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1.
Microalgae and cyanobacteria contribute roughly half of the global photosynthetic carbon assimilation. Faced with limited access to CO2 in aquatic environments, which can vary daily or hourly, these microorganisms have evolved use of an efficient CO2 concentrating mechanism (CCM) to accumulate high internal concentrations of inorganic carbon (Ci) to maintain photosynthetic performance. For eukaryotic algae, a combination of molecular, genetic and physiological studies using the model organism Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, have revealed the function and molecular characteristics of many CCM components, including active Ci uptake systems. Fundamental to eukaryotic Ci uptake systems are Ci transporters/channels located in membranes of various cell compartments, which together facilitate the movement of Ci from the environment into the chloroplast, where primary CO2 assimilation occurs. Two putative plasma membrane Ci transporters, HLA3 and LCI1, are reportedly involved in active Ci uptake. Based on previous studies, HLA3 clearly plays a meaningful role in HCO3? transport, but the function of LCI1 has not yet been thoroughly investigated so remains somewhat obscure. Here we report a crystal structure of the full‐length LCI1 membrane protein to reveal LCI1 structural characteristics, as well as in vivo physiological studies in an LCI1 loss‐of‐function mutant to reveal the Ci species preference for LCI1. Together, these new studies demonstrate LCI1 plays an important role in active CO2 uptake and that LCI1 likely functions as a plasma membrane CO2 channel, possibly a gated channel.  相似文献   

2.
Most organisms inhabiting earth feed directly or indirectly on the products synthesized by the reaction of photosynthesis, which at the current atmospheric CO2 levels operates only at two thirds of its peak efficiency. Restricting the photorespiratory loss of carbon and thereby improving the efficiency of photosynthesis is seen by many as a good option to enhance productivity of food crops. Research during last half a century has shown that several plant species developed CO2-concentrating mechanism (CCM) to restrict photorespiration under lower concentration of available CO2. CCMs are now known to be operative in several terrestrial and aquatic plants, ranging from most advanced higher plants to algae, cyanobacteria and diatoms. Plants with C4 pathway of photosynthesis (where four-carbon compound is the first product of photosynthesis) or crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) may consistently operate CCM. Some plants however can undergo a shift in photosynthetic metabolism only with change in environmental variables. More recently, a shift in plant photosynthetic metabolism is reported at high altitude where improved efficiency of CO2 uptake is related to the recapture of photorespiratory loss of carbon. Of the divergent CO2 assimilation strategies operative in different oraganisms, the capacity to recapture photorespiratory CO2 could be an important approach to develop plants with efficient photosynthetic capacity.  相似文献   

3.
Prior analysis of inorganic carbon (Ci) fluxes in the diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum has indicated that transport of Ci into the chloroplast from the cytoplasm is the major Ci flux in the cell and the primary driving force for the CO2 concentrating mechanism (CCM). This flux drives the accumulation of Ci in the chloroplast stroma and generates a CO2 deficit in the cytoplasm, inducing CO2 influx into the cell. Here, the “chloroplast pump” model of the CCM in P. tricornutum is formalized and its consistency with data on CO2 and HCO3 ? uptake rates, carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity, intracellular Ci concentration, intracellular pH, and RubisCO characteristics is assessed. The chloroplast pump model can account for the major features of the data. Analysis of photosynthetic and Ci uptake rates as a function of external Ci concentration shows that the model has the most difficulty obtaining sufficiently low cytoplasmic CO2 concentrations to support observed CO2 uptake rates at low external Ci concentrations and achieving high rates of photosynthesis. There are multiple ways in which model parameters can be varied, within a plausible range, to match measured rates of photosynthesis and CO2 uptake. To increase CO2 uptake rates, CA activity can be increased, kinetic characteristics of the putative chloroplast pump can be enhanced to increase HCO3 ? export, or the cytoplasmic pH can be raised. To increase the photosynthetic rate, the permeability of the pyrenoid to CO2 can be reduced or RubisCO content can be increased.  相似文献   

