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1.
Abstract. Purified and crude phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase from the CAM plant Kalanchoë daigremontiana Hamet et Perrier ( Bryophyllum diagremontianum ) was assayed at temperatures between 10 and 45° C. The optimum temperature of the enzyme activity changed with substrate availability and effector concentration in the assay. l -malate inhibited the enzyme activity and lowered the optimum temperature. Glucose-6-phosphate raised the optimum temperature to 43°C. K m values for phosphoenolpyruvate increased with assay temperature from 0.12 mol m-3 at 15° C to 0.36 molm−3 at 35° C. Inhibition by malate increased with temperature and acidity of the assay. In the crude enzyme 50% of control activity was inhibited by 1.65 mol m-3 malate at 15° C and by 0.5 mol m-3 at 35° C (at pH 7.0). With purification malate sensitivity was lost ( K i values for malate at least 10 times higher). The shift in optimum temperatures for PEP-carboxylase activity thus results from changes in the kinetic parameters with temperature and allosteric effectors. The often low optimum temperatures for CO2 fixation observed in nature may thus be the result of substrate and effector concentrations in the cytoplasm and the antagonistic effect of temperature on substrate affinity and effector efficiency on phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase.  相似文献   

2.
In the CAM plants, Kalanchoë tubiflora (Harvey) Hasset, Sedum morganianum E. Walth and Sedum rubrotinctum R. T. Clausen, the effects of CO2 concentrations on the light-dependent 14C transfer from the nocturnally synthetized [14C]-malic acid to starch have been studied. CO2 concentrations up to 5 × 103 μ1 1–1 did not inhibit this carbon transfer. Higher CO2 concentrations, however, were increasingly inhibitory. At 104 μl 1–1 CO2, the carbon transfer was practically prevented.
The malic acid consumption in the light showed the same response to CO2 concentrations as the [l4C]-transfer. Photosynthesis itself was not inhibited by the CO2 concentrations applied. It is assumed that, during phase III of CAM, light controls the internal CO2 concentration via photosynthesis; and that the internal CO2 concentration then controls the rate of malate decarboxylation.  相似文献   

3.
Abstract. Kalanchoe pinnata (Lam.) Pers., a plant having crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM), was grown in high light (16–23 mol photons m−2 d−1) and in the shade (0.8–2.1 mol photons m−2 d−1), respectively. Plants were stressed in three ways, i.e. by transfer from high light to shade or vice versa just before measurements, and by withholding nitrogen and/or water. During the day-night cycle of CAM, K. pinnata showed day-night changes of citrate levels (Δ citrate) in addition to malate changes (Δ malate). Changes of leaf-cell sap osmotic pressure. Δπ, were linearly correlated with these changes of organic-acid anion levels with a relation of Δπ/(Δ citrate +Δ malate) = 1/1. The environmental stressor, i.e. limited N-nutrition, drought and higher or lower irradiance than experienced during growth, affected the absolute and relative contributions made by Δ citrate and Δ malate to total nocturnal organic-acid accumulation. In the high-light-grown plants transferred to the shade, changes of citrate levels were much less affected than changes of malate levels by the generally decreased metabolic activity and inhibition of CO2 uptake. In the shade-grown plants, Δ citrate increased in response to stress imposed by interactive effects of the three stressors.  相似文献   

4.
J. N. Pierre  O. Queiroz 《Planta》1979,144(2):143-151
Glycolysis shows different patterns of operation and different control steps, depending on whether the level of Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) is low or high in the leaves of Kalanchoe blossfeldiana v.Poelln., when subjected to appropriate photoperiodic treatments: at a low level of CAM operation all the enzymes of glycolysis and phosphoenol pyruvate (PEP) carboxylase present a 12 h rhythm of capacity, resulting from the superposition of two 24h rhythms out of phase; phosphofructokinase appears to be the main regulation step; attainment of high CAM level involves (1) an increase in the peak of capacity occurring during the night of all the glycolytic enzymes, thus achieving an over-all 24h rhythm, in strict allometric coherence with the increase in PEP carboxylase capacity, (2) the establishment of different phase relationships between the rhythms of enzyme capacity, and (3) the control of three enzymic steps (phosphofructokinase, the group 3-P-glyceraldehyde dehydrogenase — 3-P-glycerate kinase, and PEP carboxylase). Results show that the hypothesis of allosteric regulation of phosphofructokinase (by PEP) and PEP carboxylase (by malate and glucose-6-P) cannot provide a complete explanation for the temporal organization of glycolysis and that changes in the phase relationships between the rhythms of enzyme capacity along the pathway and a strict correlation between the level of PEP carboxylase capacity and the levels of capacity of the glycolytic enzymes are important components of the regulation of glycolysis in relation to CAM.Abbreviations CAM crassulacean acid metabolism - F-6-P fructose-6-phosphate - F-bi-P fructose-1,6 biphosphate - G-3-PDH 3-phosphoglyceraldehyde dehydrogenase (NAD), EC 1.2.1.12 - G-6-P glucose-6-phosphate - GSH reduced glutathion - GDH glycerolphosphate dehydrogenase, EC 1.1.1.8 - PEP phosphoenol pyruvate - PEPC PEP carboxylase, EC 4.1.1.31 - PFK phosphofructokinase, EC 2.7.1.11 - 2-PGA 2-phosphoglycerate - 3-PGA 3-phosphoglycerate - PGM phosphoglycerate phosphomutase, EC 5.4.2.1 - T.P. triose phosphates - TPI triose phosphate isomerase, EC 5.3.1.1  相似文献   

