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1.
The large subunit (L) of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rubisco) from Synechococcus PCC 6301 was expressed in Escherichia coli, purified as the octamer L8, and analyzed for its ability to tightly bind the transition state analog, 2-carboxyarabinitol 1,5-bisphosphate (CABP). [14C]CABP remained tightly bound to L8 after challenging with [12C]CABP and gel filtration, indicating that L8 alone without the small subunit (S) could tightly bind CABP. Binding of CABP to L8 induced a shift in the gel filtration profile due to apparent aggregation of L8. Aggregation did not occur with the L8S8-CABP complex nor with L8-CABP in the presence of 150 mM MgCl2. If ionic strength was increased with either KCl or MgCl2 during or after the binding of [14C]CABP to L8, [14C]CABP in the complex exchanged with [12C]CABP and was lost from the protein. Ionic strength strongly affected the rate constant (k4) for [14C]CABP dissociation from the L8-[14C]CABP complex, but had little effect on k4 for the L8S8-CABP complex. The differences in CABP binding characteristics between the L8-CABP and L8S8-CABP complexes demonstrate that S is intimately involved in maintaining the stability of the tight binding of CABP to the active site. These are the same interactions stabilizing the intermediate, 3-keto-2-carboxyarabinitol 1,5-bisphosphate, to native rubisco during CO2 fixation.  相似文献   

2.
Ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rubisco) plays a central metabolic role in photosynthetic eukaryotes, and its catabolism is a crucial process for the nutrient economy of higher plants. The rubisco holoenzyme is assembled from eight chloroplast-encoded large subunits and eight nuclear-encoded small subunits. We have identified a cluster of conserved tyrosines at the interface between subunits (comprising Y67, Y68, and Y72 from the betaA-betaB loop of the small subunit and Y226 from the large subunit) that may contribute to holoenzyme stability. To investigate the role of these tyrosines in rubisco structure and in vivo degradation, we have examined site-directed mutants of these residues (Y67A, Y68A, Y72A, and Y226L) in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Even if all mutant strains were able to grow photoautotrophically, they exhibited a reduction in rubisco activity and/or the level of expression, especially the Y67A and Y72A mutants. Besides, all mutant rubiscos were inactivated at a lower temperature than the wild type. The kinetics of proteolysis of the mutant enzymes with subtilisin revealed structural alterations, leading to facilitated disassembly (in the cases of Y67A and Y72A) or aggregation propensity (for Y68A and Y226L). When subjected to oxidative stress in vivo through exposure of liquid cultures to hydrogen peroxide, all mutant strains degraded rubisco at a faster rate than the wild type. These results demonstrate that the tyrosine cluster around the betaA-betaB loop of rubisco small subunit plays a stabilizing role by affecting the catalytic activity and the degradation rate of the enzyme in stressed cells.  相似文献   

3.
Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rubisco) can be divided into two branches: the “red-like type” of marine algae and the “green-like type” of cyanobacteria, green algae, and higher plants. We found that the “green-like type” rubisco from the thermophilic cyanobacterium Thermosynechococcus elongatus has an almost 2-fold higher specificity factor compared with rubiscos of mesophilic cyanobacteria, reaching the values of higher plants, and simultaneously revealing an improvement in enzyme thermostability. The difference in the activation energies at the transition stages between the oxygenase and carboxylase reactions for Thermosynechococcus elongatus rubisco is very close to that of Galdieria partita and significantly higher than that of spinach. This is the first characterization of a “green-like type” rubisco from thermophilic organism.  相似文献   

