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1.
Synechococcus leopoliensis was grown over a wide range of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) concentrations (4-25,000 micromolar) which were obtained by varying culture pH (6.2-9.6) and the CO2 concentration of the gas stream (36-50,000 microliters per liter). The [DIC] required to half-saturate photosynthesis (K½DIC) was found to vary depending upon the ambient DIC concentration at which the cells were grown. Low [DIC] grown cells exhibited low values of K½DIC (4.7 micromolar) whereas cells grown at high [DIC] exhibited high values of K½DIC (1-2.5 millimolar). Intermediate concentrations of DIC produced intermediate values. Changes in K½DIC appeared to be solely a function of [DIC] and were independent of both culture pH and CO2 concentration. As changes in K½DIC occur in response to DIC concentrations commonly found in natural systems we suggest this adaptation may be of ecological significance.  相似文献   

2.
Photosynthesis of washed cells of Synechococcus UTEX 625 grown on 5% CO2 was markedly stimulated (647 ± 50%) at pH 8.0 by the addition of low concentrations of NaCl (concentration required for half-maximal response, K½, = 18 micromolar). Studies with KCl and Na2SO4 showed that the stimulation was due to Na+. Photosynthesis at pH 6.1 was only slightly stimulated by Na+. The response of photosynthesis at pH 8.0 to [Na+] was strongly sigmoidal for dissolved inorganic carbon ([DIC] ≤ 500 micromolar). Cells grown with high total [DIC], but air-levels of CO2, at pH 9.6 showed the same response to low [Na+]. The absence of Na+ could be partially, but not completely overcome, by higher [DIC]. Various methods for examining CO2 or HCO3 use (K½CO2 determination; isotopic disequilibrium; and consideration of HCO3 dehydration rate) were consistent with CO2 use by the cells, but HCO3 use could not be ruled out. Isotopic disequilibrium studies showed that CO2 use was stimulated by Na+. Cells grown on 5% CO2 accumulated DIC against a concentration gradient by a process (or processes) dependent on Na+. No evidence for uptake of Na+ concomitant with DIC uptake could be found. The lack of O2 evolution during the initial and most rapid period of DIC accumulation suggested that the required energy was obtained from cyclic photophosphorylation.  相似文献   

3.
The consequences of light adaptation and acclimation of photosynthesis on photosynthetic nitrogen use efficiency (NUE), particularly as it relates to the efficiency of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (Rubisco) use in photosynthetic CO2 assimilation, was studied in the sun species Glycine max and the shade species Alocasia macrorrhiza. Both G. max and A. macrorrhiza were found to possess the capacity for light acclimation of CO2 assimilation, but over distinctly different ranges of photon flux density (PFD). For each species, light acclimation of photosynthesis had little effect on the rate of photosynthesis per unit Rubisco protein or the light response of Rubisco carbamylation and CA 1P metabolism. In contrast, photosynthesis per unit Rubisco protein was significantly higher in G. max than in A. macrorrhiza, due in part to a lower total (fully carbamylated) molar activity (activity per unit enzyme) of A. macrorrhiza Rubisco than that of G. max. Comparison of the light response of Rubisco regulatory mechanisms between G. max and A. macrorrhiza indicated some degree of adaptation, such that carbamylation was higher and CA 1P levels lower at lower PFDs in the shade species than the sun species. However, this adjustment was not sufficient for Rubisco in low light grown A. macrorrhiza to be fully active at the growth PFD. Photosynthesis in A. macrorrhiza appeared to become RuBP regeneration-limited at lower PFDs than G. max, and this was probably the determinant of the light saturated rate of photosynthesis in the shade species. The low efficiency of Rubisco use in A. macrorrhiza was a major contributing factor to its five- to sixfold lower photosynthetic NUE than G. max. Shade species such as A. macrorrhiza appear to make far from maximal use of Rubisco protein N.  相似文献   

