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1.
Woo KC 《Plant physiology》1983,71(1):112-117
The evolution of O2 in spinach chloroplasts in the presence of oxaloacetate (OAA) was inhibited by a wide range of dicarboxylates. In contrast, (ammonia, 2-oxoglutarate)-dependent O2 evolution was stimulated by malate, succinate, fumarate, glutarate, maleiate, and l-tartrate although OAA has little effect. This increase in O2 evolution was accompanied by a similar increase in 14C incorporation from [5-14C]oxoglutarate into amino acids which was sensitive to azaserine inhibition. Glutamate and aspartate inhibited (ammonia, 2-oxoglutarate)-dependent O2 evolution, but this inhibition was relieved by the addition of succinate, malate, or fumarate. OAA-dependent O2 evolution also was inhibited by glutamate and aspartate, but succinate, malate, or fumarate had little effect on this inhibition. Phthalonate and n-butyl malonate inhibited (ammonia, 2-oxoglutarate)-dependent O2 evolution competitively with respect to 2-oxoglutarate and uncompetitively with respect to malate. Both these inhibitors inhibited OAA-dependent O2 evolution competitively. This evidence suggests that different mechanisms might be involved in the transport of OAA, 2-oxoglutarate, and malate into the chloroplasts.  相似文献   

2.
This study examines the transport of 2-oxoglutarate (2-OG) and other dicarboxylates during ammonia assimilation in illuminated spinach chloroplasts. The transport of all dicarboxylates examined was strongly inhibited by NH4Cl preincubation in the light. Treatment with NH4Cl caused a rapid depletion of the endogenous glutamate pool and a corresponding increase in endogenous glutamine content. The inhibition of transport activity by NH4Cl was apparently linked to its metabolism in the light because inhibition of glutamine synthetase activity by the addition of l-methionine sulfoximine or carbonylcyanide-m-chlorophenylhydrazone abolished this affect. Measurements of endogenous metabolite pools showed that malate was most rapidly exchanged during the uptake of all exogenous dicarboxylates examined. Depending on the exogenous substrates used, the apparent half-times of efflux measured for endogenous malate, aspartate and glutamate were 10, 10 to 30, and 15 to 240 seconds, respectively. The transport of 2-OG was also inhibited by malate. But chloroplasts preincubated with malate in the presence or absence of NH4Cl were found to have high transport activity similar to untreated chloroplasts. A two-translocator model is proposed to explain the stimulation of 2-OG transport as well as the stimulation of (NH3, 2-OG)-dependent O2 evolution by malate (KC Woo, CB Osmond 1982 Plant Physiol 69: 591-596) in isolated chloroplasts. In this model the transport of 2-OG on the 2-OG translocator and glutamate on the dicarboxylate translocator is coupled to malate counter-exchange in a cascade-like manner. This results in a net 2-OG/glutamate exchange with no net malate transport. Thus, during NH3 assimilation the transport of 2-OG into and the export of glutamate out of the chloroplast occurs via the 2-OG and the dicarboxylate translocators, respectively.  相似文献   