4.
The CO2-fixing enzyme rubisco is responsible for almost all carbon fixation. This process frequently requires rubisco activase (Rca) machinery, which couples ATP hydrolysis to the removal of inhibitory sugar phosphates, including the rubisco substrate ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP). Rubisco is sometimes compartmentalized in carboxysomes, bacterial microcompartments that enable a carbon dioxide concentrating mechanism (CCM). Characterized carboxysomal rubiscos, however, are not prone to inhibition, and often no activase machinery is associated with these enzymes. Here, we characterize two carboxysomal rubiscos of the form IAC clade that are associated with CbbQO-type Rcas. These enzymes release RuBP at a much lower rate than the canonical carboxysomal rubisco from Synechococcus PCC6301. We found that CbbQO-type Rcas encoded in carboxysome gene clusters can remove RuBP and the tight-binding transition state analog carboxy-arabinitol 1,5-bisphosphate from cognate rubiscos. The Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans genome encodes two form IA rubiscos associated with two sets of cbbQ and cbbO genes. We show that the two CbbQO activase systems display specificity for the rubisco enzyme encoded in the same gene cluster, and this property can be switched by substituting the C-terminal three residues of the large subunit. Our findings indicate that the kinetic and inhibitory properties of proteobacterial form IA rubiscos are diverse and predict that Rcas may be necessary for some α-carboxysomal CCMs. These findings will have implications for efforts aiming to introduce biophysical CCMs into plants and other hosts for improvement of carbon fixation of crops.  相似文献   

5.
The rate of CO2 fixation by ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rubisco) following addition of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) to fully activated enzyme, declined with first-order kinetics, resulting in 50% loss of rubisco activity after 10 to 12 minutes. This in vitro decline in rubisco activity, termed fall-over, was prevented if purified rubisco activase protein and ATP were added, allowing linear rates of CO2 fixation for up to 20 minutes. Rubisco activase could also stimulate rubisco activity if added after fallover had occurred. Gel filtration of the RuBP-rubisco complex to remove unbound RuBP allowed full activation of the enzyme, but the inhibition of activated rubisco during fallover was only partially reversed by gel filtration. Addition of alkaline phosphatase completely restored rubisco activity following fallover. The results suggest that fallover is not caused by binding of RuBP to decarbamylated enzyme, but results from binding of a phosphorylated inhibitor to the active site of rubisco. The inhibitor may be a contaminant in preparations of RuBP or may be formed on the active site but is apparently removed from the enzyme in the presence of the rubisco activase protein.  相似文献   

6.
Comparison of subunit sequences and X-ray crystal structures of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase indicates that the loop between beta-strands A and B of the small subunit is one of the most variable regions of the holoenzyme. In prokaryotes and nongreen algae, the loop contains 10 residues. In land plants and green algae, the loop is comprised of approximately 22 and 28 residues, respectively. Previous studies indicated that the longer betaA-betaB loop was required for the assembly of cyanobacterial small subunits with plant large subunits in isolated chloroplasts. In the present study, chimeric small subunits were constructed by replacing the loop of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii with the sequences of Synechococcus or spinach. When these engineered genes were transformed into a Chlamydomonas mutant that lacks small-subunit genes, photosynthesis-competent colonies were recovered, indicating that loop size is not essential for holoenzyme assembly. Whereas the Synechococcus loop causes decreases in carboxylation V(max), K(m)(O(2)), and CO(2)/O(2) specificity, the spinach loop causes complementary decreases in carboxylation V(max), K(m)(O(2)), and K(m)(CO(2)) without a change in specificity. X-ray crystal structures of the engineered proteins reveal remarkable similarity between the introduced betaA-betaB loops and the respective loops in the Synechococcus and spinach enzymes. The side chains of several large-subunit residues are altered in regions previously shown by directed mutagenesis to influence CO(2)/O(2) specificity. Differences in the catalytic properties of divergent Rubisco enzymes may arise from differences in the small-subunit betaA-betaB loop. This loop may be a worthwhile target for genetic engineering aimed at improving photosynthetic CO(2) fixation.  相似文献   