4.
The role of external carbonic anhydrase in inorganic carbon acquisition and photosynthesis by Chlamydomonas reinhardii at alkaline pH (8.0) was studied. Acetazolamide (50 micromolar) completely inhibited external carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity as determined from isotopic disequilibrium experiments. Under these conditions, photosynthetic rates at low dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) were far greater than could be maintained by CO2 supplied from the spontaneous dehydration of HCO3 thereby showing that C. reinhardii has the ability to utilize exogenous HCO3. Acetazolamide increased the concentration of DIC required to half-saturate photosynthesis from 38 to 80 micromolar, while it did not affect the maximum photosynthetic rate. External CA activity was also removed from the cell-wall-less mutant (CW-15) by washing. This had no effect on the photosynthetic kinetics of the algae while the addition of acetazolamide to washed cells (CW-15) increased the K½DIC from 38 to 80 micromolar. Acetazolamide also caused a buildup of the inorganic carbon pool upon NaHCO3 addition, indicating that this compound partially inhibited internal CA activity. The effects of acetazolamide on the photosynthetic kinetics of C. reinhardii are likely due to the inhibition of internal rather than a consequence of the inhibition of external CA. Further analysis of the isotopic disequilibrium experiments at saturating concentration of DIC provided evidence consistent with active CO2 transport by C. reinhardii. The observation that C. reinhardii has the ability to take up both CO2 and bicarbonate throws into question the role of external CA in the accumulation of DIC in this alga.  相似文献   

5.
Changes of some photosynthetic properties of high-CO2 grown cells of Chlorella pyrenoidosa during adaptation to low-CO2 conditions have been investigated. The Km value of photosynthesis of the high-CO2 grown cells for dissolved inorganic carbon was 3.3 millimolar and decreased to 25 to 30 micromolar within 4 hours after transferring to air. In the presence of saturating CO2 concentrations the photosynthetic activity of the high-CO2 grown cells was 1.5 times as high as that of the low-CO2 grown cells. There was a significant rise of the photosynthetic activity during adaptation of the high-CO2 grown cells to air, followed by a steady decrease. The activity of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase in both the high- and low-CO2 grown cells was close to the photosynthetic activity of the cells. The concentration of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) was higher in the low-CO2 adapting and low-CO2 grown cells than in the high-CO2 grown cells regardless of the photosynthetic rate. This seems to be due to an increased RuBP regeneration activity during adaptation followed by maintenance of the new higher concentration. The RuBP level always exceeded the concentration of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase RuBP binding sites in both the high- and low-CO2 grown cells at any dissolved inorganic carbon concentration.  相似文献   

6.
The blue-green alga (Cyanobacterium) Synechococcus leopoliensis (Racib.) Komarek was grown in dissolved inorganic carbon [DIC]-limited chemostats over the entire range of growth rates. At each growth rate, the kinetics of photosynthesis with respect to [DIC] and the maximal rate of photosynthesis (Pmax) were determined. The half-saturation constant for [DIC]-limited photosynthesis (K1/2DIC) for cells growing below 1.7 d?1 was constant (4.7 μM) whereas for growth rates between 1.7 d?1 and 2.1 d?1max) the kinetics of photosynthesis were multiphasic with an apparent K1/2DIC between 1.5–2.0 mM. Pmax increased in a linear fashion with growth rate for growth rates below 1.7 d?1. No trend in Pmax was apparent for growth rates greater than 1.7 d?1. These kinetic parameters were used to predict a growth rate versus [DIC] relationship. Results show that the Monod relationship is a physiologically valid expression of growth as a function of [DIC] provided (K1/2DIC) remains constant. The major change in (K1/2DIC) as μ approaches μmax results in the conclusion that two separate and distinct Monod equations must be used to describe growth as a function of DIC over the entire growth range. These results point to a major discontinuity in the μ vs. [DIC] curve at 1.7 d?1 which corresponds to the change from high to low affinity photosynthetic kinetics. We believe these results account for the previously described deficiencies of the Monod equation in describing [DIC]-limited algal growth.  相似文献   

7.
Inorganic Carbon Uptake by Chlamydomonas reinhardtii   总被引:15,自引:12,他引:3  
The rates of CO2-dependent O2 evolution by Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, grown with either air levels of CO2 or air with 5% CO2, were measured at varying external pH. Over a pH range of 4.5 to 8.5, the external concentration of CO2 required for half-maximal rates of photosynthesis was constant, averaging 25 micromolar for cells grown with 5% CO2. This is consistent with the hypothesis that these cells take up CO2 but not HCO3 from the medium and that their CO2 requirement for photosynthesis reflects the Km(CO2) of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase. Over a pH range of 4.5 to 9.5, cells grown with air required an external CO2 concentration of only 0.4 to 3 micromolar for half-maximal rates of photosynthesis, consistent with a mechanism to accumulate external inorganic carbon in these cells. Air-grown cells can utilize external inorganic carbon efficiently even at pH 4.5 where the HCO3 concentration is very low (40 nanomolar). However, at high external pH, where HCO3 predominates, these cells cannot accumulate inorganic carbon as efficiently and require higher concentrations of NaHCO3 to maintain their photosynthetic activity. These results imply that, at the plasma membrane, CO2 is the permeant inorganic carbon species in air-grown cells as well as in cells grown on 5% CO2. If active HCO3 accumulation is a step in CO2 concentration by air-grown Chlamydomonas, it probably takes place in internal compartments of the cell and not at the plasmalemma.  相似文献   