4.
The photosynthetic responses of a range of trebouxioid lichens were investigated to determine whether variations in net assimilation rates shown by populations of the same species collected from different habitats could be correlated with adjustments in carbon-concentrating mechanism (CCM) activity. The activity of a CCM was inferred from the high affinity for CO2 [i.e. low CO2 compensation point (Γ); low external CO2 concentration at which half-maximal assimilation rates are reached (K 0.5 CO2)], the release of a pool of accumulated dissolved inorganic carbon (Ci) during light/dark transient measurements of CO2 exchange and values for carbon isotope discrimination intermediate between those characteristic of C3 and C4 terrestrial plants. Higher net and gross assimilation rates were expressed by lichens collected from shaded woodland habitats. The higher rates were not accounted for by variations in chlorophyll content. Lichens with high assimilation rates also showed an increased affinity for CO2 as demonstrated by low CO2 compensation points and K 0.5 values and the magnitude of the Ci pool accumulated upon illumination and released after darkening of the thalli. However, there was no correlation between assimilation rates and organic matter or instantaneous carbon isotope discrimination measurements, with the latter remaining roughly consistent whatever the provenance or species of the lichen material. The data are discussed with reference to significant environmental factors which are likely to control photosynthesis in the habitats studied. Received: 5 April 1997 / Accepted: 9 September 1997  相似文献   

5.
Induction of the carbon concentrating mechanism (CCM) has been investigated during the acclimation of 5% CO2‐grown Chlamydomonas reinhardtii 2137 mt + cells to well‐defined dissolved inorganic carbon (Ci) limited conditions. The CCM components investigated were active HCO3? transport, active CO2 transport and extracellular carbonic anhydrase (CAext) activity. The CAext activity increased 10‐fold within 6 h of acclimation to 0·035% CO2 and there was a further slight increase over the next 18 h. The CAext activity also increased substantially after an 8 h lag period during acclimation to air in darkness. Active CO2 and HCO3? uptake by C. reinhardtii cells were induced within 2 h of acclimation to air, but active CO2 transport was induced prior to active HCO3? transport. Similar results were obtained during acclimation to air in darkness. The critical Ci concentrations effecting the induction of active Ci transport and CAext activity were determined by allowing cells to acclimate to various inflow CO2 concentrations in the range 0·035–0·84% at constant pH. The total Ci concentration eliciting the induction and repression of active Ci transport was higher during acclimation at pH 7·5 than at pH 5·5, but the external CO2 concentration was the same at both pHs of acclimation. The concentration of external CO2 required for the full induction and repression of Ci transport and CAext activity were 10 and 100 μM , respectively. The induction of CAext and active Ci transport are not correlated temporally, but are regulated by the same critical CO2 concentration in the medium.  相似文献   

6.
In response to high CO2 environmental variability, green algae, such as Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, have evolved multiple physiological states dictated by external CO2 concentration. Genetic and physiological studies demonstrated that at least three CO2 physiological states, a high CO2 (0.5–5% CO2), a low CO2 (0.03–0.4% CO2) and a very low CO2 (< 0.02% CO2) state, exist in Chlamydomonas. To acclimate in the low and very low CO2 states, Chlamydomonas induces a sophisticated strategy known as a CO2‐concentrating mechanism (CCM) that enables proliferation and survival in these unfavorable CO2 environments. Active uptake of Ci from the environment is a fundamental aspect in the Chlamydomonas CCM, and consists of CO2 and HCO3 uptake systems that play distinct roles in low and very low CO2 acclimation states. LCI1, a putative plasma membrane Ci transporter, has been linked through conditional overexpression to active Ci uptake. However, both the role of LCI1 in various CO2 acclimation states and the species of Ci, HCO3 or CO2, that LCI1 transports remain obscure. Here we report the impact of an LCI1 loss‐of‐function mutant on growth and photosynthesis in different genetic backgrounds at multiple pH values. These studies show that LCI1 appears to be associated with active CO2 uptake in low CO2, especially above air‐level CO2, and that any LCI1 role in very low CO2 is minimal.  相似文献   