5.
Abstract. In the natural habitat plants of Mesembryanthemum crystallinum are induced to perform Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) after 3 months, and reproductive growth begins after 5 months (Winter, Liittge & Winter, 1978, Oecologia (Berlin), 34, 225-237). The life cycle of M. crystallinum and the extent of growth required prior to induction of enzymes of Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) are dramatically shortened by growing seedlings with a long photoperiod (3=16h/8h light/dark). Reproductive growth begins as soon as five weeks after germination when plants are grown in continuous light (under 600μmol quanta m−2 s−1, 30°C). In plants grown under well-watered conditions, the activities of PEP carboxylase and NADP-malic enzyme begin increasing markedly 2 weeks after germination, with plants grown under longer photoperiods having higher enzyme activities. After 3 weeks of growth, leaves accumulated a large amount of malate, but the microequivalents of malate present were up to nine times greater than the total titratable acidities. Interestingly, plants from a 24h/0h or a 20h/4h photo-period showed no diurnal fluctuation of malate, but did produce malate in the light as a major photosynthetic end product. That is, under these environmental conditions, principal enzymes of CAM can be induced without the plants performing CAM. However, plants grown in a 16h/8h photoperiod did exhibit nocturnal accumulation of malate after 3 weeks of growth. In plants of all three growth conditions, the activities of NADP-malic enzyme and PEP carboxylase were further increased two- to live-fold by irrigating 3-week-old-plants with 350mol m−3 NaCl. Such early enhancement of these enzymes by salt and the shortened life cycle may be due to an accelerated development under the long photoperiods.  相似文献   

6.
Net CO2 dark fixation of Kalanchoë daigremontiana varies with night temperature. We found an optimum of fixation at about 15° C; with increasing night temperature fixation decreased. We studied the temperature dependence of the activity of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP)-carboxylase, the key enzyme for CO2 dark fixation. We varied the pH, the substrate concentration (PEP), and the L-malate and glucose-6-phosphate (G-6-P) concentration in the assay. Generally, lowering the pH and reducing the amount of substrate resulted in an increase in activation by G-6-P and in an increase in malate inhibition of the enzyme. Furthermore, malate inhibition and G-6-P activation increased with increasing temperature. Activity measurements between 10° C and 45°C at a given concentration of the effectors revealed that the temperature optimum and maximum activities at that optimum varied with the effector applied. Under the influence of 5 mol m-3 L-malate the temperature optimum and maximum activity dropped drastically, especially when the substrate level was low (at 0.5 mol m-3 PEP from 32° C to 20° C). G-6-P raised the temperature optimum and maximum activity when the substrate level was low. If both malate and G-6-P were present, intermediate values were measured. We suggest that changes in metabolite levels in K. daigremontiana leaves can alter the temperature features of PEP-carboxylase so that the observed in vivo CO2 dark fixation can be explained on the basis of PEP-carboxylase activity.Abbreviations PEP-c phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase - CAM crassulacean acid metabolism - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - G-6-P glucose-6-phosphate  相似文献   