8.
Makino A  Mae T  Ohira K 《Plant physiology》1983,73(4):1002-1007
Changes in photosynthesis and the ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) carboxylase level were examined in the 12th leaf blades of rice (Oryza sativa L.) grown under different N levels. Photosynthesis was determined using an open infrared gas analysis system. The level of RuBP carboxylase was measured by rocket immunoelectrophoresis. These changes were followed with respect to changes in the activities of RuBP carboxylase, ribulose 5-phosphate kinase, NADP-glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase, and 3-phosphoglyceric acid kinase.

RuBP carboxylase activity was highly correlated with the net rate of photosynthesis (r = 0.968). Although high correlations between the activities of other enzymes and photosynthesis were also found, the activity per leaf of RuBP carboxylase was much lower than those of other enzymes throughout the leaf life. The specific activity of RuBP carboxylase on a milligram of the enzyme protein basis remained fairly constant (1.16 ± 0.07 micromoles of CO2 per minute per milligram at 25°C) throughout the experimental period.

Kinetic parameters related to CO2 fixation were examined using the purified carboxylase. The Km(CO2) and Vmax values were 12 micromolar and 1.45 micromoles of CO2 per minute per milligram, respectively (pH 8.2 and 25°C). The in vitro specific activity calculated at the atomospheric CO2 level from the parameters was comparable to the in situ true photosynthetic rate per milligram of the carboxylase throughout the leaf life.

The results indicated that the level of RuBP carboxylase protein can be a limiting factor in photosynthesis throughout the life span of the leaf.

  相似文献   

9.
Low phosphate nutrition results in increased chlorophyll fluorescence, reduced photosynthetic rate, accumulation of starch and sucrose in leaves, and low crop yields. This study investigated physiological responses of soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merr.) leaves to low inorganic phosphate (Pi) conditions. Responses of photosynthesis to light and CO2 were examined for leaves of soybean grown at high (0.50 millimolar) or low (0.05 millimolar) Pi. Leaves of low Pi plants exhibited paraheliotropic orientation on bright sunny days rather than the normal diaheliotropic orientation exhibited by leaves of high Pi soybeans. Leaves of plants grown at high Pi had significantly higher light saturation points (1000 versus 630 micromole photons [400-700 nanometers] per square meter per second) and higher apparent quantum efficiency (0.062 versus 0.044 mole CO2 per mole photons) at ambient (34 pascals) CO2 than did low Pi leaves, yet stomatal conductances were similar. High Pi leaves also had significantly higher carboxylation efficiency (2.90 versus 0.49 micromole CO2 per square meter per second per pascal), a lower CO2 compensation point (6.9 versus 11.9 pascals), and a higher photosynthetic rate at 34 pascals CO2 (19.5 versus 6.7 micromoles CO2 per square meter per second) than did low Pi leaves. Soluble protein (0.94 versus 0.73 milligram per square centimeter), ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase content (0.33 versus 0.25 milligram per square centimeter), and ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase specific activity (25.0 versus 16.7 micromoles per square meter per second) were significantly greater in leaves of plants in the high Pi treatment. The data indicate that Pi stress alters the plant's CO2 reduction characteristics, which may in turn affect the plant's capacity to accommodate normal radiation loads.  相似文献   