7.
8.
The photosynthetic, unicellular green alga, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, lives in environments that often contain low concentrations of CO2 and HCO3 ?, the utilizable forms of inorganic carbon (Ci). C. reinhardtii possesses a carbon concentrating mechanism (CCM) which can provide suitable amounts of Ci for growth and development. This CCM is induced when the CO2 concentration is at air levels or lower and is comprised of a set of proteins that allow the efficient uptake of Ci into the cell as well as its directed transport to the site where Rubisco fixes CO2 into biomolecules. While several components of the CCM have been identified in recent years, the picture is still far from complete. To further improve our knowledge of the CCM, we undertook a mutagenesis project where an antibiotic resistance cassette was randomly inserted into the C. reinhardtii genome resulting in the generation of 22,000 mutants. The mutant collection was screened using both a published PCR-based approach (Gonzalez-Ballester et al. 2011) and a phenotypic growth screen. The PCR-based screen did not rely on a colony having an altered growth phenotype and was used to identify colonies with disruptions in genes previously identified as being associated with the CCM-related gene. Eleven independent insertional mutations were identified in eight different genes showing the usefulness of this approach in generating mutations in CCM-related genes of interest as well as identifying new CCM components. Further improvements of this method are also discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Net O2 evolution, gross CO2 uptake and net HCO inf3 su– uptake during steady-state photosynthesis were investigated by a recently developed mass-spectrometric technique for disequilibrium flux analysis with cells of the marine cyanobacterium Synechococcus PCC7002 grown at different CO2 concentrations. Regardless of the CO2 concentration during growth, all cells had the capacity to transport both CO2 and HCO inf3 su– ; however, the activity of HCO inf3 su– transport was more than twofold higher than CO2 transport even in cyanobacteria grown at high concentration of inorganic carbon (Ci = CO2 + HCO inf3 su– ). In low-Ci cells, the affinities of CO2 and HCO inf3 su– transport for their substrates were about 5 (CO2 uptake) and 10 (HCO inf3 su– uptake) times higher than in high-Ci cells, while air-grown cells formed an intermediate state. For the same cells, the intracellular accumulated Ci pool reached 18, 32 and 55 mM in high-Ci, air-grown and low-Ci cells, respectively, when measured at 1 mM external Ci. Photosynthetic O2 evolution, maximal CO2 and HCO inf3 su– transport activities, and consequently their relative contribution to photosynthesis, were largely unaffected by the CO2 provided during growth. When the cells were adapted to freshwater medium, results similar to those for artificial seawater were obtained for all CO2 concentrations. Transport studies with high-Ci cells revealed that CO2 and HCO inf3 su– uptake were equally inhibited when CO2 fixation was reduced by the addition of glycolaldehyde. In contrast, in low-Ci cells steady-state CO2 transport was preferably reduced by the same inhibitor. The inhibitor of carbonic anhydrase ethoxyzolamide inhibited both CO2 and HCO inf3 su– uptake as well as O2 evolution in both cell types. In high-Ci cells, the degree of inhibition was similar for HCO inf3 su– transport and O2 evolution with 50% inhibition occurring at around 1 mM ethoxyzolamide. However, the uptake of CO2 was much more sensitive to the inhibitor than HCO inf3 su– transport, with an apparent I50 value of around 250 M ethoxyzolamide for CO2 uptake. The implications of our results are discussed with respect to Ci utilisation in the marine Synechococcus strain.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - Ci inorganic carbon (CO2 + HCO inf3 su– ) - CA carbonic anhydrase - CCM CO2-concentrating mechanism - EZA ethoxyzolamide - GA glycolaldehyde - K1/2 concentration required for half-maximal response - Rubisco ribulose-1,5,-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase D.S. is a recipient of a research fellowship from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (D.F.G.). In addition, we are grateful to Donald A. Bryant, Department of Molecular and Cell Biology and Center of Biomolecular Structure Function, Pennsylvania State University, USA, for sending us the wild-type strain of Synechococcus PCC7002.  相似文献   

10.
The aim of this study was to determine how Chondrus crispus, a marine red macroalga, acquires the inorganic carbon (Ci) it utilizes for photosynthetic carbon fixation. Analyses of Ci uptake were done using silicone oil centrifugation (using multicellular fragments of thallus), infrared gas analysis, and gas chromatography. Inhibitors of carbonic anhydrase (CA), the band 3 anion exchange protein and Na+/K+ exchange were used in the study. It was found that: (a) C. crispus does not accumulate Ci internally above the concentration attainable by diffusion; (b) the initial Ci fixtion rate of C. crispus fragments saturates at approximately 3 to 4 millimolar Ci; (c) CA is involved in carbon uptake; its involvement is greatest at high HCO3 and low CO2 concentration, suggesting its participation in the dehydration of HCO3 to CO2; (d) C. crispus has an intermediate Ci compensation point; and (e) no evidence of any active or facilitated mechanism for the transport of HCO3 was detected. These data support the view that photosynthetic Ci uptake does not involve active transport. Rather, CO2, derived from HCO3 catalyzed by external CA, passively diffuses across the plasma membrane of C. crispus. Intracellular CA also enhances the fixation of carbon in C. crispus.  相似文献   