7.
The maximum extractable activities of twenty-one photosynthetic and glycolytic enzymes were measured in mature leaves of Mesembryanthemum crystallinum plants, grown under a 12 h light 12 h dark photoperiod, exhibiting photosynthetic characteristics of either a C3 or a Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) plant. Following the change from C3 photosynthesis to CAM in response to an increase in the salinity of in the rooting medium from 100 mM to 400 mM NaCl, the activity of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.31) increased about 45-fold and the activities of NADP malic enzyme (EC 1.1.1.40) and NAD malic enzyme (EC 1.1.1.38) increased about 4- to 10-fold. Pyruvate, Pi dikinase (EC 2.7.9.1) was not detected in the non-CAM tissue but was present in the CAM tissue; PEP carboxykinase (EC 4.1.1.32) was detected in neither tissue. The induction of CAM was also accompanied by large increases in the activities of the glycolytic enzymes enolase (EC 4.2.1.11), phosphoglyceromutase (EC 2.7.5.3), phosphoglycerate kinase (EC 2.7.2.3), NAD glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.12), and glucosephosphate isomerase (EC 2.6.1.2). There were 1.5- to 2-fold increases in the activities of NAD malate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.37), alanine and aspartate aminotransferases (EC 2.6.1.2 and 2.6.1.1 respectively) and NADP glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.13). The activities of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.39), fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (EC 3.1.3.11), phosphofructokinase (EC 2.7.1.11), hexokinase (EC 2.7.1.2) and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.49) remained relatively constant. NADP malate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.82) activity exhibited two pH optima in the non-CAM tissue, one at pH 6.0 and a second at pH 8.0. The activity at pH 8.0 increased as CAM was induced. With the exceptions of hexokinase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, the activities of all enzymes examined in extracts from M. crystallinum exhibiting CAM were equal to, or greater than, those required to sustain the maximum rates of carbon flow during acidification and deacidification observed in vivo. There was no day-night variation in the maximum extractable activities of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase, NADP malic enzyme, NAD malic enzyme, fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase and NADP malate dehydrogenase in leaves of M. crystallinum undergoing CAM.Abbreviations CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - RuBP ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate  相似文献   

8.
9.
Leport  Laurent  Kandlbinder  Andrea  Baur  Bernhard  Kaiser  Werner M. 《Planta》1996,198(4):495-501
Phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylation was measured as dark 14CO2 fixation in leaves and roots (in vivo) or as PEP carboxylase (PEPCase) activity in desalted leaf and roof extracts (in vitro) from Pisum sativum L. cv. Kleine Rheinländerin. Its relation to the malate content and to the nitrogen source (nitrate or ammonium) was investigated. In tissue from nitrate-grown plants, PEP carboxylation varied diurnally, showing an increase upon illumination and a decrease upon darkening. Diurnal variations in roots were much lower than in leaves. Fixation rates in leaves remained constantly low in continuous darkness or high in continuous light. Dark CO2 fixation of leaf slices also decreased when leaves were preilluminated for 1 h in CO2-free air, suggesting that the modulation of dark CO2 fixation was related to assimilate availability in leaves and roots. Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase activity was also measured in vitro. However, no difference in maximum enzyme activity was found in extracts from illuminated or darkened leaves, and the response to substrate and effectors (PEP, malate, glucose-6-phosphate, pH) was also identical. The serine/threonine protein kinase inhibitors K252b, H7 and staurosporine, and the protein phosphatase 2A inhibitors okadaic acid and cantharidin, fed through the leaf petiole, did not have the effects on dark CO2 fixation predicted by a regulatory system in which PEPCase is modulated via reversible protein phosphorylation. Therefore, it is suggested that the diurnal modulation of PEP carboxylation in vivo in leaves and roots of pea is not caused by protein phosphorylation, but rather by direct allosteric effects. Upon transfer of plants to ammonium-N or to an N-free nutrient solution, mean daily malate levels in leaves decreased drastically within 4–5 d. At that time, the diurnal oscillations of PEP carboxylation in vivo disappeared and rates remained at the high light-level. The coincidence of the two events suggests that PEPCase was de-regulated because malate levels became very low. The drastic decrease of leaf malate contents upon transfer of plants from nitrate to ammonium nutrition was apparently not caused by increased amino acid or protein synthesis, but probably by higher decarboxylation rates.Abbreviations CAM crassulacean acid metabolism - PEP Phosphoenolpyruvate - PEPCase phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase - PP protein phosphatase - PK protein kinase This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft. B. Baur was a recipient of a doctoral grant, and L. Leport recipient of a post-doctoral grant of the DFG. The skilled technical assistance of Eva Wirth and Maria Lesch is gratefully acknowledged.  相似文献   

