this difference disappeared to a large extent at elevated CO2. The high RGR of Amaranthus at elevated CO2 levels allowed it to overcome the difference in initial size between the two species.This study was supported by a grant from the US Department of Energy  相似文献   

10.
Three methods of estimating photorespiratory rate in leaves of the C3–C4 intermediate species Moricandia arvensis and the related C3 species Moricandia moricandioides were compared. The results indicated that the photorespiratory rate in M. arvensis is less than in M. moricandioides, and that this is caused partly by reduced carbon flux through the photorespiratory pathway, and partly by the presence of a mechanism for enhanced photorespiratory CO2 reassimilation in the intermediate species. Measurements of the CO2 compensation point () in the two species supported this conclusion. A functional C4 pathway is unlikely to be involved in the reduction of photorespiratory rate in M. arvensis since pulse-chase experiments showed that carbon did not move from C4 acids to the reductive pentose-phosphate pathway in attached leaves under steady-state conditions at .Abbreviations and symbols APR apparent photosynthetic rate - Ci, Ce intercellular, external CO2 concentration - CO2 compensation point - PAR photosynthetically active radiation - PFD photon flux density  相似文献   

11.
Carbon-isotope ratios were examined as 13C values in several C3, C4, and C3–C4 Flaveria species, and compared to predicted 13C, values generated from theoretical models. The measured 13C values were within 4 of those predicted from the models. The models were used to identify factors that contribute to C3-like 13C values in C3–C4 species that exhibit considerable C4-cycle activity. Two of the factors contributing to C3-like 13C values are high CO2 leakiness from the C4 pathway and pi/pa values that were higher than C4 congeners. A marked break occurred in the relationship between the percentage of atmospheric CO2 assimilated through the C4 cycle and the 13C value. Below 50% C4-cycle assimialtion there was no significant relationship between the variables, but above 50% the 13C values became less negative. These results demonstrate that the level of C4-cycle expression can increase from, 0 to 50% with little integration of carbon transfer from the C4 to the C3 cycle. As expression increaces above 50%, however, increased integration of C3- and C4-cycle co-function occurs.Abbreviations and symbols RuBP carboxylase ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.39) - PEP carboxylase phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.31) - pa atmospheric CO2 partial pressure - pi intercellular CO2 partial pressure - isotope ratio - quantum yield for CO2 uptake  相似文献   

12.
The characteristics of oscillations in photosynthetic carbon fixation and chlorophyll fluorescence in leaves of the C4 plant Amaranthus caudatus L. were compared to those shown by the C3 plant Spinacia oleracea L. As in spinach, oscillations could be observed in Amaranthus when leaves were illuminated after periods of darkening, particularly at temperatures below 20°C, less so or not at all at higher temperatures. However, in contrast to spinach, pronounced oscillations occurred in Amaranthus after a sudden dark/light transition only at low, not at high photon flux densities. Whereas in spinach maxima in carbon uptake were observed slightly after minima in chlorophyll fluorescence had occurred, in Amaranthus maxima in carbon uptake were close to maxima in chlorophyll fluorescence. Since the quantum efficiency of electron transport through photosystem II of the chloroplast electron-transport chain was higher during the minima of chlorophyll fluorescence than during the maxima, the observations suggest that in Amaranthus photosynthetic water oxidation did not occur as synchronously with carbon uptake as in spinach. It is proposed that, in contrast to spinach, photosynthetic oscillations in Amaranthus are related to the diffusional transport of photosynthetic intermediates between mesophyll and bundle-sheath cells.Abbreviations Fo, Fm, Fs initial, maximal and steady-state chlorophyll a fluorescence - PFD photon flux density - QA primary quinone acceptor of PSII We are grateful to Professors D.A. Walker, FRS, Robert Hill Institute, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK., and Agu Laisk, Chair of Plant Physiology, University of Tartu, Tartu, Estonia, for helpful discussions and to Ms. S. Neimanis for help with the experiments. Our work was performed within the research of the Sonderforschungsbereich 251 of the University of Würzburg. It was supported by the Stiftung Volkswagenwerk. A.S.R. acknowledges also support by the Alexander-von-Humboldt-Stiftung and U.G. by the Graduate College of the University of Würzburg.  相似文献   