11.
In high inorganic carbon grown (1% CO2 [volume/volume]) cells of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus PCC7942, the carbonic anhydrase (CA) inhibitor, ethoxyzolamide (EZ), was found to inhibit the rate of CO2 uptake and to reduce the final internal inorganic carbon (Ci) pool size reached. The relationship between CO2 fixation rate and internal Ci concentration in high Ci grown cells was little affected by EZ. This suggests that in intact cells internal CA activity was unaffected by EZ. High Ci grown cells readily took up CO2 but had little or no capacity for HCO3 uptake. These cells appear to possess a CO2 utilizing Ci pump that has a CA-like function associated with the transport step such that HCO3 is the species delivered to the cell interior. This CA-like step may be the site of inhibition by EZ. Low Ci grown cells possess both CO2 uptake and HCO3 uptake activities and EZ inhibited both activities to a similar degree, suggesting that a common step in CO2 and HCO3 uptake (such as the Ci pump) may have been affected. The inhibitor had no apparent effect on internal CO2/HCO3 equilibria (internal CA function) in low Ci grown cells.  相似文献   

12.
The photosynthetic pathway composition (C3:C4 mixture) of an ecosystem is an important controller of carbon exchanges and surface energy flux partitioning, and therefore represents a fundamental ecophysiological distinction. To assess photosynthetic mixtures at a tallgrass prairie pasture in Oklahoma, we collected nighttime above-canopy air samples along concentration and isotopic gradients throughout the 1999 and 2000 growing seasons. We analyzed these samples for their CO2 concentration and carbon isotopic composition and calculated C3:C4 proportions with a two-source mixing model. In 1999, the C4 percentage increased from 38% in spring (late April) to 86% in early fall (mid-September). The C4 percentages inferred from ecosystem respiration measurements in 2000 indicate a smaller shift, from 67% in spring (early May) to 77% in mid-summer (late July). We also sampled daytime CO2 concentration and carbon isotope gradients above the canopy to determine ecosystem discrimination against 13CO2 during net uptake. These discrimination values were always lower than corresponding nighttime ecosystem respiration isotopic signatures would suggest. After accounting for the isotopic disequilibria between respiration and photosynthesis resulting from seasonal variations in the C3:C4 mixture, we estimated canopy photosynthetic discrimination. The C4 percentage calculated from this approach agrees with the percentage determined from nighttime respiration for sampling periods in both growing seasons. Isotopic imbalances between photosynthesis and respiration are likely to be common in mixed C3:C4 ecosystems and must be considered when using daytime isotopic measurements to constrain ecosystem physiology. Given the global extent of such ecosystems, isotopic imbalances likely contribute to global variations in the carbon isotopic composition of atmospheric CO2.  相似文献   

13.
The effects of salinity (sea water at 0 ‰ versus 30 ‰) on gross rates of O2 evolution (J O2) and net rates of CO2 uptake (P N) were measured in the halotolerant estuarine C4 grasses Spartina patens, S. alterniflora, S. densiflora, and Distichlis spicata in controlled growth environments. Under high irradiance, salinity had no significant effect on the intercellular to ambient CO2 concentration ratio (C i/C a). However, during photosynthesis under limiting irradiance, the maximum quantum efficiency of CO2 fixation decreased under salinity across species, suggesting there is increased leakage of the CO2 delivered to the bundle sheath cells by the C4 pump. Growth under salinity did not affect the maximum intrinsic efficiency of photosystem 2, PS2 (FV/FM) in these species, suggesting salinity had no effect on photosynthesis by inactivation of PS2 reaction centers. Under saline conditions and high irradiance, P N was reduced by 75 % in Spartina patens and S. alterniflora, whereas salinity had no effect on P N in S. densiflora or D. spicata. This inhibition of P N in S. patens and S. alterniflora was not due to an effect on stomatal conductance since the ratio of C i/C a did not decrease under saline conditions. In growth with and without salt, P N was saturated at ∼500 μmol(quantum) m−2 s−1 while J O2 continued to increase up to full sunlight, indicating that carbon assimilation was not tightly coupled to photochemistry in these halophytic species. This increase in alternative electron flow under high irradiance might be an inherent function in these halophytes for dissipating excess energy.  相似文献   

