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1.
Sedum telephium is a C3/CAM intermediate plant in which expressionof CAM is caused by water deficit. The timing of the C3-CAMswitch and its relationship with water status and phosphoenolpyruvate(PEP) carboxylase activity have been investigated. Water deficitwas provided by application of polyethylene glycol (PEG) solutionsso that roots were exposed to water potentials from 0 to –2.0 MPa below that of the nutrient solution. The response ofthe plants was measured during the first dark period after PEGaddition and 7 d later. Malic acid accumulation was triggeredduring the first dark period at root water potentials of –0.3MPa or less. This corresponded with very small decreases inleaf water potential and relative water content. The capacityof PEP carboxylase was not altered at any water potential duringthe first dark period. After 7 d the capacity of PEP carboxylaseprogressively increased as water potential declined to –0.4MPa. At this, and more negative, water potentials it was 5-foldhigher than in well-watered leaves. Malic acid fluctuationsincreased with decreasing PEG water potential below a thresholdof –0.1 MPa. Malic acid levels at the end of the lightperiod were progressively lower as water potential decreased.NAD- and NADP-malic enzyme activity were not affected by lowwater potential. Leaves detached from well-watered plants in the middle of thelight period and kept hydrated did not accumulate malic acidduring the following dark period. Allowing the leaves to lose10% of their water content induced malic acid accumulation duringthe same time. Conversely, leaves detached from long-term droughtedplants (which had malate fluctuations and a PEP carboxylasecapacity 5-fold higher than well-watered plants) accumulatedmalate during the night if maintained at the same low hydrationstate (82%RWC), whereas malic acid accumulation was promptlyreduced if they were rehydrated. Malic acid accumulation couldtherefore be rapidly altered by changing the hydration stateof the leaves. The short-term rehydration treatments did notalter PEP carboxylase capacity. However, alteration of leafhydration affected the apparent Km (PEP) of PEP carboxylaseextracted 1 h before the end of the dark period. The Km wasincreased by rehydration and decreased by dehydration. Sensitivityto feedback inhibition by malate was not affected by hydrationstate and was high for PEP carboxylase from well-watered leavesand lower for PEP carboxylase from long-term droughted leaves. Taken together, the responses of intact plants and detachedleaves show that malic acid accumulation can be triggered veryrapidly by small water deficits in the leaves. The extent ofnight-time malic acid accumulation is independent of PEP carboxylasecapacity. However, a change in the hydration state of the leavescan rapidly alter the affinity of PEP carboxylase for PEP. Theregulation of malic acid accumulation in relation to the drought-inducedtriggering of CAM is discussed. Key words: Crassulacean acid metabolism, water stress, Sedum telephium, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEP carboxylase), malic enzyme  相似文献   

2.
A comparison of the activity and properties of the enzyme phosphoenolpyruvatecarboxylase (PEPC) was made for plants of Sedum telephium L.grown under low (70 µmol m–2 s–1) or high(500µmol m–2 s–1) PPFD and subjected to varyingdegrees of water stress. Under well-watered conditions onlyplants grown under high PPFD accumulated titratable acidityovernight and the extractable activity of PEPC was almost 2-foldhigher in these plants than in plants grown under low PPFD.Increasing drought stress resulted in a substantial increasein the activity of PEPC extracted both during the light anddark periods and a decrease in the sensitivity to inhibitionby malic acid. The magnitude of these changes was determinedby the severity and duration of drought and by light intensity.A comparison of the kinetic properties of PEPC from severelydroughted plants revealed that plants droughted under high PPFDhad a lower Km for PEP than plants under low PPFD. Additionof 2·0 mol m–3 malate resulted in an increase inthe Km for PEP, with plants draughted under low PPFD havinga significantly higher Km in the presence of malic acid comparedto those under high PPFD. Response to the activator glc-6-P,which lowered the Km for PEP, also varied between plants grownunder the two light regimes. Under well-watered conditions PEPCextracted from plants under high PPFD was more sensitive toactivation by glc-6-P than those under low PPFD. After the severedrought treatment, however, the Km for PEP in the presence ofglc-6-P was similar for enzyme extracted from plants grown underboth light regimes. Soluble sugars and starch were depletedovernight and were both possible sources of substrate for PEPC.With increasing drought, however, the depletion of starch relativeto soluble sugars increased under both light regimes. The propertiesof PEPC and the characteristics of carbohydrate accumulation/depletionare discussed in relation to the regulation of CAM in S. telephiumgrown under different light and watering regimes. Key words: PEP carboxylase, CAM, carbohydrates, Sedum telephium  相似文献   

