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1.
The enzyme-catalyzed activation of ribulosebisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rubisco) was investigated in an illuminated reconstituted system containing thylakoid membranes, rubisco, ribulosebisphosphate (RuBP), MgCl2, carbonic anhydrase, catalase, the artificial electron acceptor pyocyanine, and partially purified rubisco activase. Optimal conditions for light-induced rubisco activation were found to include 100 micrograms per milliliter rubisco, 300 micrograms per milliliter rubisco activase, 3 millimolar RuBP, and 6 millimolar free Mg2+ at pH 8.2. The half-time for rubisco activation was 2 minutes, and was 4 minutes for rubisco deactivation. The rate of rubisco deactivation was identical in the presence and absence of activase. The Kact(CO2) of rubisco activation in the reconstituted system was 4 micromolar CO2, compared to a Kact(CO2) of 25 to 30 micromolar CO2 for the previously reported spontaneous CO2/Mg2+ activation mechanism. The activation process characterized here explains the high degree of rubisco activation at the physiological concentrations of 10 micromolar CO2 and 2 to 4 millimolar RuBP found in intact leaves, conditions which lead to almost complete deactivation of rubisco in vitro.  相似文献   

2.
The activation state of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rubisco) in a lysed chloroplast system is increased by light in the presence of a saturating concentration of ATP and a physiological concentration of CO2 (10 micromolar). Electron transport inhibitors and artificial electron donors and acceptors were used to determine in which region of the photosynthetic electron transport chain this light-dependent reaction occurred. In the presence of DCMU and methyl viologen, the artificial donors durohydroquinone and 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol (DCPIP) plus ascorbate both supported light activation of rubisco at saturating ATP concentrations. No light activation occurred when DCPIP was used as an acceptor with water as electron donor in the presence of ATP and dibromothymoquinone, even though photosynthetic electron transport was observed. Nigericin completely inhibited the light-dependent activation of rubisco. Based on these results, we conclude that stimulation of light activation of rubisco by rubisco activase requires electron transport through PSI but not PSII, and that this light requirement is not to supply the ATP needed by the rubisco activase reaction. Furthermore, a pH gradient across the thylakoid membrane appears necessary for maximum light activation of rubisco even when ATP is provided exogenously.  相似文献   

3.
Photosynthetic CO2 exchange in photorespiration mutants of Arabidopsisthaliana showed a time-dependent inhibition at 350 µl/literCO2 in 50% O2 but not in 2% O2. In a glycolate-P phos-phatasedeficient mutant, inhibition of photosynthesis was due to adepletion of ribulosebisphosphate. In the remaining mutants,which have defects in photorespiratory enzymes which metabolizeamino acids, reduced photosynthesis was accompanied by a declinein the activation level of ribulosebisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase(Chastain and Ogren 1985), a decline in ribulosebisphosphateconcentration, and an accumulation of glyoxylate. Addition ofglyoxylate at submillimolar concentrations to intact spinach(Spinacea oleracea L.) chloroplasts inhibited light activationof ribulosebisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rubisco) andCO2 fixation. Similar concentrations of glyoxylate had no effecton A. thaliana rubisco activity in vitro. These results suggestthat glyoxylate accumulation indirectly inhibited rubisco activationstate in vivo. The inhibition of photosynthesis in mutants whichaccumulate glyoxylate may be attributed to a decline in ribulosebisphosphateconcentration, a reduction in rubisco activation state, or acombination of both phenomena. 3Present address: CSIRO, Division of Plant Industry, GPO Box1600, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia. (Received May 12, 1989; Accepted July 8, 1989)  相似文献   

4.
The activation level of ribulosebisphosphate carboxylase following preincubation with ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate was increased by ATP and ribulosebisphosphate carboxylase activase in the absence of thylakoids or illumination. Maximal activation was obtained with 0.5 millimolar ATP in the presence of an ATP regenerating system (phosphoenolpyruvate and pyruvate kinase). Without the ATP regenerating system, activation was lower, linearly dependent on ATP concentration up to 1.0 millimolar, and was strongly inhibited by ADP.  相似文献   