7.
Ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco, EC 4.1.1. 39) obtained from a thermophilic red alga Galdieria partita has the highest specificity factor of 238 among the Rubiscos hitherto reported. Crystal structure of activated Rubisco from G. partita complexed with the reaction intermediate analogue, 2-carboxyarabinitol 1,5-bisphosphate (2-CABP) has been determined at 2.4-A resolution. Compared with other Rubiscos, different amino residues bring the structural differences in active site, which are marked around the binding sites of P-2 phosphate of 2-CABP. Especially, side chains of His-327 and Arg-295 show the significant differences from those of spinach Rubisco. Moreover, the side chains of Asn-123 and His-294 which are reported to bind the substrate, ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate, form hydrogen bonds characteristic of Galdieria Rubisco. Small subunits of Galdieria Rubisco have more than 30 extra amino acid residues on the C terminus, which make up a hairpin-loop structure to form many interactions with the neighboring small subunits. When the structures of Galdieria and spinach Rubiscos are superimposed, the hairpin region of the neighboring small subunit in Galdieria enzyme and apical portion of insertion residues 52-63 characteristic of small subunits in higher plant enzymes are almost overlapped to each other.  相似文献   

8.
The properties of rice-derived ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rubisco) in different concentrations of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) solutions have been studied. The results indicate that at low H2O2 concentrations (0.2-10 mM), the properties of rubisco (e.g., carboxylase activities, structure, and susceptibility to heat denaturation) change slightly. However, at higher H2O2 concentrations (10-200 mM), rubisco undergoes an unfolding process, including the loss of secondary and tertiary structure, forming extended hydrophobic interface, and leading to cross-links between large subunits. High concentrations of H2O2 can also result in an increase in susceptibility of rubisco to heat denaturation. Further pre-treatments with or without reductive reagents to rubisco show that the disulfide bonds in rubisco help to protect the enzyme from damage by H2O2 as well as other reactive oxygen species.  相似文献   

9.
Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rubisco) is involved in photosynthesis where it catalyzes the initial step in the fixation of carbon dioxide. The enzyme also catalyzes a competing oxygenation reaction leading to loss of fixed carbon dioxide, thus reducing the net efficiency of photosynthesis significantly. Rubisco has therefore been studied extensively, and a challenging goal is the engineering of a more photosynthetically efficient enzyme. Hexadecameric rubiscos fall in two distinct groups, "green-like" and "red-like". The ability to discriminate between CO2 and O2 as substrates varies significantly, and some algae have red-like rubisco with even higher specificity for CO2 than the plant enzyme. The structure of unactivated rubisco from Alcaligenes eutrophus has been determined to 2.7 A resolution by molecular replacement and refined to R and Rfree values of 26.6 and 32.2 %, respectively. The overall fold of the protein is very similar to the rubisco structures solved previously for green-like hexadecameric enzymes, except for the extended C-terminal domains of the small subunits which together form an eight-stranded beta-barrel which sits as a plug in the entrance to the central solvent channel in the molecule. The present structure is the first which has been solved for a red-like rubisco and is likely to represent a fold which is common for this group. The small subunits in general are believed to have a stabilizing effect, and the new quaternary structure in the oligomer of the present structure is likely to contribute even more to this stabilization of the assembled rubisco protein.  相似文献   

10.
Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (EC 4.1.1.39) from Rhodospirillum rubrum has been crystallized in a form that is suitable for structural studies by x-ray diffraction. The asymmetric unit of the crystal contains one dimeric enzyme molecule of molecular mass 101,000 Da. The enzyme was activated prior to crystallization and is presumed to be in the CO2-activated state in the crystal. The method of hydrophobicity correlation has been used to compare the amino acid sequence of this molecule (466 residues) to that of the large subunit of a higher plant ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (477 residues in Nicotiana tabacum). The pattern of residue hydrophobicities is similar along the two polypeptides. This suggests that the three-dimensional folding of the large polypeptide chains may be similar in plant and bacterial enzymes. If this is so, knowing the structure of either the plant or bacterial ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase should aid in learning the structure of the other.  相似文献   