3.
A phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) (EC 4.1.1.3 [EC] ) activitywas associated with, the Percoll purified chloroplasts fromKalanchoe blossfeldiana leaves performing crassulacean acidmetabolism (CAM) (plants grown under short-day conditions).Very little PEPC activity was detected in the chloroplasts whenthe plants were grown under long days, performing a C3-typephotosynthetic metabolism. The PEPC activity measured in thechloroplasts from CAM-plants was very sensitive to such effectorsas glucose-6-phosphate (G-6-P) and malate: the initial activityof PEPC in the presence of 1.2 mM PEP was 400% activated by10 mM G-6-P and was 25% inhibited by 1 mM malate. These resultsshow that the PEPC in the chloroplasts has the enzymatic characteristicsdescribed by Brulfert and Queiroz [(1982) Planta 154: 339] forPEPC extracted from CAM-performing K. blossfeldiana leaves. (Received November 1, 1985; Accepted April 25, 1986)  相似文献   

4.
The light and dark forms of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase(PEPC) from the dicot plant Amaranthus viridis L. were purifiedand their kinetic properties were studied in water-based orbinary alcohol-water solvents. At pH 7.3, the specific activityof the purified light form was about 2.7-fold higher than thatpresented by the dark form of PEPC under optimal conditions,while Km remained virtually unchanged in both forms. The enzyme'slight form was better activated by glucose 6-phosphate and lessinhibited by L-malate than the dark PEPC. From the organic solventsstudied, methanol showed the most important effect, enhancingPEPC activity by two-fold at 20% (v/v). Ethanol, ethylene glycol,tert-butanol and 2-propanol were also activators to a lesserdegree, but at high concentrations (typically greater than 20%,v/v) the effect was reduced or turned to inhibition. Km (PEP)was reduced by an order of magnitude in the presence of 20%(v/v) methanol (i.e. from 0.32 to 0.022 mM for the light formof the enzyme). The inhibitory effect of malate at low PEP waslessened by methanol for both forms (i.e. I50 0.25 mM in aqueousmedium to 0.48 mM in binary mixture for the dark form), whileglucose-6-P activation of PEPC was not affected by methanol.The results suggest that the kinetics of PEPC in a medium thatmimics more closely in vivo conditions are different from thoseobserved by standard procedures consisting of aqueous media,and provide a new insight on the properties of PEPC as relatedto its regulation in vivo. (Received June 26, 1995; Accepted August 24, 1995)  相似文献   

5.
Exposure of the facultative halophyte Mesembryanthemum crystallinumL. to salt stress induces a shift from C3 photosynthesis toCrassulacean acid metabolism (CAM). During induction of CAM,the activity of NADP-malic enzyme (EC 1.1.1.40 [EC] ) increased asmuch as 12-fold in leaves, while the enzymatic activity in rootsfell to half of the original level. These changes in the activityof the enzyme corresponded to changes in levels of the enzymeprotein. NADP-malic enzymes extracted from leaves in the C3and CAM modes could be distinguished by differences in electrophoreticmobility during electrophoresis on a non-denaturing polyacrylamidegel. NADP-malic enzyme extracted from roots in the C3-mode andin the CAM mode migrated as fast as the enzyme extracted fromleaves in the CAM mode on the same gel. Although the patternof peptide fragments from NADP-malic enzyme from CAM-mode leaveswas similar to that from C3-mode leaves, as indicated by peptidemapping, both immunoprecipitation and an enzyme-linked immunosorbentassay revealed some antigenic differences between the enzymesextracted from leaves in the C3 and the CAM modes. These resultssuggest the existence of at least two isoforms of NADPmalicenzyme that differ in their levels of expression during inductionof CAM. (Received April 21, 1994; Accepted September 5, 1994)  相似文献   