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

14.
The natural abundance hydrogen-isotope composition of leaf water ( ) and leaf organic matter ( D org ) was measured in leaves of C3 and C4 dicotyledons and monocotyledons. The value of leaf water showed a marked diurnal variation, greatest enrichment being observed about midday. However, this variation was greater in the more slowly transpiring C4 plants than in C3 plants under comparable environmental conditions. A model based on analogies with a constant feed pan of evaporating water was developed and the difference between C3 and C4 plants expressed in terms of either differences in kinetic enrichment or different leaf morphology. Microclimatic and morphological features of the leaves which may be associated with this factor are discussed. There was no daily excursion in the D org value in leaves of either C3 or C4 plants. When D org values were referenced to the mean values during the period of active photosynthesis, the discrimination against deuterium during photosynthetic metabolism (D) was greater in C3 plants (-117 to -121) than in C4 plants (-86 to -109).These results show that the different water use strategies of C3 and C4 plants are responsible for the measured difference in deuterium-isotope composition of leaf water. However, it is unlikely that these physical processes account fully for the differences in hydrogen-isotope composition of the products of C3 and C4 photosynthetic metabolism.Symbols Hydrogen-isotope composition of leaf water - D org hydrogen-isotope composition of leaf organic matter  相似文献   

15.
The induction kinetics of the 680 nm chlorophyll fluorescence were measured on attached leaves of Kalanchoë daigremontiana R. Hamet et Perr. (CAM plant), Sedum telephium L. and Sedum spectabile Bor. (C3 plant in spring, CAM plant in summer) and Raphanus sativus L. (C3 plant) at three different times during a 12/12 h day/night cycle. During the fluorescence transient the fluorescence intensity at the O, P and T-level (fO, fmax, fst,) was different for the plant species tested; this may be due to their different leaf structure, pigment composition and organization of their photosystems. The kinetics of the fluorescence induction depended on the time of preillumination or dark adaptation during the light/dark cycle but not on the type of primary CO2 fixation mechanism (C3 and CAM). For dark adapted leaves measured either at the end of the dark phase or after dark adaptation of plants taken from the light phase a higher P-level fluorescence, a higher variable fluorescence (P-O) and a larger complementary area were found than for leaves of plants taken directly from the light phase. This indicates the presence of largely oxidized photosystem 2 acceptor pools during darkness. During the light phase the fluorescence decline after the P-level was faster than during the dark phase; from this we conclude that the light adaptation of the photosynthetic apparatus (state 1state 2 transition, pH) during the induction period proceeded faster in plants taken from the light phase than in plants taken from the dark phase.Abbreviations C3 plant plant with primary CO2 fixation on ribulose-1,5-bis-phosphate (Calvin-Benson cycle) - CAM Crassulacean Acid Metabolism  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
Leaf anatomical, ultrastructural, and CO2-exchange analyses of three closely related species of Flaveria indicate that they are C3–C4 intermediate plants. The leaf mesophyll of F. floridana J.R. Johnston, F. linearis Lag., and F. chloraefolia A. Gray is typical of that in dicotyledonous C3 plants, but the bundle sheath cells contain granal, starch-containing chloroplasts. In F. floridana and F. chloraefolia, the chloroplasts and numerous associated mitochondria are arranged largely centripetally, as in the closely related C4 species, F. brownii A.M. Powell. In F. linearis, fewer mitochondria are present and the chloroplasts are more evenly distributed throughout the bundle sheath cytosol. There is no correlation between the bundle sheath ultrastructure and CO2 compensation concentration. () values of these C3–C4 intermediate Flaveria species. At 21% O2 and 25°C, for F. chloraefolia, F. linearis, and F. floridana is 23–26, 14–19, and 8–10 l CO2 l-1, respectively. The O2 dependence of is the greatest for F. chloraefolia and F. linearis (similar to that for C3–C4 intermediate Panicum and Moricandia species) and the least for F. floridana, whose O2 response is identical to that for F. brownii from 1.5 to 21% O2, but greater at higher pO2. The variation in leaf anatomy, bundle sheath ultrastructure, and O2 dependence of among these Flaveria species may indicate an active evolution in the pathway of photosynthetic carbon metabolism within this genus.Abbreviations CO2 compensation concentration - IRGA infrared gas analysis Published as Paper No. 7068, Journal Series, Nebraska Agricultural Experiment Station  相似文献   