10.
Farazdaghi H 《Bio Systems》2011,103(2):265-284
Photosynthesis is the origin of oxygenic life on the planet, and its models are the core of all models of plant biology, agriculture, environmental quality and global climate change. A theory is presented here, based on single process biochemical reactions of Rubisco, recognizing that: In the light, Rubisco activase helps separate Rubisco from the stored ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP), activates Rubisco with carbamylation and addition of Mg2+, and then produces two products, in two steps: (Step 1) Reaction of Rubisco with RuBP produces a Rubisco-enediol complex, which is the carboxylase-oxygenase enzyme (Enco) and (Step 2) Enco captures CO2 and/or O2 and produces intermediate products leading to production and release of 3-phosphoglycerate (PGA) and Rubisco. PGA interactively controls (1) the carboxylation-oxygenation, (2) electron transport, and (3) triosephosphate pathway of the Calvin-Benson cycle that leads to the release of glucose and regeneration of RuBP. Initially, the total enzyme participates in the two steps of the reaction transitionally and its rate follows Michaelis-Menten kinetics. But, for a continuous steady state, Rubisco must be divided into two concurrently active segments for the two steps. This causes a deviation of the steady state from the transitional rate. Kinetic models are developed that integrate the transitional and the steady state reactions. They are tested and successfully validated with verifiable experimental data. The single-process theory is compared to the widely used two-process theory of Farquhar et al. (1980. Planta 149, 78-90), which assumes that the carboxylation rate is either Rubisco-limited at low CO2 levels such as CO2 compensation point, or RuBP regeneration-limited at high CO2. Since the photosynthesis rate cannot increase beyond the two-process theory's Rubisco limit at the CO2 compensation point, net photosynthesis cannot increase above zero in daylight, and since there is always respiration at night, it leads to progressively negative daily CO2 fixation with no possibility of oxygenic life on the planet. The Rubisco-limited theory at low CO2 also contradicts all experimental evidence for low substrate reactions, and for all known enzymes, Rubisco included.  相似文献   

11.
The Na+ requirement for photosynthesis and its relationship to dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) concentration and Li+ concentration was examined in air-grown cells of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus leopoliensis UTEX 625 at pH 8. Analysis of the rate of photosynthesis (O2 evolution) as a function of Na+ concentration, at fixed DIC concentration, revealed two distinct regions to the response curve, for which half-saturation values for Na+ (K½[Na+]) were calculated. The value of both the low and the high K½(Na+) was dependent upon extracellular DIC concentration. The low K½(Na+) decreased from 1000 micromolar at 5 micromolar DIC to 200 micromolar at 140 micromolar DIC whereas over the same DIC concentration range the high K½(Na+) decreased from 10 millimolar to 1 millimolar. The most significant increases in photosynthesis occurred in the 1 to 20 millimolar range. A fraction of total photosynthesis, however, was independent of added Na+ and this fraction increased with increased DIC concentration. A number of factors were identified as contributing to the complexity of interaction between Na+ and DIC concentration in the photosynthesis of Synechococcus. First, as revealed by transport studies and mass spectrometry, both CO2 and HCO3 transport contributed to the intracellular supply of DIC and hence to photosynthesis. Second, both the CO2 and HCO3 transport systems required Na+, directly or indirectly, for full activity. However, micromolar levels of Na+ were required for CO2 transport while millimolar levels were required for HCO3 transport. These levels corresponded to those found for the low and high K½(Na+) for photosynthesis. Third, the contribution of each transport system to intracellular DIC was dependent on extracellular DIC concentration, where the contribution from CO2 transport increased with increased DIC concentration relative to HCO3 transport. This change was reflected in a decrease in the Na+ concentration required for maximum photosynthesis, in accord with the lower Na+-requirement for CO2 transport. Lithium competitively inhibited Na+-stimulated photosynthesis by blocking the cells' ability to form an intracellular DIC pool through Na+-dependent HCO3 transport. Lithium had little effect on CO2 transport and only a small effect on the size of the pool it generated. Thus, CO2 transport did not require a functional HCO3 transport system for full activity. Based on these observations and the differential requirement for Na+ in the CO2 and HCO3 transport system, it was proposed that CO2 and HCO3 were transported across the membrane by different transport systems.  相似文献   