5.
We compared the heat-denaturation profiles of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) and Rubisco activase and further examined the ability of Rubisco activase to restore the activity of heat-denatured Rubisco originally reported (E. Sanchez de Jimenez, L. Medrano, and E. Martinez-Barajas [1995] Biochemistry 34: 2826-2831). Rubisco was heat-treated in both the carbamylated and uncarbamylated forms and in the presence and absence of 10 mM dithiothreitol (DTT). Both forms were highly resistant to heat denaturation and further protection was gained in the presence of DTT. A 50% loss in total activity occurred after 1 h at 57.5 and 55.2[deg]C for uncarbamylated Rubisco and at 60.2 and 59.6[deg]C for carbamylated Rubisco, in each case with and without DTT, respectively. In contrast, Rubisco activase lost 50% activity after only 5 min at 33[deg]C and the loss in activity was not affected by the presence of Rubisco. When Rubisco, heat-denatured to various extents, was incubated at room temperature with Rubisco activase or bovine serum albumin as a control, Rubisco activase did not have a significant specific ability to restore Rubisco activity. We conclude that Rubisco activase alone does not have the ability to restore the activity of heat-denatured Rubisco and is unlikely to protect or restore Rubisco activity from heat denaturation in vivo because it is more heat-labile than Rubisco.  相似文献   

6.
Ribulose-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) activase uses the energy from ATP hydrolysis to remove tight binding inhibitors from Rubisco, thus playing a key role in regulating photosynthesis in plants. Although several structures have recently added much needed structural information for different Rubisco activase enzymes, the arrangement of these subunits in solution remains unclear. In this study, we use a variety of techniques to show that Rubisco activase forms a wide range of structures in solution, ranging from monomers to much higher order species, and that the distribution of these species is highly dependent on protein concentration. The data support a model in which Rubisco activase forms an open spiraling structure rather than a closed hexameric structure. At protein concentrations of 1 μm, corresponding to the maximal activity of the enzyme, Rubisco activase has an oligomeric state of 2–4 subunits. We propose a model in which Rubisco activase requires at least 1 neighboring subunit for hydrolysis of ATP.  相似文献   

7.
Light Activation of Rubisco by Rubisco Activase and Thylakoid Membranes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A reconstituted system comprising ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase(rubisco), rubisco activase, washed thylakoid membranes, andATP was used to demonstrate a light-dependent stimulation ofrubisco activation. ATP, ribulose bisphosphate, H+, and Mg2+concentrations are normally light-dependent variables in thechloroplast but were maintained at pre-determined levels. Resultsindicated that rubisco activase and washed thylakoid membranesare sufficient to catalyze light stimulation of rubisco activationwith the reconstituted system, and that rubisco activase isrequired for this light stimulation. The washed thylakoid membranesdid not exhibit rubisco activase activity, nor was rubisco activaseprotein detected immunologically. Light-dependent activationof rubisco in the reconstituted system was similar in whole-chainand PS I electron transport reactions, and saturated at approximately100 µmol photons m–2 s–1. 1 Present address: Department of Biological Sciences, LouisianaTech University, Ruston, LA 71272, U.S.A.  相似文献   

8.
Lan Y  Mott KA 《Plant physiology》1991,95(2):604-609
The spectrophotometric assay for ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) was used to determine the rate of increase in Rubisco activity over time in the presence or absence of Rubisco activase. Polynomial approximations to the raw data were used to smooth out minor fluctuations in the spectrophotometer readings, and Rubisco activase activity was expressed as nanomoles of activated Rubisco per minute. This assay was used to examine the effects of CO2 and the inactive-Rubisco:ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate complex (ER) on the activase-catalyzed activation reaction. Double-reciprocal plots of activase activity and ER at several concentrations of CO2 were consistent with two-substrate Michaelis-Menton kinetics, and the apparent Km (CO2) and Km(ER) were determined to be 53 and 2.7 micromolar, respectively. These data do not prove that ER and CO2 are substrates for the reaction catalyzed by activase, but they may be important to our understanding of the activation process in vivo. The implications of these data and their relation to previously published data on the effects of ER and CO2 on activase are discussed.  相似文献   