3.
Woo KC  Osmond CB 《Plant physiology》1982,69(3):591-596
Intact chloroplasts isolated from spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) leaves showed a light-dependent O(2) evolution (5.5 +/- 0.75 micromoles per milligram chlorophyll per hour) when supplied with ammonia and 2-oxoglutarate. This (ammonia, 2-oxoglutarate)-dependent O(2) evolution was stimulated 2- to 4-fold by the dicarboxylates, malate, succinate, fumarate, glutarate, and l-tartarate. Evolution of O(2) in the presence of malate was dependent on the presence of both 2-oxoglutarate and NH(4)Cl; malate with only either 2-oxoglutarate and NH(4)Cl alone did not support O(2) evolution. Furthermore, in the presence of malate, the amount of O(2) evolved was solely dependent on the amount of NH(4)Cl or 2-oxoglutarate added and malate did not affect the ratio of O(2) evolved to NH(4)Cl or 2-oxoglutarate consumed. Studies with inhibitors (2-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethyl urea, methionine sulfoximine, and azaserine) indicated that the above activity was directly linked to glutamine synthetase and glutamate synthase activity in the chloroplast and was not caused by the metabolism of malate. The V(max)/2 of (ammonia, 2-oxoglutarate)-dependent O(2) evolution was reached at 32 micromolar NH(4)Cl and 6 millimolar (approximately) 2-oxoglutarate in the absence of malate, and at 22 micromolar NH(4)Cl and 73 micromolar 2-oxoglutarate when malate (3 millimolar) was present.Intact chloroplasts isolated from pea (Pisum sativum) leaves also showed a stimulation of (ammonia, 2-oxoglutarate)-dependent O(2) evolution by malate. However glutamine was required for this activity even though glutamine with only either NH(4)Cl or 2-oxoglutarate did not respond to malate stimulation.The measured rates of (ammonia, 2-oxoglutarate)-dependent O(2) evolution in isolated spinach chloroplasts in the presence of malate were about 19.5 +/- 4.5 micromoles O(2) evolved per milligram chlorophyll per hour. This is adequate to sustain photorespiratory NH(3) recycling and the refixation of NH(3) arising from NO(3) under ambient conditions in the light. The role of the chloroplast in photorespiratory NH(3) recycling and the nature of the associated transport of 2-oxoglutarate into the chloroplast is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
J. W. Anderson  D. A. Walker 《Planta》1983,159(3):247-253
(Ammonia plus 2-oxoglutarate)-dependent O2 evolution by intact chloroplasts was enhanced three- to five fold by 2 mM L- and D-malate, attaining rates of 9–15 μmol mg-1 Chl h-1. Succinate and fumarate also promoted activity but D-aspartate and, in the presence of aminooxyacetate, L-aspartate inhibited the malate-promoted rate. A reconstituted chloroplast system supported (ammonia plus 2-oxoglutarate)-dependent O2 evolution at rates of 6-11 μmol mg-1 Chl h-1 in the presence of MgCl2, NADP(H), ADP plus Pi (or ATP), ferredoxin and L-glutamate. The concentrations of L-glutamate and ATP required to support 0.5 V max were 5 mM and 0.25 mM, respectively. When the reaction was initiated with NH4Cl, O2 evolution was preceded by a lag phase before attaining a constant rate. The lag phase was shortened by addition of low concentrations of L-glutamine or by preincubating in the dark in the presence of glutamate, ATP and NH4Cl. Oxygen evolution was inhibited by 2 mM azaserine and, provided it was added initially, 2 mM methionine sulphoximine. The (ammonia plus 2-oxoglutarate)-dependent O2 evolution was attributed to the synthesis of glutamine from NH4Cl and glutamate which reacted with 2-oxoglutarate in a reaction catalysed by ferredoxin-specific glutamate synthase using H2O as the ultimate electron donor. The lag phase was attributed to the establishment of a steady-state pool of glutamine. L-Malate did not affect the activity of the reconstituted system.  相似文献   

5.
The direct incorporation of 15NH4Cl into amino acids in illuminated spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) chloroplasts in the presence of 2-oxoglutarate plus malate was determined. The amido-N of glutamine was the most highly labeled N-atom during 15NH4 assimilation in the presence of malate. In 4 minutes the 15N-label of the amido-N of glutamine was 37% enriched. In contrast, values obtained for both the N-atom of glutamate and the amino-N of glutamine were only about 20% while that of the N-atom of aspartate was only 3%. The addition of malate during the assimilation of 15NH4Cl and Na15NO2 greatly increased the 15N-label into glutamine but did not qualitatively change the order of the incorporation of 15N-label into all the amino acids examined. This evidence indicates the direct involvement of the glutamine synthetase/glutamate synthase pathway for ammonia and nitrite assimilation in isolated chloroplasts. The addition of malate or succinate during ammonia assimilation also led to more than 3-fold increase in [14C]2-oxoglutarate transport into the chloroplast as well as an increase in the export of [14C]glutamate out of the chloroplast. Little [14C]glutamine was detected in the medium of the chloroplast preparations. The stimulation of 15N-incorporation and [14C]glutamate export by malate could be directly attributed to the increase in 2-oxoglutarate transport activity (via the 2-oxoglutarate translocator) observed in the presence of exogenous malate.  相似文献   