10.
Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC, EC 4.1.1.31) was purified 56-fold from Vicia faba root nodules to a specific activity of 24.8 units mg-1 protein. Native molecular mass was determined to be 443 kDa by gel permeation chromatography, whereas a molecular mass of 113 kDa was obtained for the subunit by means of SDS-PAGE, indicating that the enzyme is a homotetramer. One peak of activity was obtained by ion-exchange chromatography or gel filtration, and thus there was no evidence of isoenzymes. The effect of pH on PEPC activity was studied, the pH optimum found at 8.25. The effect of substrate (phosphoenolpyruvate, PEP) on the enzyme activity was studied at five different pH values from 6.5 to 9.5. The Km(PEP) at pH 8.25 proved to be 0.064 m M. Inhibition by malate or activation by glucose-6-phosphate was dependent on the pH of the reaction mixture. Malate behaved as a non-competitive mixed-type inhibitor with a Ki of 0.76 m M , a Ki(s) of 1.15 m M and a Ki(i) of 0.72 m M , at pH 7.0 while at pH 8.25 Ki was about 140 m M. Activation by glucose-6-P was 70% with 4 m M PEP at pH 7, whereas no effect was found at pH 8.25. Experiments with mixed effectors at pH 7 and 1 m M PEP, showed that glucose-6-P can reverse the inhibition caused by L-malate on the PEPC activity.  相似文献   

11.
Abstract: In Mesembryanthemum crystallinum plants, treated for 9 days with 0.4 M NaCl at low light intensities (80 - 90 or 95 - 100 μE m-2 s-1; λ = 400 - 700 nm), no day/night malate level differences (Δmalate) were detected. At high light (385 - 400 μE m-2 s-1) strong stimulation of PEPC activity, accompanied by a Δmalate of 11.3 mM, demonstrated the presence of CAM metabolism. This indicates that, to evolve day/night differences in malate concentration, high light is required. Salt treatment at low light induces and increases the activity of NAD- and NADP-malic enzymes by as much as 3.7- and 3.9-fold, while at high light these values reach 6.4- and 17.7-fold, respectively. The induction of activity of both malic enzymes and PEPC (phospo enol pyruvate carboxylase) take place before Δmalate is detectable. An increase in SOD (superoxide dismutase) was observed in plants cultivated at high light in both control and salt-treated plants. However, in salt-treated plants this effect was more pronounced. Carboxylating and decarboxylating enzymes seem to be induced by a combination of different signals, i.e., salt and light intensity. Plants performing CAM, after the decrease of activity of both the decarboxylating enzymes at the beginning of the light period, showed an increase in these enzymes in darkness when the malate pool reaches higher levels. In CAM plants the activity of fumarase (Krebs cycle) is much lower than that in C3 plants. The role of mitochondria in CAM plants is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
In this report, the effects of light on the activity and allosteric properties of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase were examined in newly matured leaves of several C3 and C4 species. Illumination of previously darkened leaves increased the enzyme activity 1.1 to 1.3 fold in C3 species and 1.4 to 2.3 fold in C4 species, when assayed under suboptimal conditions (pH 7) without allosteric effectors. The sensitivities of PEP carboxylase to the allosteric effectors malate and glucose-6-phosphate were markedly different between C3 and C4 species. In the presence of 5 mM malate, the activity of the enzyme extracted from illuminated leaves was 3 to 10 fold higher than that from darkened leaves in C4 species due to reduced malate inhibition of the enzyme from illuminated leaves, whereas it increased only slightly in C3 species. The Ki(malate) for the enzyme increased about 3 fold by illumination in C4 species, but increased only slightly in C3 species. Also, the addition of the positive effector glucose-6-phosphate provided much greater protection against malate inhibition of the enzyme from C4 species than C3 species. Feeding nitrate to excised leaves of nitrogen deficient plants enhanced the degree of light activation of PEP carboxylase in the C4 species maize, but had little or no effect in the C3 species wheat. These results suggest that post-translational modification by light affects the activity and allosteric properties of PEP carboxylase to a much greater extend in C4 than in C3 species.  相似文献   