9.
We tested the hypothesis that light activation of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) is inhibited by moderately elevated temperature through an effect on Rubisco activase. When cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) or wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) leaf tissue was exposed to increasing temperatures in the light, activation of Rubisco was inhibited above 35 and 30°C, respectively, and the relative inhibition was greater for wheat than for cotton. The temperature-induced inhibition of Rubisco activation was fully reversible at temperatures below 40°C. In contrast to activation state, total Rubisco activity was not affected by temperatures as high as 45°C. Nonphotochemical fluorescence quenching increased at temperatures that inhibited Rubisco activation, consistent with inhibition of Calvin cycle activity. Initial and maximal chlorophyll fluorescence were not significantly altered until temperatures exceeded 40°C. Thus, electron transport, as measured by Chl fluorescence, appeared to be more stable to moderately elevated temperatures than Rubisco activation. Western-blot analysis revealed the formation of high-molecular-weight aggregates of activase at temperatures above 40°C for both wheat and cotton when inhibition of Rubisco activation was irreversible. Physical perturbation of other soluble stromal enzymes, including Rubisco, phosphoribulokinase, and glutamine synthetase, was not detected at the elevated temperatures. Our evidence indicates that moderately elevated temperatures inhibit light activation of Rubisco via a direct effect on Rubisco activase.  相似文献   

10.
We developed a continuous-addition method for maintaining subsaturating concentrations of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) for several minutes, while simultaneously monitoring its consumption by ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco). This method enabled us to observe the effects of subsaturating RuBP and CO2 concentrations on the activity of Rubisco during much longer periods than previously studied. At saturating CO2, the activity of the enzyme declined faster when RuBP was maintained at concentrations near its Km value than when RuBP was saturating. At saturating RuBP, activity declined faster at limiting than at saturating CO2, in accordance with previous observations. The most rapid decline in activity occurred when both CO2 and RuBP concentrations were subsaturating. The activity loss was accompanied by decarbamylation of the enzyme, even though the enzyme was maintained at the same CO2 concentration before and after exposure to RuBP. Rubisco activase ameliorated the decline in activity at subsaturating CO2 and RuBP concentrations. The results are consistent with a proposed mechanism for regulating the carbamylation of Rubisco, which postulates that Rubisco activase counteracts Rubisco's unfavorable carbamylation equilibrium in the presence of RuBP by accelerating, in an ATP-dependent manner, the release of RuBP from its complex with uncarbamylated sites.  相似文献   

11.
Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase activase often consists of two polypeptides that arise from alternative splicing of pre-mRNA. In this study recombinant versions of the spinach (Spinacea oleracea L.) 45- and 41-kD forms of activase were analyzed for their response to temperature. The temperature optimum for ATP hydrolysis by the 45-kD form was 45[deg]C, approximately 13[deg]C higher than the 41-kD form. When the two forms were mixed, the temperature response of the hybrid enzyme was similar to the 45-kD form. In the absence of adenine nucleotide, preincubation of either activase form at temperatures above 25[deg}C inactivated ATPase activity. Adenosine 5[prime]-([gamma]-thio)triphosphate, but not ADP, significantly enhanced the thermostability of the 45-kD form but was much less effective for the 41-kD form. Intrinsic fluorescence showed that the adenosine 5[prime]-([gamma]-thio)triphosphate-induced subunit aggregation was lost at a much lower temperature for the 41-kD than for the 45-kD form. However, the two activase forms were equally susceptible to limited proteolysis after heat treatment. The results indicate that (a) the 45-kD form is more thermostable than, and confers increased thermal stability to, the 41-kD form, and (b) a loss of subunit interactions, rather than enzyme denaturation, appears to be the initial cause of temperature inactivation of activase.  相似文献   

12.
Roesler KR  Ogren WL 《Plant physiology》1990,94(4):1837-1841
Immunoblot analysis of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rubisco) activase from the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii indicated the presence of a single polypeptide. This observation contrasts with the Spinacea oleracea (spinach) and Arabidopsis thaliana proteins, in which two polypeptide species are generated by alternative pre-mRNA splicing. A Chlamydomonas rubisco activase cDNA clone containing the entire coding region was isolated and sequenced. The open reading frame encoded a 408 amino acid, 45 kilodalton polypeptide that included a chloroplast transit peptide. The presumptive mature polypeptide possessed 62% and 65% amino acid sequence identity, respectively, with the spinach and Arabidopsis mature polypeptides. The Chlamydomonas rubisco activase transit peptide possessed almost no amino acid sequence identity with the higher plant transit peptides. The nucleotide sequence of Chlamydomonas rubisco activase cDNA provided no evidence for alternative mRNA splicing, consistent with the immunoblot evidence for only one polypeptide. Genomic DNA blot analysis indicated the presence of a single Chlamydomonas rubisco activase gene. In the presence of spinach rubisco activase, a lower extent and rate of activation were obtained in vitro with Chlamydomonas rubisco than with spinach rubisco. We conclude Chlamydomonas rubisco activase comprises a single polypeptide which differs considerably from the higher plant polypeptides with respect to primary structure.  相似文献   