6.
Conditions and maintenance of growth were chosen so that plantsof Clusia minor L. were obtained which showed the C3- and CAM-modes of CO2-exchange, respectively. C. minor is known to accumulateconsiderable amounts of citric acid in addition to malic acidduring the dark-phase of CAM. 14CO2-pulse-chase experiments were performed with these plants.Patterns of labelling during the pulse and redistribution oflabel during the chase in the C3-mode were as expected for C3-photosynthesis.Pulse-labelling in the CAM-mode during the last hour of thelight period, during the first part of the dark period and duringthe last hour of the dark period always led to an almost exclusiveincorporation of label into malate. Redistribution of labelfrom malate after the pulse at the end of the dark period duringthe chase in the subsequent light period followed the patternexpected for light-dependent reassimilation of CO2 remobilizedfrom malate in CAM during the light period. During the chasesin the dark period, label was transferred from l4C-malate tocitrate. This suggests that during accumulation of citric acidin the dark period of CAM in C. minor, citrate is synthesizedin the mitochondria from malate or oxaloacetate after formationof malate via phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase. The experiment also showed that no labelled compounds are exportedfrom leaves in the CAM-mode during the dark period. In plantsof the C3-mode the roots proved to be strong sinks. Key words: Clusia minor, labelling, pulse-chase, 14CO2  相似文献   

7.
A remarkable difference was found in the survival of leavesof Mesembryanthemum crystallinum with plants grown in the C3versus the CAM mode. With excised leaves (petiole in solution)of C3-mode plants subjected to 6 days of darkness, there wasa large reduction in the chlorophyll content of the leaf andleaf turgor had decreased. By day 9, the chlorophyll had disappeared,except at the major veins, and the leaf tip had dried and turnedbrown. In contrast, the leaf tissue in the CAM mode showed onlya partial loss of chlorophyll during the same period, and evenafter 17 days of darkness, the tissue at the base was stillalive. Similarly, intact plants grown in the C3 mode deterioratedmuch faster during 20 days of darkness than did plants grownin the CAM mode. Chlorophyll content, chlorophyll a/b ratio,phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase, NADP-malic enzyme, malate andstarch content were measured. In both C3- and CAM-mode plants,the starch content decreased rapidly during the dark periodand was nearly depleted after two days. In the CAM-mode tissue,there was a relatively high level of malate during prolongeddarkness (up to 17 days), with a transitory rise early in thedark period. In contrast, the malate content was low and rapidlydepleted in the C3-mode leaves kept in darkness. These findingssuggest that malate may be an important source of carbon forsustaining leaves of CAM-mode M. crystallinum during prolongeddarkness. (Received May 20, 1987; Accepted October 23, 1987)  相似文献   

8.
AULIO  K. 《Annals of botany》1986,58(2):273-275
The shoreweed Littorella uniflora (L.) Aschers. possesses twogrowth forms differing from each other both in morphologicaland ecological features. In two recent publications, oppositeresults have been reported on the occurrence of a CAM-like carbonpathway in the terrestrial form of L. uniflora. Experimentalanalysis in this paper reveals that the induction of diel acidmetabolism requires saturated air humidity, conditions whichrarely occur in nature. Littorella uniflora (L.) Aschers., CAM-like photosynthesis, malic acid, relative humidity  相似文献   

9.
Control of C4 photosynthesis and Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) is, in part, mediated by the diel regulation of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) activity. The nature of this regulation of PEPC in the leaf cell cytoplasm of C4 and CAM plants is both metabolite-related and posttranslational. Specificially, the regulatory properties of the enzyme vary in accord with the physiological activity of C4 photosynthesis and CAM: PEPC is less sensitive to feedback inhibition by l-malate under light (C4 plants) or at night (CAM plants) than in darkness (C4) or during the day (CAM). While the view that a light-induced change in the aggregation state of the holoenzyme is a general mechanism for the diel regulation of PEPC activity in CAM plants is currently in dispute, there is no supportive in vivo evidence for such a tetramer/dimer interconversion in C4 plants. In contrast, a wealth of in vitro and in vivo data has accumulated in support of the view that the reversible phosphorylation of a specific, N-terminal regulatory serine residue in PEPC (e.g. Ser-15 or Ser-8 in the maize or sorghum enzymes, respectively) plays a key, if not cardinal, role in the posttranslational regulation of the carboxylase by light/dark or day/night transitions in both C4 and CAM plants, respectively.  相似文献   