6.
I. U. Flügge  K. C. Woo  H. W. Heldt 《Planta》1988,174(4):534-541
The transport of glutamate, 2-oxoglutarate and malate in intact spinach chloroplasts was determined using a double-silicone-layer centrifugation technique in which the silicone layers stayed separated at the end of centrifugation. Glutamate was found to be transported via the dicarboxylate but not the 2-oxoglutarate translocator. Hence the kinetic parameters (i.e.K m,K i andV max) determined in glutamate-preloaded chloroplasts represent the kinetic constants of the dicarboxylate translocator. Measurements from malate- or succinate-preloaded chloroplasts represent the aggregate values of both the dicarboxylate and the 2-oxoglutarate translocators. Calculations showed that the 2-oxoglutarate and glutamate transport required to support the high fluxes of photorespiratory NH3 recycling could be achieved if the transport of these two dicarboxylates occurred on separate translocators. It is proposed that during photorespiration the transport of 2-oxoglutarate into and glutamate out of the chloroplast occurred via the 2-oxoglutarate and the dicarboxylate translocators, respectively. These transports are coupled to malate counter-exchange in a cascade-like manner resulting in a net 2-oxoglutarate/glutamate exchange with no net malate uptake.Abbreviation 2-OG 2-oxoglutarate  相似文献   

7.
Intact chloroplasts prepared from summer-grown spinach plants supported (aspartate plus 2-oxoglutarate)-dependent O2 evolution but not (glutamine plus 2-oxoglutarate)-dependent O2 evolution. The former activity, which was sensitive to amino oxyacetate, was attributed to transaminase activity and reduction of the resulting oxalo-acetate to malate using H2O as eventual electron donor. A reconstituted chloroplast system which included chloroplast stroma, thylakoid membranes, ferredoxin and NADP(H) supported O2 evolution in the presence ofl-glutamine and 2-oxoglutarate at rates of 15–22 μmol mg-1 chlorophyll h-1 although lower rates were obtained with material from winter-grown plants. Activity was not observed in the absence of ferredoxin and omission of NADP(H) decreased activity by 40%. The reaction was associated with the production of 0.49 mol O2 mol-1 2-oxoglutarate consumed and up to 0.46 mol O2 mol-1 glutamine supplied. The reaction, which was inhibited by azaserine but not by methionine sulphoximine or amino oxyacetate, was attributed to light-coupled glutamate synthase (EC 1.4.1.13) with H2O serving as eventual electron donor. Activity was not affected significantly byl-malate. The reconstituted system also supported O2 evolution in the presence of nitrite, oxaloacetate, (aspartate plus 2-oxoglutarate) and oxidised glutathione.  相似文献   

8.
Illuminated pea chloroplasts supported (glutamine plus α-oxoglutarate (α-OG)) and (NH3 plus α-OG)-dependent O2 evolution. The properties of these reactions were consistent with light-coupled glutamate synthase and glutamine synthetase activities. In the presence of a glutamate-oxidizing system (component C) comprised of NAD-specific glutamate dehydrogenase (NAD-GDH), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), 4 mM pyruvate and 0.2 mM NAD, illuminated chloroplasts supported O2 evolution in the presence of glutamine. The reaction did not proceed in the absence of any one of the constituents of component C and the properties of O2 evolution were consistent with light-coupled glutamate synthase activity. In the presence of component C, chloroplasts also catalysed O2 evolution in the presence of catalytic concentrations of glutamate. Studies of O2 evolution and metabolism of [14C]-glutamate in the presence of the inhibitors methionine sulphoximine (MSO) and azaserine suggest that O2 evolution was dependent on the synthesis of glutamine from the products of glutamate oxidation. This was supported by polarographic studies using α-OG and NH3 instead of glutamate.The results are consistent with a C5-dicarboxylic acid shuttlemechanism for the export of reducing equivalents from illuminated chloroplasts (glutamate) and recycling of the oxidation products (α-OG and NH3).  相似文献   