12.
Cells of the unicellular green algae Chlamydomonas reinhardtii were grown in high dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) concentrations (supplied with 50 milliliters per liter CO2[g]) and transferred to low DIC concentrations (supplied with ≤ 100 microliters per liter CO2[g]). Immediately after transfer from high to low DIC the emission of photosystem II related chlorophyll a fluorescence was substantially quenched. It is hypothesized that the suddenly induced inorganic carbon limitation of photosynthesis resulted in a phosphorylation of LHCII, leading to the subsequent state 1 to state 2 transition. After 2 hours of low-DIC acclimation, 77 K fluorescence measurements revealed an increase in the fluorescence emitted from photosystem I, due to direct excitation, suggesting a change in photosystem II/photosystem I stoichiometry or an increased light harvesting capacity of photosystem I. After 5 to 6 hours of acclimation a considerable increase in spillover from photosystem II to photosystem I was observed. These adjustments of the photosynthetic light reactions reached steady-state after about 12 hours of low DIC treatment. The quencher of fluorescence could be removed by 5 minutes of dark treatment followed by 5 minutes of weak light treatment, of any of four different light qualities. It is hypothesized that this restoration of fluorescence was due to a state 2 to state 1 transition in low-DIC acclimated cells. A decreased ratio of violaxanthin to zeaxanthin was also observed in 12 hour low DIC treated cells, compared with high DIC grown cells. This ratio was not coupled to the level of fluorescence quenching. The role of different processes during the induction of a DIC accumulating mechanism is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Wang ZY  Portis AR 《Plant physiology》1992,99(4):1348-1353
Ribulose bisphosphate (RuBP), a substrate of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco), is an inhibitor of Rubisco activation by carbamylation if bound to the inactive, noncarbamylated form of the enzyme. The effect of Rubisco activase on the dissociation kinetics of RuBP bound to this form of the enzyme was examined and characterized with the use of 3H-labeled RuBP and proteins purified from spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) In the absence of Rubisco activase and in the presence of a large excess of unlabeled RuBP, the dissociation rate of bound [1-3H]RuBP was much faster after a short (30 second) incubation than after an extended incubation (1 hour). After 1 hour of incubation, the dissociation rate constant (Koff) of the bound RuBP was 4.8 × 10−4 per second, equal to a half-time of about 35 minutes, whereas the rate after only 30 seconds was too fast to be accurately measured. This time-dependent change in the dissociation rate was reflected in the subsequent activation kinetics of Rubisco in the presence of RuBP, CO2, and Mg2+, and in both the absence or presence of Rubisco activase. However, the activation of Rubisco also proceeded relatively rapidly without Rubisco activase if the RuBP level decreased below the estimated catalytic site concentration. High pH (pH 8.5) and the presence of Mg2+ in the medium also enhanced the dissociation of the bound RuBP from Rubisco in the presence of RuBP. In the presence of Rubisco activase, Mg2+, ATP (but not the nonhydrolyzable analog, adenosine-5′-O-[3-thiotriphosphate]), excess RuBP, and an ATP-regenerating system, the dissociation of [1-3H]RuBP from Rubisco was increased in proportion to the amount of Rubisco activase added. This result indicates that Rubisco activase-mediated hydrolysis of ATP is required for promotion of the enhanced dissociation of the bound RuBP from Rubisco. Furthermore, product analysis by ion-exchange chromatography demonstrated that the release of the bound RuBP, in an unchanged form, was considerably faster than the observed increase in Rubisco activity. Thus, RuBP dissociation was experimentally separated from activation and precedes the subsequent formation of active, carbamylated Rubisco during activation of Rubisco by Rubisco activase.  相似文献   

14.
Restrictions to photosynthesis can limit plant growth at high temperature in a variety of ways. In addition to increasing photorespiration, moderately high temperatures (35–42 °C) can cause direct injury to the photosynthetic apparatus. Both carbon metabolism and thylakoid reactions have been suggested as the primary site of injury at these temperatures. In the present study this issue was addressed by first characterizing leaf temperature dynamics in Pima cotton (Gossypium barbadense) grown under irrigation in the US desert south‐west. It was found that cotton leaves repeatedly reached temperatures above 40 °C and could fluctuate as much as 8 or 10 °C in a matter of seconds. Laboratory studies revealed a maximum photosynthetic rate at 30–33 °C that declined by 22% at 45 °C. The majority of the inhibition persisted upon return to 30 °C. The mechanism of this limitation was assessed by measuring the response of photosynthesis to CO2 in the laboratory. The first time a cotton leaf (grown at 30 °C) was exposed to 45 °C, photosynthetic electron transport was stimulated (at high CO2) because of an increased flux through the photorespiratory pathway. However, upon cooling back to 30 °C, photosynthetic electron transport was inhibited and fell substantially below the level measured before the heat treatment. In the field, the response of assimilation (A) to various internal levels of CO2 (Ci) revealed that photosynthesis was limited by ribulose‐1,5‐bisphosphate (RuBP) regeneration at normal levels of CO2 (presumably because of limitations in thylakoid reactions needed to support RuBP regeneration). There was no evidence of a ribulose‐1,5‐bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) limitation at air levels of CO2 and at no point on any of 30 ACi curves measured on leaves at temperatures from 28 to 39 °C was RuBP regeneration capacity measured to be in substantial excess of the capacity of Rubisco to use RuBP. It is therefore concluded that photosynthesis in field‐grown Pima cotton leaves is functionally limited by photosynthetic electron transport and RuBP regeneration capacity, not Rubisco activity.  相似文献   