18.
The light dependence of quantum yields of Photosystem II (II) and of CO2 fixation were determined in C3 and C4 plants under atmospheric conditions where photorespiration was minimal. Calculations were made of the apparent quantum yield for CO2 fixation by dividing the measured rate of photosynthesis by the absorbed light [A/I=CO2 and of the true quantum yield by dividing the estimated true rate of photosynthesis by absorbed light [(A+Rl)/Ia=CO2·], where RL is the rate of respiration in the light. The dependence of the II/CO2 and II/CO2 * ratios on light intensity was then evaluated. In both C3 and C4 plants there was little change in the ratio of II/CO2 at light intensities equivalent to 10–100% of full sunlight, whereas there was a dramatic increase in the ratio at lower light intensities. Changes in the ratio of II/CO2 can occur because respiratory losses are not accounted for, due to changes in the partitioning of energy between photosystems or changes in the relationship between PS II activity and CO2 fixation. The apparent decrease in efficiency of utilization of energy derived from PS II for CO2 fixation under low light intensity may be due to respiratory loss of CO2. Using dark respiration as an estimate of RL, the calculated II/CO2 * ratio was nearly constant from full sunlight down to approx 5% of full sunlight, which suggests a strong linkage between the true rate of CO2 fixation and PS II activity under varying light intensity. Measurements of photosynthesis rates and II were made by illuminating upper versus lower leaf surfaces of representative C3 and C4 monocots and dicots. With the monocots, the rate of photosynthesis and the ratio of II/CO2 exhibited a very similar patterns with leaves illuminated from the adaxial versus the abaxial surface, which may be due to uniformity in anatomy and lack of differences in light acclimation between the two surfaces. With dicots, the abaxial surface had both lower rates of photosynthesis and lower II values than the adaxial surface which may be due to differences in anatomy (spongy versus palisade mesophyll cells) and/or light acclimation between the two surfaces. However, in each species the response of II/CO2 to varying light intensity was similar between the two surfaces, indicating a comparable linkage between PS II activity and CO2 fixation.Abbreviations A measured rate of CO2 assimilation - A+RL true rate of CO2 assimilation; e - CO2 estimate of electrons transported through PSII per CO2 fixed by RuBP carboxylase - f fraction of light absorbed by Photosystem II - F'm yield of PSII chlorophyll fluorescence due to a saturating flash of white light under steady-state photosynthesis - Fs variable yield of fluorescence under steady-state photosynthesis; PPFD-photosynthetic photon flux density - Ia absorbed PPFD - PS II Photosystem II - Rd rate of respiration in the dark - RI rate of respiration in the light estimated from measurement of Rd or from analysis of quantum yields - apparent quantum yield of CO2 assimilation under a given condition (A/absorbed PPFD) - true quantum yield of CO2 assimilation under a given condition [(A+RL)/(absorbed PPFD)] - quantum yield for photosynthetic O2 evolution - electrons transported via PS II per quantum absorbed by PS II Supported by USDA Competitive Grant 90-37280-5706.  相似文献   