13.
Abstract. Portulacaria afra (L.) Jacq. is a perennial facultative CAM species showing a seasonal shift from C3 to CAM photosynthesis. The shift to CAM during the summer occurs despite continued irrigation of the plants. The authors examined the hypothesis that the seasonal shift to CAM occurred because of low transient water potentials. They measured changes in whole leaf water, osmotic and pressure potentials over the course of the shift. They also studied changes in enzyme activity to ascertain if PEP carboxylase and PEP carboxykinase were induced during the seasonal shift to CAM. Water potentials were high, from -0.1 to -0.5 MPa, predawn and midday, when the C3 pathway of photosynthesis was utilized. Osmotic potentials were constant, from -0.7 to - 0.8 MPa, indicating very little change in turgor. P. afra shifted to CAM indicated by large diurnal acid fluctuations (300 400 meq m−2) despite C3-like predawn water potentials. Midday water potentials usually decreased 0.2-0.7 MPa, while the osmotic potential remained unchanged or decreased slightly. Thus, a midday loss of turgor was associated with the use of the CAM pathway. The results support the hypothesis that the induction of CAM occurred due to low transient water potentials and may be partially mediated through the loss of turgor. The shift to CAM is only a partial induction with PEP carboxykinase showing high activity all year round while PEP carboxylase increases three-to five-fold over C3 levels. Relatively high levels of CAM enzyme activity enables the utilization of the CAM pathway in the winter and spring in response to high daytime temperatures and increased evaporative demand. These results would lead to an increase in water use efficiency during such periods when compared to other inducible CAM species.  相似文献   

14.
A hypothetical adaptive response of succulent plants to drought-stress is the redistribution of water from old to young leaves. We examined the effects of possible movement of water from old to young leaves in three succulent species, Carpobrotus edulis (weak CAM-inducible), Kalanchoe tubiflora (CAM) and Sedum spectabile (possibly a CAM-cycler or CAM-inducible). Old leaves were removed from plants, and photosynthesis, transpiration, f. wt : d. wt ratios, diurnal acid fluctuations, stomatal conductance and internal CO2 concentrations of the remaining young leaves were measured during drought-stress. Comparison was made with plants retaining old leaves. There was no evidence that water moved from old to young leaves during drought-stress as previously hypothesized. Only in drought-stressed plants of K. tubiflora, were photosynthetic and transpiration rates of young leaves greater on shoots with old leaves removed compared with attached. There was a trend in all species for greater fluctuations in acidity in young leaves on shoots that lacked older leaves. For two of the three species studied, the f. wt : d. wt ratios of young leaves were greater under drought-stress, on shoots with old leaves removed than with them attached. Absence of old leaves may reduce competition for water with young leaves, which consequently have higher water content and greater photosynthetic rates.  相似文献   

15.
Maize phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) was rapidly and completely inactivated by very low concentrations of trypsin at 37 degrees C. PEP+Mg2+ and several other effectors of PEP carboxylase offered substantial protection against trypsin inactivation. Inactivation resulted from a fairly specific cleavage of 20 kDa peptide from the enzyme subunit. Limited proteolysis under catalytic condition (in presence of PEP, Mg2+ and HCO3) although yielded a truncated subunit of 90 kDa, did not affect the catalytic function appreciably but desensitized the enzyme to the effectors like glucose-6-phosphate glycine and malate. However, under non-catalytic condition, only malate sensitivity was appreciably affected. Significant protection of the enzyme activity against trypsin during catalytic phase could be either due to a conformational change induced on substrate binding. Several lines of evidence indicate that the inactivation caused by a cleavage at a highly conserved C-terminal end of the subunit.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of mycorrhiza formation in combination with elevated CO2 concentrations on carbon metabolism of Norway spruce ( Picea abies ) seedlings and aspen ( Populus tremula × Populus tremuloides ) plantlets were analysed. Plants were inoculated for 6 wk with the ectomycorrhizal fungi Amanita muscaria and Paxillus involutus (aspen only) in an axenic Petri-dish culture at 350 and 700 μl l−1 CO2 partial pressure. After mycorrhiza formation, a stimulation of net assimilation rate was accompanied by decreased activities of sucrose synthase, an increased activation state of sucrose-phosphate synthase, decreased fructose-2,6-bisphosphate and starch, and slightly elevated glucose-6-phosphate contents in source leaves of both host species, independent of CO2 concentration. Exposure to elevated CO2 generally resulted in higher net assimilation rates, increased starch as well as decreased fructose-2,6-bisphosphate (aspen only) content in source leaves of both mycorrhizal and nonmycorrhizal plants. Our data indicate only slightly improved carbon utilization by mycorrhizal plants at elevated CO2. They demonstrate however, that both factors which modulate the sink-source properties of plants increase the capacity for sucrose synthesis in source leaves mainly by allosteric enzyme regulation.  相似文献   