10.
Activities of Carboxylation Enzymes in Freshwater Macrophytes   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Fifteen species of freshwater macrophytes, mainly from cool,temperate waters, were assayed for ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase(RuBPCase) and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPCase) activities.In extracts from all the species RuBPCase was the most activecarboxylation enzyme, and the RuBPCase/PEPCase ratio was atleast 2·0, even for the submersed species Isoetes lacustrisL. and Littorella unifiora (L.) Aschers. which have been reportedto show Crassulacean Acid Metabolism (CAM) activity. The PEPCaseactivity in I.lacustris was lower than that found in some non-CAM-likespecies. In this respect, I.lacustris and L unifiora differfrom most terrestrial CAM plants. However, these two species,along with Potamogeton praelongus Wulf. and Juncus bulbosusvar.fluitans L., had the lowest RuBPCASE/PEPCase ratios, lowerthan found in terrestrial C3 species; suggesting that the potentialfor substantial photosynthetic metabolism of C4 acids existsin some temperate, submersed plants. In the three amphibiousspecies (Potamogeton polygonifolius Pourr., Mentha aquaticaL., and Hippuris vulgaris L.) examined, the aerial leaves exhibitedhigher RuBPCase activities than the submersed leaves. Key words: Ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase, phosphoenolpruvate carboxylase, freshwater macrophytes  相似文献   

11.
The catalytic and regulatory properties of phosphoenolpyruvate(PEP) carboxylase (PEPC) are modulated remarkably by the increasein the level of bicarbonate in the assay medium. The activityof PEPC increased by two-fold as the concentration of bicarbonatewas raised from 0.05 to 10 mM. During this state, there wasonly marginal effect on Km for PEP, while the affinity of PEPCto Mg2+ increased by >2 fold. In contrast, the sensitivityof PEPC to malate decreased with increasing concentration ofHCO3. Similarly, the stimulation by glucose 6-phosphate(G-6-P) at optimal concentration (10 mM) of HCO3 wasmuch less than that at suboptimal concentration (0.05 mM). K1for malate increased by about 3 fold and Ka for G-6-P risedby fourfold as bicarbonate concentration was rised from 0.05to 10 mM. These results suggest that HCO3 desensitizesPEPC to both malate and G-6-P. Further, these changes were manifestedin both dark- as well as light-forms of the enzyme. Similarresults were obtained with PEPC in leaf extracts or in purifiedform. We therefore propose that bicarbonate-induced changesare independent of phospho-rylation and possibly through a significantchange in the conformation of the enzyme. This is the firstdetailed report indicating marked modulation of regulatory andcatalytic properties of PEPC by bicarbonate, one of its substrate. (Received April 14, 1998; Accepted September 22, 1998)  相似文献   