11.
Chemiluminescence emitted by Mn(2+)-activated ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rubisco) while catalyzing oxygenation was analyzed to clarify the source of the emission. Using dual detectors capturing radiation over a wide range of visible and infrared wavelengths, we tested for radiation from singlet O(2) decay and found it to be essentially absent (less than 0.1% of the total luminescence intensity). Spectra were determined between 647 and 885 nm with a very sensitive, charge-coupled detector-based spectrograph to detect differences in the emission spectra between rubiscos from bacterial and higher plant sources. All Mn(2+)-activated rubiscos emitted a broad, smooth spectrum of chemiluminescence, unchanging as the reaction progressed. The spectra from higher plant rubiscos (spinach and both the wild type and an L335V mutant from tobacco), all exhibited maxima at about 800 nm. However, Mn(2+)-activated rubisco from the bacterium, Rhodospirillum rubrum, emitted at shorter wavelengths (760 nm peak), demonstrating host ligand-field influences arising from aminoacyl residue differences and/or conformational changes caused by the absence of small subunits. The findings provide strong evidence that the chemiluminescence arises from an excited state of the active-site Mn(2+) that is produced during oxygenation. We propose that the Mn(2+) becomes excited by a one-electron exchange mechanism of oxygenation that is not available to Mg(2+)-activated rubisco.  相似文献   

12.
The activation of purified ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rubisco) has been studied in the presence of sugar phosphates, and the effect of rubisco activase on this process determined. During an 11-minute time course at pH 7.7 and 11 micromolar CO2, the activation of rubisco was strongly inhibited by ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate (4 millimolar), fructose-1,6-bisphosphate (1 millimolar) and ribose 5-phosphate (5 millimolar), but this inhibition was overcome by the addition of rubisco activase and activation then proceeded to a greater extent than spontaneous activation of rubisco. Glycerate 3-phosphate (20 millomolar) slowed the initial rate but not the extent of activation and rubisco activase had no effect on this. The activation of rubisco was shown to be affected by phosphoenolpyruvate (3 millimolar) but not by creatine phosphate (3 millimolar) or ATP (3 millimolar), and the creatine-phosphate/creatine phosphokinase system was used to generate the high ATP/ADP quotients required for rubisco activase to function. ATP was shown to be required for the rubisco activase-dependent rubisco activation in the presence of fructose-1,6-bisphosphate (1 millimolar). It is concluded that rubisco activase has a mixed specificity for some sugar phosphate-bound forms of rubisco, but has low or no activity with others. Some possible bases for these differences among sugar phosphates are discussed but remain to be established.  相似文献   

13.
The functions of His291, His295 and His324 at the active-site of recombinant A. nidulans ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/ oxygenase have been explored by site-directed mutagenesis. Replacement of His291 by K or R resulted in unassembled proteins, while its replacement by E, Q or N resulted in assembled but inactive proteins. These results are in accord with a metal ion-binding role of this residue in the activated ternary complex by analogy to x-ray crystallographic analyses of tobacco and spinach enzymes.His324 (H327 in spinach), which is located within bonding distance of the 5-phosphate of bound bi-substrate analog 2-carboxyarabinitol 1,5-bisphosphate in the crystal structures, has been substituted by A, K, R, Q and N. Again with the exception of the H324K and R variants, these changes resulted in detectable assembled protein. The mutant H324A protein exhibited no detectable carboxylase activity, whereas the H324Q and H324N changes resulted in purifiable holoenzyme with 2.0 and 0.1% of the recombinant wild-type specific carboxylase activity, respectively. These results are consistent with a phosphate binding role for this residue.The replacement of His295, which has been suggested to aid in phosphate binding, with Ala in the A. nidulans enzyme leads to a mutant with 5.8% of the recombinant wild-type carboxylase activity. All other mutations at this position resulted in unassembled proteins. Purified H295A and H324Q enzymes had elevated Km(RuBP) values and unchanged CO2/O2 specificity factors compared to recombinant wild-type.Abbreviations CABP D-2-carboxyarabinitol 1,5 bisphosphate - IPTG isopropyl-b-d-thiogalactopyranoside - L large subunit of rubisco - PAGE polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - rubisco ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - RuBP ribulose-P2, ribulose 1,5 bisphosphate - S small subunit of rubisco - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate - X-gal 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-b-d-galactoside  相似文献   