17.
Phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase activity in epidermal extracts of Commelina communis has been compared in the presence of malate and glucose-6-phosphate. The activity of PEP carboxylase was inhibited by increasing malate concentrations at several substrate (PEP) concentrations and changes in both the apparent K m (PEP) and V max values in the presence of malate suggested the occurence of mixed-type inhibiton. In the presence of glucose-6-phosphate no increase in enzyme activity was observed, although there was a slight decrease in the K m (PEP). However, glucose-6-phosphate appeared to alleviate the inhibition caused by malate. The possible implications of these properties in the control of malate production in guard cells is discussed.Abbreviations PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - Glc6P glucose-6-phosphate  相似文献   

18.
Effects of CO2 on stomatal movements of Commelina communis L. were studied with plants, epidermal strips and guard cell protoplasts. With plants, the stomatal response induced by a blue light pulse was studied for different ambient CO2 concentration ranging from CO2-deprived air to 100 Pa in darkness or under red light. It was observed that the blue light response could be obtained not only under a red light background but also in darkness and CO2-free air, the two responses being quite similar.
With epidermal strips, the effect of CO2 on ferricyanide reductase activity at the guard cell plasmalemma was studied by transmission electron microscopy. In the presence of ferric ions, reduced ferricyanide gives an electron dense precipitate of Prussian Blue. In darkness and air, no precipitate was observed. In darkness and CO2-free air as well as under light and normal air, a precipitate was found along the plasmalemma of the guard cells, indicating a ferricyanide reductase activity. With guard cell protoplasts suspended in a medium either in equilibrium with air or in a CO2-free medium the H+ extrusion induced by a blue light pulse added to a red light background was measured. A low CO2 content was obtained by adding photosynthetic algae to the suspension of guard cell protoplasts. In a CO2-free medium the rate of H+ extrusion was enhanced.
The results are discussed on the basis of a possible competition for reducing power between CO2 fixation and a putative blue light dependent redox chain located on the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract Photoperiodism, known to control the level of CAM in different types of CAM plants (e.g. Kalanchoe blossfeldiana, Bryophyllum daigremontianum), would act as a reliable timer for seasonal coherent adaptation. Two different endogenous rhythms (malic enzyme activity, PEP carboxylase capacity) appear to be separately coupled to dawn and dusk, respectively, thus achieving time-compartmentation of CAM; this feature suggests involvement of an ‘internal coincidence’ type of clock mechanism. Persistence in continuous darkness of the rhythm of malic enzyme activity (measured by label incorporation into pyruvate or by CO2 output) establishes its endogenous character and shows that light is not necessary for malate decarboxylation. The role of the dawn signal would be to entrain the CAM system, i.e. to phase the endogenous rhythm of malic enzyme activity correctly to local time. The possibility of an effect of the phase of the PEP carboxylase rhythm on the phase of the decarboxylation rhythm is ruled out by the presence of the intermediary malate storage step. Phase responses to red and to far-red show that phytochrome is involved in rephasing the rhythm of malic enzyme activity. The relative position of dusk affords a ‘measurement’ of the season by the CAM system entrained by dawn. According to the dusk-dawn interval, the level of PEP carboxylase capacity (amount of active enzyme) is modified, resulting in changes of CAM level (high activity under short days).  相似文献   

20.
Illumination of previously darkened maize (Zea mays L. cv Golden Cross Bantam T51) leaves had no effect on the concentration of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase protein, but increased enzyme activity about 2-fold when assayed under suboptimal conditions (pH 7.0 and limiting PEP). In addition, sensitivity to effectors of PEP carboxylase activity was significantly altered; e.g. malate inhibition was reduced and glucose-6-phosphate activation was increased. Consequently, 10- to 20-fold differences in PEP carboxylase activity were observed during dark to light transitions when assayed in the presence of effectors. At pH 7.0 activity of purified PEP carboxylase was not proportional to enzyme concentrations. Below 0.7 microgram PEP carboxylase protein per milliliter, enzyme activity was disproportionately reduced. Including polyethylene glycol plus potassium chloride in the reaction mixture eliminated this discontinuity and substantially increased PEP carboxylase activity and reduced malate inhibition dramatically. Inclusion of polyethylene glycol in the assay mixture specifically increased the activity of PEP carboxylase extracted from dark leaves, and reduced malate inhibition of the enzyme from both light and dark leaves. Collectively, the results suggest that PEP carboxylase in maize leaves is subjected to some type of protein modification that affects both activity and effector sensitivity. We postulate that changes in quaternary structure (dissociation or altered subunit interactions) may be involved.  相似文献   

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