12.
Klaus Winter 《Planta》1982,154(4):298-308
Properties of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase, obtained from leaves of Mesembryanthemum crystallinum L. performing Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM), were determined at frequent time points during a 12-h light/12-h dark cycle. Leaf extracts were rapidly desalted and PEP carboxylase activity as a function of PEP concentration, malate concentration, and pH was measured within 2 min after homogenization of the tissue. Maximum velocity of PEP carboxylase was similar in the light and dark at pH 7.5 and pH 8.0. However, PEP carboxylase had as much as a 12-fold lower K m for PEP and as much as a 20-fold higher K i for malate during the dark than during the light periods, the magnitude of these differences being dependent on the assay pH. Assuming that enzyme properties immediately after isolation reflect the approximate state of the enzyme in vivo, these differences in enzyme properties reduce the potential for CO2 fixation via PEP carboxylase in the light. A small decrease in cytoplasmic pH in the light would greatly magnify the above differences in day/night properties of PEP carboxylase, because the sensitivity of PEP carboxylase to inhibition by malate increased with decreasing pH. Properties of PEP carboxylase were also studied in plants exposed to short-term perturbations of the normal 12-h light/12-h dark cycle (e.g., prolonged light period, prolonged dark period). Under all light/dark regimes, there was a close correlation between change in properties of PEP carboxylase and changes of the tissue from acidification to deacidification, and vice versa. Changes in properties of PEP carboxylase were not merely light/dark phenomena because they were also observed in plants exposed to continuous light or dark. the data indicate that, during CAM, PEP carboxylase exists in two stages which differ in their capacity for net malate synthesis. The physiologically-active state is distinguished by a low K m for PEP and a high K i for malate and favors malate synthesis. The physiologically-inactive state has a high K m for PEP and a low K i for malate and exists during periods of deacidification and other periods lacking synthesis of malic acid.Abbreviations CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - PEPC PEP carboxylase - RuBP ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate - RH relative humidity  相似文献   

13.
Madsen, T. V. 1987. Sources of inorganic carbon acquired throughCAM in Littorella uniflora (L.) Aschers.—J. exp. Bot.38: 367–377. The CO2 dynamics of the lacunal air and the relative contributionof external and internal CO2 sources to dark CO2 assimilationwas examined in the submerged aquatic CAM species Littorellauniflora (L.) Aschers. Refixation of internal CO2, released by dark respiration, constitutedabout 30–35% of the total dark CO2 assimilation. At aCO2 concentration of 0·2 mol m–3 around the leavesthe external CO2 uptake through the roots increased from 45%of the total CO2 uptake at 0·7 mol m–3 CO2 to 100%at 1·6 mol m–3 and 3·1 mol m–3 CO2around the roots. The negligible importance of leaf CO2 uptakeat high CO2 concentrations around the roots was the result ofa causative high CO2 concentration in the leaf lacunae. The CO2 permeability of Littorella leaves was high relativeto root permeability. This has at least two ecological implications:(1) it enhances the potential diffusive release of CO2 fromthe sediment C02-pool via the lacunal system of the plants.This loss of CO2, however, was found to be greatly reduced byCAM activity of the plants. (2) The high permeability of theleaf surface to CO2 exchange allows the plants to assimilateCO2 from the water surrounding the leaves when the concentrationis high, i.e. during extensive epiphyte dark respiration. Thus,CAM tends to facilitate retension of a high CO2 pool in thesediment-plant system and at the same time allows the plantsto exploit the water column CO2 source when it is abundant.This result is in accordance with the general idea that CAMin aquatics constitute a carbon conserving mechanism. Key words: Aquatic macrophytes, dark CO2 assimilation, inorganic carbon sources  相似文献   

14.
The extent to which photorespiration occurs in CrassulaceanAcid Metabolism (CAM) plants has received limited attention.No comparative studies of C3 and CAM development have been made.To address this problem, activities of several photorespiratoryenzymes were measured in a facultative CAM plant—Mesembryanthemumcrystallinum L.—during induction of CAM by water stress(NaCl-treatment). Salt-treatment over a 22 d period produceda progressive change in metabolism from C3 to CAM. This wasconfirmed by (I) changes in gas exchange from C3 fixation tothe characteristic CAM pattern of nocturnal CO2 uptake; (2)increases in did acid fluctuation and (3) a 30-fold increasein phosphoenol pyruvate (PEP) carboxylase activity. In contrast,no significant changes were observed in the activities of glycollateoxidase (GO), NAD-dependent-hydroxypyruvate reductase (HPR),glutamine synthetase (GS) or glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) whenplants were induced into CAM. Ion exchange chromatography onDEAE Sephacel detected only one GS isoenzyme (GS2, chloroplastic)at all stages of CAM induction, Western blot analysis, however,detected an additional, although minor, band of GS1 (cytosolic),in C3 plants, which disappeared following CAM induction. Ourresults show that, after development of CAM, these plants stillretain the capacity to photorespire. This may be an essentialrequirement of CAM plants growing in habitats with variablerainfall. When water availability is high, stomata may openin the light allowing ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase oxygenase(Rubisco) activity and photorespiration to occur. The inherentcapacity to photorespire would allow plants to survive variableperiods of rainfall. Key words: Mesembryanthemum, C3, CAM, photorespiration  相似文献   