14.
Constraints on inorganic carbon (Ci) availability stimulated buoyancy in natural, photosynthetically active populations of the colonial blue-green alga (cyanobacterium) Microcystis aeruginosa. In nonmixed eutrophic river water and cultures, O2 evolution determinations indicated Ci limitation of photosynthesis, which was overcome either by CO2 additions to the aqueous phase or by exposure of buoyant colonies to atmospheric CO2. Microautoradiographs of M. aeruginosa colonies revealed partitioning of 14CO2 fixation and photosynthate accumulation between peripheral and internal cells, particularly in large colonies. When illuminated colonies were suspended in the aqueous phase, peripheral cells accounted for at least 90% of the 14CO2 assimilation, whereas internal cells remained unlabeled. However, when 14CO2 was allowed to diffuse into colonies 15 min before illumination, a more uniform distribution of labeling was observed. Resultant differences in labeling patterns were most likely due to peripheral cells more exclusively utilizing CO2 when ambient Ci concentrations were low. Among colonies located at the air-water interface, internal cells showed an increased share of photosynthate production when atmospheric 14CO2 was supplied. This indicated that Ci transport was restricted in large colonies below the water surface, forcing internal cells to maintain a high degree of buoyancy, thus promoting the formation of surface scums. At the surface, Ci restrictions were alleviated. Accordingly, scum formation appears to have an ecological function, allowing cyanobacteria access to atmospheric CO2 when the Ci concentration is growth limiting in the water column.  相似文献   

15.
The present work investigated the inorganic carbon (Ci) uptake, fluorescence quenching and photo‐inhibition of the edible cyanobacterium Ge‐Xian‐Mi (Nostoc) to obtain an insight into the role of CO2 concentrating mechanism (CCM) operation in alleviating photo‐inhibition. Ge‐Xian‐Mi used HCO3 in addition to CO2 for its photosynthesis and oxygen evolution was greater than the theoretical rates of CO2 production derived from uncatalysed dehydration of HCO3. Multiple transporters for CO2 and HCO3 operated in air‐grown Ge‐Xian‐Mi. Na+‐dependent HCO3 transport was the primary mode of active Ci uptake and contributed 53–62% of net photosynthetic activity at 250 µmol L?1 KHCO3 and pH 8.0. However, the CO2‐uptake systems and Na+‐independent HCO3 transport played minor roles in Ge‐Xian‐Mi and supported, respectively, 39 and 8% of net photosynthetic activity. The steady‐state fluorescence decreased and the photochemical quenching increased in response to the transport‐mediated accumulation of intracellular Ci. Inorganic carbon transport was a major factor in facilitating quenching during the initial stage and the initial rate of fluorescence quenching in the presence of iodoacetamide, an inhibitor of CO2 fixation, was 88% of control. Both the initial rate and extent of fluorescence quenching increased with increasing external dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and saturated at higher than 200 µmol L?1 HCO3. The operation of the CCM in Ge‐Xian‐Mi served as a means of diminishing photodynamic damage by dissipating excess light energy and higher external DIC in the range of 100–10000 µmol L?1 KHCO3 was associated with more severe photo‐inhibition under strong irradiance.  相似文献   

16.
Ogawa T  Kaplan A 《Plant physiology》1987,83(4):888-891
The pH of the medium during CO2 uptake into the intracellular inorganic carbon (Ci) pool of a high CO2-requiring mutant (E1) and wild type of Anacystis nidulans R2 was measured. Experiments were performed under conditions where photosynthetic CO2 fixation is inhibited. There was an acidification of the medium during CO2 uptake in the light and an alkalization during CO2 efflux after darkening. A one to one stoichiometry existed between the amounts of H+ appearing in the medium and CO2 taken up into the intracellular Ci pool, regardless of the carbon species transported. The results indicate that (a) CO2 is taken up simultaneously with an efflux of equimolar H+, probably produced as a result of CO2 hydration during transport and (b) HCO3 produced by hydration of CO2 in the medium was transported into the cells without accompanying net flux of H+ or OH. The influx and efflux of Ci during Ci transport produced nonequilibrium between CO2 and HCO3 in the medium, with the concentration of HCO3 being higher than that expected under equilibrium conditions. The nonequilibrium was present even under the conditions where the influx of Ci is compensated by its efflux. The direction of this nonequilibrium suggested that efflux of HCO3 occurs during uptake of Ci.  相似文献   