14.
Light activation of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rubisco) and stromal ATP content were measured in intact isolated spinach chloroplasts. Treatments which decreased stromal ATP, such as incubation with the ATP analog β,γ-methylene adenosine triphosphate or with the energy transfer inhibitor phloridzin inhibited the light activation of rubisco. In the absence of added inorganic phosphate (Pi), light activation of rubisco was inhibited, coincident with low stromal ATP. Addition of methyl viologen restored both stromal ATP and rubisco activity to levels observed in the presence of Pi. Activation of rubisco was inhibited in the presence of 2 millimolar dihydroxyacetone phosphate or 3-phosphoglycerate and stromal ATP was also decreased under these conditions. Both were partially restored by increasing the Pi concentration. The strong correlation between activation state of rubisco and stromal ATP concentration in intact chloroplasts under a wide variety of experimental conditions indicates that light activation of rubisco is dependent on ATP and proportional to the ATP concentration. These observations can be explained in terms of the rubisco activase protein, which mediates activation of rubisco at physiological concentrations of CO2 and ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate and is dependent upon ATP.  相似文献   

15.
The quaternary structure of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase (rubisco) from Rhodospirillum rubrum, an enzyme consisting of two large subunits, L2, was investigated by small-angle X-ray scattering. In the presence of HCO 3 - and Mg2+, rubisco is in the active state and displays a radius of gyration of 2.96 nm, a maximum diameter of 9.5 nm and a volume of 170 nm3. A model is presented where the subunits are arranged back-to-back, rotated relative to each other by 90°, and shifted by 1.3 nm. Upon inactivation by removal of HCO 3 - and Mg2+, the model swells slightly without any distinct changes in configuration. This contrasts with our previous observations with rubisco from Alcaligenes eutrophus, an enzyme composed of small (S) and large (L) subunits, L8S8, where inactivation gives rise to substantial changes in configuration.Abbreviations RuBP Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate - 3-PGA 3-phosphoglyceric acid  相似文献   

16.
The crystal structure of activated tobacco rubisco, complexed with the reaction-intermediate analogue 2-carboxy-arabinitol 1,5-bisphosphate (CABP) has been determined by molecular replacement, using the structure of activated spinach rubisco (Knight, S., Andersson, I., & Brändén, C.-I., 1990, J. Mol. Biol. 215, 113-160) as a model. The R-factor after refinement is 21.0% for 57,855 reflections between 9.0 and 2.7 A resolution. The local fourfold axis of the rubisco hexadecamer coincides with a crystallographic twofold axis. The result is that the asymmetric unit of the crystals contains half of the L8S8 complex (molecular mass 280 kDa in the asymmetric unit). The activated form of tobacco rubisco is very similar to the activated form of spinach rubisco. The root mean square difference is 0.4 A for 587 equivalent C alpha atoms. Analysis of mutations between tobacco and spinach rubisco revealed that the vast majority of mutations concerned exposed residues. Only 7 buried residues were found to be mutated versus 54 residues at or near the surface of the protein. The crystal structure suggests that the Cys 247-Cys 247 and Cys 449-Cys 459 pairs are linked via disulfide bridges. This pattern of disulfide links differ from the pattern of disulfide links observed in crystals of unactivated tobacco rubisco (Curmi, P.M.G., et al., 1992, J. Biol. Chem. 267, 16980-16989) and is similar to the pattern observed for activated spinach tobacco.  相似文献   

17.
In some plants, 2-carboxy-d-arabinitol 1-phosphate (CA 1P) is tightly bound to catalytic sites of ribulose, 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rubisco). This inhibitor's tight binding property results from its close resemblance to the transition state intermediate of the carboxylase reaction. Amounts of CA 1P present in leaves varies with light level, giving CA 1P characteristics of a diurnal modulator of rubisco activity. Recently, a specific phosphatase was found that degrades CA 1P, providing a mechanism to account for its disappearance in the light. The route of synthesis of CA 1P is not known, but could involve the branched chain sugar, hamamelose. There appear to be two means for diurnal regulation of the number of catalytic sites on rubisco: carbamylation mediated by the enzyme, rubisco activase, and binding of CA 1P. While strong evidence exists for the involvement of rubisco activase in rubisco regulation, the significance of CA 1P in rubisco regulation is enigmatic, given the lack of general occurrence of CA 1P in plant species. Alternatively, CA 1P may have a role in preventing the binding of metabolites to rubisco during the night and the noncatalytic binding of ribulose bisphosphate in the light.  相似文献   