15.
Sipes DL  Ting IP 《Plant physiology》1989,91(3):1050-1055
Kinetic characteristics of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) from the epiphytic C3 or C4: CAM intermediate plant, Peperomia camptotricha, were investigated. Few day versus night differences in Vmax,Km(PEP)), or malate inhibition were observed, even in extracts from water-stressed plants which characteristically perform CAM, regardless of efforts to stabilize day/night forms. The PEPC extracted from plants during the light period remained stable, without much of an increase or decrease in activity for at least 22 hours at 0 to 4°C. Extracts from mature, fully developed leaves had slightly greater PEPC activity than from very young, developing leaves. Generally, however, the kinetic properties of PEPC extracted from mature leaves of plants grown under short day (SD), long day (LD), or 1-week water-stress conditions, as well as from young, developing leaves, were similar. The PEPC inhibitor, l-malate, decreased the Vmax and increased the Km(PEP) for all treatments. Under specific conditions, malate did not inhibit PEPC rates in the dark extracts as much as the light. The PEPC activator, glucose-6-phosphate (G-6-P), lowered the Km(PEP) for all treatments. At saturating PEP concentrations, PEPC activity was independent of pH in the range of 7.5 to 9.0. At subsaturating PEP concentrations, the pH optimum was 7.8. The rates of PEPC activity were lower in the light period extracts than the dark, at pH 7.1, but day/night PEPC was equally active at pH 7.8. At pH 7.5 and a subsaturating PEP concentration, G-6-P significantly activated PEPC. At pH 8, however, only slight activation by G-6-P was observed. The lower pH of 7.5 combined with l-malate addition, greatly inhibited PEPC, particularly in extracts from young, developing leaves which were completely inhibited at an l-malate concentration of 1 millimolar. However, malate did not further inhibit PEPC activity in mature leaves when assayed at pH 7.1. The fairly constant day/night kinetic and regulatory properties of PEPC from P. camptotricha are unlike those of PEPC from CAM or C4 species studied, and are consistent with the photosynthetic metabolism of this plant.  相似文献   

16.
Maximum activity of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC, EC4.1.1.31) was detected at the stationary phase of growth ofCatharanthus roseus cells in a heterotrophic culture. The activityof PEPC, after partial purification by fractionation with ammoniumsulphate and chromatography on Q-Sepharose, was greatly influencedby pH. The Km of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) was 23 µM atpH 8·0 and 45 µM at pH 7·4. Malate, aspartate,citrate, ATP, pyrophosphate and Pi acted as inhibitors of PEPC,but the extent of inhibition varied in each case with the pHof the reaction mixture. By contrast, glucose-6-phosphate, fructose-1,6-bisphosphateand acetyl-CoA, known as stimulators of the activity of PEPCfrom other sources, had little or no effect on the activityof the partially purified PEPC. The possible role and mechanismof regulation of PEPC in C. roseus cells are discussed.Copyright1994, 1999 Academic Press Catharanthus roseus, Apocynaceae, Madagascar periwinkle, suspension culture, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase, enzyme kinetics, glycolysis  相似文献   