17.
《Trends in plant science》2023,28(7):795-807
Microalgal photosynthesis is responsible for nearly half of the CO2 annually captured by Earth’s ecosystems. In aquatic environments where the CO2 availability is low, the CO2-fixing efficiency of microalgae greatly relies on mechanisms – called CO2-concentrating mechanisms (CCMs) – for concentrating CO2 at the catalytic site of the CO2-fixing enzyme ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco). While the transport of inorganic carbon (Ci) across membrane bilayers against a concentration gradient consumes part of the chemical energy generated by photosynthesis, the bioenergetics and cellular mechanisms involved are only beginning to be elucidated. Here, we review the current knowledge relating to the energy requirement of CCMs in the light of recent advances in photosynthesis regulatory mechanisms and the spatial organization of CCM components.  相似文献   

18.
The nature of the inorganic carbon (Ci) species actively taken up by cyanobacteria CO2 or HCO3 has been investigated. The kinetics of CO2 uptake, as well as that of HCO3 uptake, indicated the involvement of a saturable process. The apparent affinity of the uptake mechanism for CO2 was higher than that for HCO3. Though the calculated Vmax was the same in both cases, the maximum rate of uptake actually observed was higher when HCO3 was supplied. Ci uptake was far more sensitive to the carbonic anhydrase inhibitor ethoxyzolamide when CO2 was the species supplied. Observations of photosynthetic rate as a function of intracellular Ci level (following supply of CO2 or HCO3 for 5 seconds) led to the inference that HCO3 is the species which arrives at the inner membrane surface, regardless of the species supplied. When the two species were supplied simultaneously, mutual inhibition of uptake was observed.

On the basis of these and other results, a model is proposed postulating that a carboic anhydrase-like subunit of the Ci transport apparatus binds CO2 and releases HCO3 at or near a membrane porter. The latter transports HCO3 ions to the cell interior.

  相似文献   

19.
Cells of a high CO2-requiring mutant (E1) and wild type of Synechococcus PCC7942 were incubated with COS in the light, then suspended in COS-free medium and their CO2 exchange was measured using an open gas-analysis system under the conditions where photosynthetic CO2 fixation is inhibited. When the suspension of cells untreated with COS was illuminated, the rate of CO2 uptake was high and addition of carbonic anhydrase during illumination released a large amount of CO2 from the medium into the gas phase. The COS treatment in the light markedly reduced the rate of CO2 uptake by the cells and the amount of CO2 released by carbonic anhydrase. Incubation of cells with COS in the dark had no effect on the CO2-exchange profile. The COS concentration required for 50% inhibition of CO2 uptake was about 25 micromolar when the concentration of inorganic carbon (Ci) in the medium was 60 micromolar; higher Ci concentrations reduced the inhibitory effect of COS. Measurement of Ci uptake in E1 cells by a silicone oil centrifugation method also indicated marked reduction of the activities of 14CO2 and H14CO3 uptake in the cells treated with COS in the light. The results demonstrated that COS is a potent inhibitor of Ci transport.  相似文献   

20.
This work aimed to evaluate if gas exchange and PSII photochemical activity in maize are affected by different irradiance levels during short-term exposure to elevated CO2. For this purpose gas exchange and chlorophyll a fluorescence were measured on maize plants grown at ambient CO2 concentration (control CO2) and exposed for 4 h to short-term treatments at 800 μmol(CO2) mol−1 (high CO2) at a photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) of either 1,000 μmol m−2 s−1 (control light) or 1,900 μmol m−2 s−1 (high light). At control light, high-CO2 leaves showed a significant decrease of net photosynthetic rate (P N) and a rise in the ratio of intercellular to ambient CO2 concentration (C i/C a) and water-use efficiency (WUE) compared to control CO2 leaves. No difference between CO2 concentrations for PSII effective photochemistry (ΦPSII), photochemical quenching (qp) and nonphotochemical quenching (NPQ) was detected. Under high light, high-CO2 leaves did not differ in P N, C i/C a, ΦPSII and NPQ, but showed an increase of WUE. These results suggest that at control light photosynthetic apparatus is negatively affected by high CO2 concentration in terms of carbon gain by limitations in photosynthetic dark reaction rather than in photochemistry. At high light, the elevated CO2 concentration did not promote an increase of photosynthesis and photochemistry but only an improvement of water balance due to increased WUE.  相似文献   

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