9.
Yu J  Woo KC 《Plant physiology》1988,88(4):1048-1054
The transport of l-[14C]glutamine in oat (Avena sativa L.) and spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) chloroplasts was studied by a conventional single-layer and a newly developed stable double-layer silicone oil filtering system. [14C]Glutamine was actively transported into oat chloroplasts against a concentration gradient. Metabolite uptake was greatly affected by the endogenous dicarboxylate pools, which could be easily changed by preloading the chloroplast with specific exogenous substrate. Glutamine uptake was decreased by 44 to 75% in oat chloroplasts preloaded with malate, 2-oxoglutarate (2-OG), and aspartate, but increased by 52% in chloroplasts preloaded with l-glutamate. On the other hand, the uptake of the other four dicarboxylates was decreased by 47 to 79% in chloroplasts preloaded with glutamine. In glutamine-preloaded chloroplasts the uptake of glutamine was inhibited only by l-glutamate. The observed inhibition by l-glutamate was competitive with an apparent Ki value of 32.1 millimolar in oat and 6.7 millimolar in spinach chloroplasts. This study indicates that there are two components involved in glutamine transport in chloroplasts. The major component was mediated via a specific glutamine translocator. It was specific for glutamine and did not transport other dicarboxylates except l-glutamate. A K0.5 value of 1.25 millimolar and Vmax of 45.5 micromoles per milligram of chlorophyll per hour were determined for the glutamine translocator in oat chloroplasts. The respective values were 1.0 millimolar and 16.7 micromoles per milligram of chlorophyll per hour in spinach chloroplasts. A three translocator model, involving the glutamine, dicarboxylate, and 2-OG translocators, is proposed for the reassimilation of photorespiratory NH3 in chloroplasts of C3 species. In this three-translocator model the additional transport of glutamine into the chloroplast is coupled to the export of glutamate via the glutamine translocator. This is an extension of the two-translocator model, involving the dicarboxylate and 2-OG translocators, proposed for spinach chloroplasts, (KC Woo, UI Flügge, HW Heldt 1987 Plant Physiol 84: 624-632).  相似文献   

10.
Protoplasts and intact chloroplasts isolated from Agropyron smithii Rybd. were utilized in an effort to determine the limiting factor(s) for photosynthesis at supraoptimal temperatures. Saturated CO2-dependent O2 evolution had a temperature optimum of 35°C for both protoplasts and intact chloroplasts. A sharp decline in activity was observed as assay temperature was increased above 35°C, and at 45°C only 20% of the maximal rate remained. The temperature optimum for 3-phosphoglycerate reduction by intact chloroplasts was 35°C. Above this temperature, 3-phosphoglycerate reduction was more stable than CO2-dependent O2 evolution. Reduction of nitrite in coupled intact chloroplasts had a temperature optimum of 40°C with only slight variation in activity between 35°C and 45°C. Reduction of nitrite in uncoupled chloroplasts had a temperature optimum of 40°C, but increasing the assay temperature to 45°C resulted in a complete loss of activity. Reduction of p-benzoquinone by protoplasts and intact chloroplasts had a temperature optimum of 32°C when measured in the presence of dibromothymoquinone. This photosystem II activity exhibited a strong inhibition of O2 evolution as assay temperature increased above the optimum. It is concluded that, below the temperature optimum, ATP and reductant were not limiting photosynthesis in these systems or intact leaves. Above the temperature optimum, photosynthesis in these systems is limited in part by the phosphorylation potential of the stromal compartment and not by the available reductant.  相似文献   

11.
A mutant line, RPr79/2, of barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Maris Mink) has been isolated that has an apparent defect in photorespiratory nitrogen metabolism. The metabolism of 14C-labelled glutamine, glutamate and 2-oxoglutarate indicates that the mutant has a greatly reduced ability to synthesise glutamate, especially in air, although in-vitro enzyme analysis indicates the presence of wild-type activities of glutamine synthetase (EC 6.3.1.2) glutamate synthase (EC 1.4.7.1 and EC 1.4.1.14) and glutamate dehydrogenase (EC 1.4.1.2). Several characteristics of RPr79/2 are very similar to those described for glutamate-synthase-deficient barley and Arabidopsis thaliana mutants, including the pattern of labelling following fixation of 14CO2, and the rapid rise in glutamine content and fall in glutamate in leaves on transfer to air. The CO2-fixation rate in RPr79/2 declines much more slowly on transfer from 1% O2 to air than do the rates in glutamate-synthase-deficient plants, and RPr79/2 plants do not die in air unless the temperature and irradiance are high. Analysis of (glutamine+NH3+2-oxoglutarate)-dependent O2 evolution by isolated chloroplasts shows that chloroplasts from RPr79/2 require a fivefold greater concentration of 2-oxoglutarate than does the wild-type for maximum activity. The levels of 2-oxoglutarate in illuminated leaves of RPr79/2 in air are sevenfold higher than in Maris Mink. It is suggested that RPr79/2 is defective in chloroplast dicarboxylate transport.  相似文献   