15.
The induction of a dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) accumulating mechanism in the two algal species Scenedesmus obliquus (WT) and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (137 c+) was physiologically characterized by monitoring DIC uptake kinetics at a low and constant DIC concentration (120-140 micromolar), after transfer from high-DIC culturing conditions. A potentiometric titration method was used to measure and calculate algal DIC uptake. Full acclimation to low-DIC conditions was obtained within a period of 90 min, after which time the DIC uptake had been increased 7 to 10 times. Experiments were also conducted in the presence of inhibitors against DIC accumulation. The inhibitor of extracellular carbonic anhydrase (CA), acetazolamide (50 micromolar), inhibited the adaptation partly, while the inhibitor of both extra- and intracellular CA, ethoxyzolamide (50 micromolar) totally inhibited the acclimation. Cycloheximide (10 micrograms per milliliter), which inhibits protein synthesis on cytoplasmic ribosomes, and vanadate (180 micromolar), which inhibits the plasmamembrane bound ATPase, also inhibited the acclimation totally. These results taken together suggest that the algae are dependent on intracellular CA, plasmamembrane bound ATPase, and de novo protein synthesis for DIC accumulation. Also, these components are more important than extracellular CA for the overall function of the DIC-accumulating mechanism.  相似文献   

16.
The regulation of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) carboxylase (Rubisco) activity and pool sizes of RuBP and P-glycerate were examined in the tropical understory species Alocasia macrorrhiza following step changes in photon flux density (PFD). Previous gas exchange analysis of this species following a step increase in PFD from 10 to 500 micromoles quanta per square meter per second suggested that the increase in photosynthetic rate was limited by the rate of increase of Rubisco activity for the first 5 to 10 minutes. We demonstrate here that the increase in photosynthetic rate was correlated with an increase in both the activation state of Rubisco and the total kcat (fully activated specific activity) of the enzyme. Evidence presented here suggests that a change in the pool size of the naturally occurring tight binding inhibitor of Rubisco activity, 2-carboxyarabinitol 1-phosphate, was responsible for the PFD-dependent change in the total kcat of the enzyme. RuBP pool size transiently increased after the increase in PFD, indicating that photosynthesis was limited by the capacity for carboxylation. After 5 to 10 minutes, RuBP pool size was again similar to the pool size at low PFD, presumably because of the increased activity of Rubisco. Following a step decrease in PFD from 500 to 10 micromoles quanta per square meter per second, Rubisco activity declined but at a much slower rate than it had increased in response to a step increase in PFD. This slower rate of activity decline than increase was apparently due to the slower rate of 2-carboxyarabinitol 1-phosphate synthesis than degradation and, to a lesser degree, to slower deactivation than activation. RuBP pool size initially declined following the decrease in PFD, indicating that RuBP regeneration was limiting photosynthesis. As Rubisco activity decreased, RuBP slowly increased to its original level at high PFD. The slow rate of activity loss by Rubisco in this species suggests a biochemical basis for the increased efficiency for CO2 assimilation of successive lightfleck use by species such as A. macrorrhiza.  相似文献   

17.
Analysis of leaf-level photosynthetic responses of 39 tree species grown in elevated concentrations of atmospheric CO2 indicated an average photosynthetic enhancement of 44% when measured at the growth [CO2]. When photosynthesis was measured at a common ambient [CO2], photosynthesis of plants grown at elevated [CO2] was reduced, on average, 21% relative to ambient-grown trees, but variability was high. The evidence linking photosynthetic acclimation in trees with changes at the biochemical level is examined, along with anatomical and morphological changes in trees that impact leaf- and canopy-level photosynthetic response to CO2 enrichment. Nutrient limitations and variations in sink strength appear to influence photosynthetic acclimation, but the evidence in trees for one predominant factor controlling acclimation is lacking. Regardless of the mechanisms that underlie photosynthetic acclimation, it is doubtful that this response will be complete. A new focus on adjustments to rising [CO2] at canopy, stand, and forest scales is needed to predict ecosystem response to a changing environment.Abbreviations A/Ci photosynthesis as a function of internal [CO2] - Jmax maximum rate of electron transport - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - Vcmax maximum rate of carboxylation The U.S. Government right to retain a non-exclusive, royalty free licence in and to any copyright is acknowledged.  相似文献   