18.
Net photosynthetic rates (Pns) in leaves were compared between rice plants grown in ambient air control and free-air CO2 enrichment (FACE, about 200 micromol mol(-1) above ambient) treatment rings. When measured at the same CO2 concentration, the Pn of FACE leaves decreased significantly, indicating that photosynthetic acclimation to high CO2 occurs. Although stomatal conductance (Gs) in FACE leaves was markedly decreased, intercellular CO2 concentrations (Ci) were almost the same in FACE and ambient leaves, indicating that the photosynthetic acclimation is not caused by the decreased Gs. Furthermore, carboxylation efficiency and maximal Pn, both light and CO2-saturated Pn, were decreased in FACE leaves, as shown by the Pn-Ci curves. In addition, the soluble protein, Rubisco (ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate caboxylase/oxygenase), and its activase contents as well as the sucrose-phosphate synthase activity decreased significantly, while some soluble sugar, inorganic phosphate, chlorophyll and light-harvesting complex II (LHC II) contents increased in FACE leaves. It appears that the photosynthetic acclimation in rice leaves is related to both ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) carboxylation limitation and RuBP regeneration limitation.  相似文献   

19.
In spite of only slightly subnormal pigment contents, two plastome mutants of Oenothera (Vα, Iσ) were practically incapable of photosynthetic CO2 fixation and another one exhibited considerably reduced photosynthesis (IVβ). While other photosynthetic enzymes were present as far as investigated, ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.39) activity was very low or missing altogether. As shown by gel electrophoresis, mutant IVβ contained some, though little, fraction I protein. In the other two mutants fraction I protein could not be detected. Also, neither the small nor the large subunit of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase could be found in these mutants. In immunodiffusion experiments with a monospecific antiserum against rye ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase, only extracts from wild-type Oenothera produced visible precipitation lines. Still, the presence of very low levels of immunochemically reactive antigen was indicated for all three mutants. The highest level was observed in mutant IVβ. The behaviour of the mutant extracts suggested that the antigens of mutant and wild type leaves reacting with the antiserum were not identical. All mutants appeared to have a coupled electron transport system as shown by ATP measurements, light scattering and 515 nm absorption changes. Linear electron transport was possible in the mutants. Still, the photoresponse of cytochrome f and fluorescence measurements suggested altered electron transport properties in the mutants. These are interpreted to be secondary lesions of the photosynthetic apparatus caused by primary deficiency in ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase activity. From the absence in two mutants (Vα, Iσ) of the small subunit of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase, which is known to be coded for by nuclear DNA and to be synthesized on cytoplasmic ribosomes, it appears that the genetic system of the plastids is capable of interfering with the genome-controlled synthesis of plastid components.  相似文献   

20.
The requirements for activation of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rubisco) were investigated in leaves of Arabidopsis wild-type and a mutant incapable of light activating rubisco in vivo. Upon illumination with saturating light intensities, the activation state of rubisco increased 2-fold in the wild-type and decreased in the mutant. Activation of fructose 1,6-bisphosphate phosphatase was unaffected by the mutation. Under low light, rubisco deactivated in both the wild-type and the mutant. Deactivation of rubisco in the mutant under high and low light led to the accumulation of high concentrations of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate. Inhibiting photosynthesis with methyl viologen prevented ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate accumulation but was ineffective in restoring rubisco activation to the mutant. Net photosynthesis and the rubisco activation level were closely correlated and saturated at a lower light intensity in the mutant than in wild-type. At CO2 concentrations between 100 and 2000 microliters per liter, the activation state was a function of the CO2 concentration in the dark but was independent of CO2 concentration in the light. High CO2 concentration (1%) suppressed activation in the wild-type and deactivation in the mutant. These results support the concept that rubisco activation in vivo is not a spontaneous process but is catalyzed by a specific protein. The absence of this protein, rubisco activase, is responsible for the altered characteristics of rubisco activation in the mutant.  相似文献   

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