12.
Transport of dicarboxylates across the chloroplast envelope plays an important role in transferring carbon skeletons to the nitrogen assimilation pathway and exporting reducing equivalent to the cytosol to prevent photo-inhibition (the malate valve). It was previously shown that the Arabidopsis plastidic 2-oxoglutarate/malate transporter (AtpOMT1) and the general dicarboxylate transporter (AtpDCT1) play crucial roles at the interface between carbon and nitrogen metabolism. However, based on the in vitro transport properties of the recombinant transporters, it was hypothesized that AtpOMT1 might play a dual role, also functioning as an oxaloacetate/malate transporter, which is a crucial but currently unidentified component of the chloroplast malate valve. Here, we test this hypothesis using Arabidopsis T-DNA insertional mutants of AtpOMT1. Transport studies revealed a dramatically reduced rate of oxaloacetate uptake into chloroplasts isolated from the knockout plant. CO(2) -dependent O(2) evolution assays showed that cytosolic oxaloacetate is efficiently transported into chloroplasts mainly by AtpOMT1, and supported the absence of additional oxaloacetate transporters. These findings strongly indicate that the high-affinity oxaloacetate transporter in Arabidopsis chloroplasts is AtpOMT1. Further, the knockout plants showed enhanced photo-inhibition under high light due to greater accumulation of reducing equivalents in the stroma, indicating malfunction of the malate valve in the knockout plants. The knockout mutant showed a phenotype consistent with reductions in 2-oxoglutarate transport, glutamine synthetase/glutamate synthase activity, subsequent amino acid biosynthesis and photorespiration. Our results demonstrate that AtpOMT1 acts bi-functionally as an oxaloacetate/malate transporter in the malate valve and as a 2-oxoglutarate/malate transporter mediating carbon/nitrogen metabolism.  相似文献   

13.
Malate oxidation supported C2H2 reduction by bacteroids isolated from Sesbania rostrata stem nodules. Optimal activity reached 7.5 nanomoles per minute per milligram of dry weight and was in the same order of magnitude as that observed with succinate but always required a lower O2 tension. Malate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.37), purified 66-fold from bacteroids, actively oxidized malate (Km = 0.19 millimolar). Malic enzyme (EC 1.1.1.39) from Sesbania bacteroids had a lower affinity for malate (Km = 2.32 millimolar). Both enzymes exclusively required NAD+ as cofactor and required an alkaline pH for optimal activity. 2-Oxoglutarate and oxalate, inhibiting malate dehydrogenase and malic enzyme, respectively, were used to specifically block each malate oxidation pathway in bacteroids. The predominance of malate dehydrogenase activity to support bacteroid N2 fixation was demonstrated. The inhibition of O2 consumption by 2-oxoglutarate confirmed the importance of the malate dehydrogenase pathway in malate oxidation. It is proposed that the utilization of malate, with regard to O2, is important in a general strategy of this legume to maintain N2 fixation under O2 limited conditions.  相似文献   

14.
Aspartate or glutamate stimulated the rate of light-dependent malate decarboxylation by isolated Zea mays bundle sheath chloroplasts. Stimulation involved a decrease in the apparent Km (malate) and an increased maximum velocity of decarboxylation. In the presence of glutamate other dicarboxylates (succinate, fumarate) competitively inhibited malate decarboxylation by intact chloroplasts with respect to malate with an apparent Ki of about 6 millimolar. For comparison the Ki for inhibition of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-malic enzyme from freshly lysed chloroplasts by these dicarboxylates was 15 millimolar. A range of compounds structurally related to aspartate stimulated malate decarboxylation by intact chloroplasts. Ka values for stimulation at 5 millimolar malate were 1.7, 5, and 10 millimolar for l-glutamate, l-aspartate, and β-methyl-dl-aspartate, respectively. Certain compounds, notably cysteic acid, which stimulated malate decarboxylation by intact chloroplasts inhibited malate decarboxylation by nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-malic enzyme obtained from lysed chloroplasts and assayed under comparable conditions. It was concluded that aspartate, glutamate, and related compounds affect the transport of malate into the intact chloroplasts and that malate translocation does not take place on the general dicarboxylate translocator previously reported for higher plant chloroplasts.  相似文献   