18.
Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) pool size was determined at regular intervals during the growing season to understand the effects of tropospheric ozone concentrations, elevated atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations and their interactions on the photosynthetic limitation by RuBP regeneration. Soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merr. cv. Essex) was grown from seed to maturity in open-top field chambers in charcoal-filtered air (CF) either without (22 nmol O3 mol?1) or with added O3 (83 nmol mol?1) at ambient (AA, 369 μmol CO2 mol?1) or elevated CO2 (710 μmol mol?1). The RuBP pool size generally declined with plant age in all treatments when expressed on a unit leaf area and in all treatments but CF-AA when expressed per unit ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco; EC 4.1.1.39) binding site. Although O3 in ambient CO2 generally reduced the RuBP pool per unit leaf area, it did not change the RuBP pool per unit Rubisco binding site. Elevated CO2, in CF or O3-fumigated air, generally had no significant effect on RuBP pool size, thus mitigating the negative O3 effect. The RuBP pools were below 2 mol mol?1 binding site in all treatments for most of the season, indicating limiting RuBP regeneration capacity. These low RuBP pools resulted in increased RuBP regeneration via faster RuBP turnover, but only in CF air and during vegetative and flowering stages at elevated CO2. Also, the low RuBP pool sizes did not always reflect RuBP consumption rates or the RuBP regeneration limitation relative to potential carboxylation (%RuBP). Rather, %RuBP increased linearly with decrease in the RuBP pool turnover time. These data suggest that amelioration of damage from O3 by elevated atmospheric CO2 to the RuBP regeneration may be in response to changes in the Rubisco carboxylation.  相似文献   

19.
The possible responses of the terrestrial biosphere to future CO2 increases and associated climatic change are being investigated using dynamic global vegetation models (DG VMs) which include the Farquhar et al. (1980) biochemical model of leaf assimilation as the primary means of carbon capture. This model requires representative values of the maximum rates of Rubisco activity, Vmax, and electron transport, Jmax, for different vegetation types when applied at the global scale. Here, we describe an approach for calculating these values based on measurements of the maximum rate of leaf photosynthesis (Amax) 13C discrimination. The approach is tested and validated by comparison with measurements of Rubisco activity assayed directly on wild-type and transgenic Nicotiana tabacum (tobacco) plants with altered Rubisco activity grown under ambient and elevated CO2 mole fractions with high and low N-supply. Vmax and Jmax values are reported for 18 different vegetation types with global coverage. Both variables were linearly related reinforcing the idea of optimal allocation of resources to photosynthesis (light harvesting vs. Rubisco) at the global scale. The reported figures should be of value to the further development of vegetation and ecosystem models employing mechanistic DGVMs.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of ammonium assimilation on photosynthetic carbon fixation and O2 exchange were examined in two species of N-limited green algae, Chlorella pyrenoidosa and Selenastrum minutum. Under light-saturating conditions, ammonium assimilation resulted in a suppression of photosynthetic carbon fixation by S. minutum but not by C. pyrenoidosa. These different responses are due to different relationships between cellular ribulose bisphosphate (RuBP) concentration and the RuBP binding site density of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco). In both species, ammonium assimilation resulted in a decrease in RuBP concentration. In S. minutum the concentration fell below the RuBP binding site density of Rubisco, indicating RuBP limitation of carboxylation. In contrast, RuBP concentration remained above the binding site density in C. pyrenoidosa. Compromising RuBP regeneration in C. pyrenoidosa with low light resulted in an ammonium-induced decrease in RuBP concentration below the RuBP binding site density of Rubisco. This resulted in a decrease in photosynthetic carbon fixation. In both species, ammonium assimilation resulted in a larger decrease in net O2 evolution than in carbon fixation. Mass spectrometric analysis shows this to be a result of an increase in the rate of mitochondrial respiration in the light.  相似文献   

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