19.
Esculin, a pH-sensitive fluorescent dye, was used to indicate light-dependent pH changes in leaves of Spinacia oleracea L. and Pelargonium zonale L. Shortly after its introduction into the leaves via the transpiration stream, esculin was localized mainly in the symplasm. An increase in its blue fluorescence on illumination with red actinic light indicated that the cytosolic pH had increased. A similar light-dependent alkalinization was seen when the green fluorescence of pyranine was used to monitor changes in the cytosolic pH. After esculin had been transferred into the vacuoles, a light-dependent vacuolar acidification was indicated by a decrease in its blue fluorescence. Since the pK of esculin is close to neutrality, it is suitable as an indicator of proton transport into vacuoles provided the vacuolar sap is only moderately acidic. In leaf cells with very acidic vacuoles, esculin therefore responds only to cytosolic pH changes as long as it remains in the cytosol. The observations made with esculin after it had entered the vacuoles confirmed earlier conclusions on light-dependent proton transport into the vacuoles of mesophyll cells. Previous measurements had been made with 5-carboxy-2,7-dichlorofluoresceine (CDCF), which has a pK of 4.8. In contrast to esculin, CDCF can, in principle, record pH changes in very acidic vacuoles. However, earlier conclusions made on the basis of observed CDCF fluorescence are now recognized to have no unambiguous basis because new measurements, reported here, show that CDCF fluorescence is influenced not only by pH changes but also by changes in light scattering. The latter are, like pH changes, light-dependent and originate from the thylakoid system of chloroplasts. They indicate both the formation of a large transthylakoid proton gradient and the dissipation of excess light energy as heat. Decreased green fluorescence of leaves which had been fed CDCF may therefore, depending on conditions, indicate vacuolar acidification or the dissipation of excess light energy absorbed by the pigment system of chloroplasts, or both. Pyranine fluorescence was found to be much less influenced by light scattering than CDCF fluorescence.Abbreviations CDCF 5-(and 6-)carboxy-2,7-dichlorofluoresceine - P700 primary donor of PS I - PFD photon flux density - QA primary quinone acceptor of PS II - QP, QN photochemical, non-photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence, respectively This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft within the framework of the research of the Sonderforschungsbereich 251 of the University of Würzburg. We are grateful to Drs. U. Schreiber and K.-J. Dietz and to Mrs. B. Hollenbach (all from our Institute) for discussions.  相似文献   

20.
A C3 monocot, Hordeum vulgare and C3 dicot, Vicia faba, were studied to evaluate the mechanism of inhibition of photosynthesis due to water stress. The net rate of CO2 fixation (A) and transpiration (E) were measured by gas exchange, while the true rate of O2 evolution (J O2) was calculated from chlorophyll fluorescence analysis through the stress cycle (10 to 11 days). With the development of water stress, the decrease in A was more pronounced than the decrease in J O2 resulting in an increased ratio of Photosystem II activity per CO2 fixed which is indicative of an increase in photorespiration due to a decrease in supply of CO2 to Rubisco. Analyses of changes in the J O2 A ratios versus that of CO2 limited photosynthesis in well watered plants, and RuBP pool/RuBP binding sites on Rubisco and RuBP activity, indicate a decreased supply of CO2 to Rubisco under both mild and severe stress is primarily responsible for the decrease in CO2 fixation. In the early stages of stress, the decrease in C i (intercellular CO2) due to stomatal closure can account for the decrease in photosynthesis. Under more severe stress, CO2 supply to Rubisco, calculated from analysis of electron flow and CO2 exchange, continued to decrease. However, C i, calculated from analysis of transpiration and CO2 exchange, either remained constant or increased which may be due to either a decrease in mesophyll conductance or an overestimation of C i by this method due to patchiness in conductance of CO2 to the intercellular space. When plants were rewatered after photosynthesis had dropped to 10–30% of the original rate, both species showed near full recovery within two to four days.Abbreviations A- net CO2 assimilation rate - A *- net CO2 assimilation rate plus dark respiration - ATP- adenosine triphosphate - CABP- carboxyarabinitol 1,5-bisphosphate - C a- ambient CO2 concentration - C c- CO2 concentration in the chloroplast - C i- intercellular CO2 concentration - E- transpiration rate - g m- mesophyll conductance - g s- stomatal conductance - J O2 true rate of O2 evolution - LSD- least significant difference - PPFD- photosynthetic photon flux density - PS II- Photosystem II - R n- dark respiration rate - Rubisco- ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - RuBP- ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate - RWC- relative water content - c- rate of carboxylation - o- rate of oxygenation - PSII- quantum yield of Photosystem II - - CO2 compensation point in the absence of R n - - water potential  相似文献   

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