15.
In the presence of purified nitrate reductase (NR) and 1 mM NADH, illuminated pea chloroplasts catalysed reduction of NO3? to NH3 with the concomitant evolution of O2. The rates were slightly less than those for reduction of NO2? to NH3 and O2, evolution by chloroplasts in the absence of NR and NADH (ca 6 μg atoms N/mg Chl/hr). Illuminated chloroplasts quantitatively reduced 0.2 mM oxaloacetate (OAA) to malate. In the presence of an extrachloroplast malate-oxidizing system comprised of NAD-specific malate dehydrogenase (NAD-MDH), NAD, NR and NO3?, illuminated chloroplasts supported OAA-dependent reduction of NO3? to NH3 with the evolution of O2. The reaction did not proceed in the absence of any of these supplements or in the dark but malate could replace OAA. The results are consistent with the reduction of NO3?by reducing equivalents from H2O involving a malate/OAA shuttle. The ratios for O2, evolved: C4-acid supplied and N reduced: C4-acid supplied in certain experiments imply recycling of the C4-acids.  相似文献   

16.
Studies on the reconstitution of o(2)-evolution of chloroplasts   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Sayre RT  Cheniae GM 《Plant physiology》1982,69(5):1084-1095
Extraction of spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) chloroplasts with cholate-asolectin in the absence of Mg2+ results in the rapid and selective inactivation of O2 evolution and a partial (30 to 40%) loss of photosystem II (PSII) donor activity without extraction of thylakoid bound Mn (~5 to 6 Mn per 400 Chlorophyll). Inclusion of ethylene glycol in the extractions inhibits loss of O2 evolution and results in quantitative and qualitative differences in proteins solubilized but does not significantly inhibit the partial loss of PSII donor activity. Similarly, in two stage experiments (extraction followed by addition of organic solvent and solubilized thylakoid protein), O2 evolution (V and Vmax) of extracted chloroplasts is enhanced approximately 2.5- to 8-fold. However, PSII donor activity remains unaffected. This reversal of cholate inactivation of O2 evolution can be induced by solvents including ethanol, methanol, 2-propanol, and dimethyl sulfoxide. Such enhancements of O2 evolution specifically required cholate-solubilized proteins, which are insensitive to NH2OH and are only moderately heat-labile. NH2OH extraction of chloroplasts prior to cholate-asolectin extraction abolishes reconstitutability of O2 evolution. Thus, the protein(s) affecting reconstitution is unlike those of the O2·Mn enzyme. The specific activity of the protein fraction effecting reconstitution of O2 evolution is greatest in fractions depleted of the reported Mn-containing, 65-kilodalton, and the Fe-heme, 232-kilodalton (58-kilodalton monomer), proteins. Divalent (~3 millimolar) and monovalent (~30 millimolar) cations do not affect reconstitution of PSII donor activity but do affect reconstitution of O2 evolution by decreasing the protein(s) concentration required for reconstitution of O2 evolution in nonfractionated, cholate-asolectin extractions. The data indicate a reconstitution of the PSII segment linking the PSII secondary donor(s) to O2-evolving centers.  相似文献   

17.
3-Phosphoglycerate (PGA)-dependent O2 evolution by mesophyll chloroplasts of the C4 plant, Digitaria sanguinalis L. Scop. (crabgrass), was inhibited by micromolar levels of 4,4′-diisothiocyano-2,2′-disulfonic acid stilbene (DIDS). As little as 1.8 micromolar DIDS added to the assay medium (containing 0.7 millimolar PGA) resulted in 80 to 100% inhibition of O2 evolution. The extent of inhibition of O2 evolution observed was dependent on various factors including: pH, concentration of DIDS to relative chlorophyll, concentration of PGA, and the time of addition of DIDS to the chloroplasts relative to addition of PGA.

Preincubation of crabgrass chloroplasts with micromolar levels of DIDS, followed by washing to remove any nonirreversibly bound DIDS, inhibited PGA-dependent O2 evolution. Protection against this inhibition was afforded by preincubating the chloroplasts with various substrates before adding DIDS. For example, if the chloroplasts were first incubated with 8.3 millimolar PGA, phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) or inorganic phosphate before adding 42 micromolar DIDS, the percentage of inhibition was decreased from 100% (without any substrate) to 0, 54, and 67%, respectively. 2-Phosphoglycerate caused a slight decrease in the inhibition (about 10%) and glucose-6-phosphate had no protective effect. If the chloroplasts were pretreated with DIDS initially, the inhibition could not be overcome by PGA, suggesting that DIDS acts as an irreversible inhibitor. Micromolar levels of DIDS also inhibited PGA dependent O2 evolution by isolated chloroplasts of the C3 plant barley. As with crabgrass, preincubation with PGA or inorganic phosphate resulted in a decrease in the DIDS inhibition, but PEP was very ineffective compared to the C4 chloroplasts.