17.
Guard cell protoplasts (GCP) were prepared from leaves of Commelinacommunis L. and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPc) activityrecorded after injection of the protoplasts directly into theassay medium. The GCP were lysed immediately by the presenceof Triton X-100 and a lowered osmotic concentration in the assaycuvette enabling PEPc activity to be measured with ‘nascent’enzyme. There was no light activation of the enzyme with KmPEP (about 3.7 mol m–3) and Vmax being similar in light-ordark-treated protoplasts. Illumination of the GCP in the presenceof CO2-free air and KCI, a treatment which is known to swellGCP, did not change the kinetics. PEPc activity at saturating PEP was very sensitive to malateinhibition, 20 mmol m–3 (the I50 value) inhibiting activityby about 50%. Inhibition was similar in light- or dark-treatedprotoplasts. Malate inhibition was, however, much less (I50= 500 mmol m–3) if the enzyme source was a protoplastextract kept in the absence of glycerol. Inclusion of 20% glycerolin the extraction medium maintained the enzyme in the malate-sensitiveform as occurred in the in vivo assays. The high apparent KmPEP and the high sensitivity to malate inhibition of GCP PEPcare features unlike those observed with PEPc from leaf tissuesof C4 and CAM plants and from GCP extracts. PEPc activity increased slightly in the presence of KCI in theassay medium up to about 10 mol m–3 and thereafter activityslowly declined as KCI concentrations increased further. Key words: Guard cell protoplasts, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase  相似文献   

18.
The photosynthetic uptake of root-zone CO2 was determined forEriocaulon septangulare, Gratiola aurea, Isoetes macrospora,Littorella uniflora var. americana and Lobelia dortmanna aspart of a study of the photosynthetic carbon economy of submergedaquatic isoetids. The pH and dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC)of the sediment interstitial water in four Wisconsin lakes reflectedthe water column character, where the DIC increased with depthin the sediment to concentrations five to ten times those ofthe water column. Sediment free CO2 concentrations were 5–50times those in the water column and were similar at all sites(about 05–1.0mM CO2 in the root-zone). In ‘pH-drift’studies these plants were unable to take up HCO2. Laboratory determinations of the carbon uptake from the rootand shoot-zones were made for all five species. These experimentsshowed that CO2 in the root-zone accounted for 65–95 percent of external carbon uptake for the five species. For G.aurea and E. septangulare, root-zone CO2 was > 85 per centof carbon uptake. Carbon, CO2, photosynthesis, sediment, isoetid, Eriocaulon septangulare, Gratiola aurea, Isoetes macrospora, Littorella uniflora, Lobelia dortmanna  相似文献   

19.
A spectrophotometric assay has been used to measure the activityof PEP carboxylase and RuBP carboxylase in the epidermal andmesophyll tissue of Commelina communis. On both a chlorophylland protein basis the PEP carboxylase activity was always greaterin the epidermis than in the mesophyll, whereas RuBP carboxylaseactivity was always highest in the mesophyll. PEP carboxylaseactivity in epidermal extracts was lost very slowly and itspH optimum was a broad one in the range 7·5–8·0.The Km values for PEP carboxylase in the epidermis and mesophyllobtained from light- and dark-treated plants were not very differentalthough its Vmax was much lower in dark-treated tissue. Thesedata are discussed in relation to the possible role of PEP carboxylasein guard cell metabolism.  相似文献   

20.
NADP-malic enzyme (EC 1.1.1.40 [EC] ), which is involved in Crassulaceanacid metabolism (CAM), was purified to electrophoretic homogeneityfrom the leaves of the inducible CAM plant Mesembryanthemumcrystallinum. The NADP-malic enzyme, which was purified 1,146-fold,has a specific activity of 68.8 µmol (mg protein)–1min–1. The molecular weight of the subunits of the enzymewas 64 kDa. The native molecular weight of the enzyme was determinedby gel-filtration to be 390 kDa, indicating that the purifiedNADP-malic enzyme is a hexamer of identical subunits. The optimalpH for activity of the enzyme was around 7.2. Double-reciprocalplots of the enzymatic activity as a function of the concentrationof L-malate yielded straight lines both at pH 7.2 and at pH7.8 and did not reveal any evidence for cooperativity of bindingof L-malate. The Km value for L-malate was 0.35 mM. Hill plotsof the activity as a function of the concentration of NADP+indicated positive cooperativity in the binding of NADP+ tothe enzyme with a Hill coefficient (nH) of 2.0. An S0.5 value(the concentration giving half-maximal activity) of 9.9 µMfor NADP+ was obtained. Oxaloacetate inhibited the activityof the NADP-malic enzyme. Effects of succinate and NaHCO3 onthe activity of NADP-malic enzyme were small. (Received October 30, 1991; Accepted May 1, 1992)  相似文献   

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