Oxalacetate-dependent O2 evolution and its stimulation by the uncoupler, NH4Cl, were unaffected by the addition of DIDS to crabgrass mesophyll chloroplasts. Furthermore, preincubation of the chloroplasts with DIDS (up to 65 micromolar) had no inhibitory effect on the extractable activity of NADP glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase and phosphoglycerate kinase. Inhibition by DIDS was interpreted to be at the substrate binding site of the phosphate translocator. The data further suggest that in C4 crabgrass chloroplasts, PEP is transported on a carrier which also transports PGA.

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18.
Conditions for optimal CO2 fixation and malate decarboxylation by isolated bundle sheath chloroplasts from Zea mays were examined. The relative rates of these processes varied according to the photosynthetic carbon reduction cycle intermediate provided. Highest rates of malate decarboxylation, measured as pyruvate formation, were seen in the presence of 3-phosphoglycerate, while carbon fixation was highest in the presence of dihydroxyacetone phosphate; only low rates were measured with added ribose-5-phosphate. Chloroplasts exhibited a distinct phosphate requirement and this was optimal at a level of 2 millimolar inorganic phosphate in the presence of 2.5 millimolar 3-phosphoglycerate, dihydroxyacetone phosphate, or ribose-5-phosphate. Malate decarboxylation and CO2 fixation were stimulated by additions of AMP, ADP, or ATP with half-maximal stimulation occurring at external adenylate concentrations of about 0.15 millimolar. High concentrations (>1 millimolar) of AMP were inhibitory. Aspartate included in the incubation medium stimulated malate decarboxylation and CO2 assimilation. In the presence of aspartate, the apparent Michaelis constant (malate) for malate decarboxylation to pyruvate by chloroplasts decreased from 6 to 0.67 millimolar while the calculated Vmax for this process increased from 1.3 to 3.3 micromoles per milligram chlorophyll. Aspartate itself was not metabolized. It was concluded that the processes mediating the transport of phosphate, 3-phosphoglycerate, and dihydroxyacetone phosphate transport on the one hand, and also of malate might differ from those previously described for chloroplasts from C3 plants.  相似文献   

19.
Chloroplasts from CAM-Mesembryanthemum crystallinum can transport phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) across the envelope. The initial velocities of PEP uptake in the dark at 4°C exhibited saturation kinetics with increasing external PEP concentration. PEP uptake had a Vmax of 6.46 (±0.05) micromoles per milligram chlorophyll per hour and an apparent Kmpep of 0.148 (±0.004) millimolar. The uptake was competitively inhibited by Pi (apparent Ki = 0.19 millimolar), by glycerate 3-phosphate (apparent Ki = 0.13 millimolar), and by dihydroxyacetone phosphate, but malate and pyruvate were without effect. The chloroplasts were able to synthesize PEP when presented with pyruvate. PEP synthesis was light dependent. The prolonged synthesis and export of PEP from the chloroplasts required the presence of Pi or glycerate 3-phosphate in the external medium. It is suggested that the transport of pyruvate and PEP across the chloroplasts envelope is required during the gluconeogenic conversion of carbon from malate to storage carbohydrate in the light.  相似文献   

20.
Huber SC 《Plant physiology》1978,62(3):321-325
Magnesium was most inhibitory to photosynthetic reactions by intact chloroplasts when the magnesium was added in the dark before illumination. Two millimolar MgCl2, added in the dark, inhibited CO2-dependent O2 evolution by Hordeum vulgare L. and Spinacia oleracea L. (C3 plants) chloroplasts 70 to 100% and inhibited (pyruvate + oxaloacetate)-dependent O2 evolution by Digitaria sanguinalis L. (C4 plant) mesophyll chloroplasts from 80 to 100%. When Mg2+ was added in the light, O2 evolution was reduced only slightly. O2 evolution in the presence of phosphoglycerate was less sensitive to Mg2+ inhibition than was CO2-dependent O2 evolution.

Magnesium prevented the light activation of several photosynthetic enzymes. Two millimolar Mg2+ blocked the light activation of NADP-malate dehydrogenase in D. sanguinalis mesophyll chloroplasts, and the light activation of phosphoribulokinase, NADP-linked glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, and fructose 1,6-diphosphatase in barley chloroplasts. The results suggest that Mg2+ inhibits chloroplast photosynthesis by preventing the light activation of certain enzymes.

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