13.
In vivo activation states of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase(RuBisCO; EC 4.1.1.39 [EC] ) in the dark and light phases were measuredin intact leaves of Phaseolus and radish. The activation statewas high in the dark and comparable to the activation stateunder illumination at saturating light intensity. Then, we examined,using RuBisCO purified from spinach leaves, a mechanism forthe activation of RuBisCO in the dark when the stroma is neutralizedand lossess Mg2+ partly. Activation was not obserevd when theenzyme was incubated at air-level CO2 and 10 mM Mg2+ at pH rangingfrom 6.2 to 7.5. However, the activation was highly promotedin this pH range when the activation mixture contained 10 mMinorganic phosphate. The activation state was 50 to 60% betweenpH 7.0 and 7.8 and maximum over pH 8.2 in the presence of 10mM inorganic phosphate. Studies of the initial rate of activationshow that the promotion of activation was through stabilizationof the active form of the enzyme by inorganic phosphate, notby altering the pKa of the activator -amino group of Lys-201.The physiological significance of the activation of RuBisCOby inorganic phosphate in the dark is discussed. 3 Present address: Department of Biochemistry, University ofNebraska, Lincoln, NE 68588-0664, U.S.A.  相似文献   

14.
15.
The slow inactivation which accompanies catalysis by higher-plant ribulose-P2 carboxylase-oxygenase (Rubisco) in vitro was only partially reversed when the enzyme was gel filtered to remove small molecules. However, gel filtration or dialysis in the presence of high SO2-4 concentrations induced full recovery. This suggests that the inactivation is caused by a tight-binding inhibitor whose effective affinity is reduced by competition with SO2-4 ions, which are known to bind at the catalytic site. The involvement of an inhibitor was confirmed by observations that supernatants obtained after acid-precipitation of inactivated Rubisco were inhibitory when applied to fresh enzyme. The inhibitor bound slowly and tightly and showed strong negative cooperativity. The inhibitor was moderately unstable at pH 8.3, decaying with a halflife of several hours, but was more stable at pH 2. It was destroyed by phosphatase treatment but not by H2O2 or o-phenylenediamine, compounds which react with vicinal dicarbonyl groups. It did not contain a carbon atom derived from substrate CO2. Possibilities concerning the identity, genesis, and physiological relevance of this inhibitor are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
The activation of Rubisco in vivo requires the presence of the regulatory protein Rubisco activase. To elucidate its role in maintaining CO2 assimilation rate at high temperature, we examined the temperature response of CO2 assimilation rate at 380 μL L−1 CO2 concentration (A380) and Rubisco activation state in wild-type and transgenic tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) with reduced Rubisco activase content grown at either 20°C or 30°C. Analyses of gas exchange and chlorophyll fluorescence showed that in the wild type, A380 was limited by ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate regeneration at lower temperatures, whereas at higher temperatures, A380 was limited by ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylation irrespective of growth temperatures. Growth temperature induced modest differences in Rubisco activation state that declined with measuring temperature, from mean values of 76% at 15°C to 63% at 40°C in wild-type plants. At measuring temperatures of 25°C and below, an 80% reduction in Rubisco activase content was required before Rubisco activation state was decreased. Above 35°C, Rubisco activation state decreased slightly with more modest decreases in Rubisco activase content, but the extent of the reductions in Rubisco activation state were small, such that a 55% reduction in Rubisco activase content did not alter the temperature sensitivity of Rubisco activation and had no effect on in vivo catalytic turnover rates of Rubisco. There was a strong correlation between Rubisco activase content and Rubisco activation state once Rubisco activase content was less that 20% of wild type at all measuring temperatures. We conclude that reduction in Rubisco activase content does not lead to an increase in the temperature sensitivity of Rubisco activation state in tobacco.The catalytic sites of Rubisco must be activated for CO2 fixation to take place. This requires the carbamylation of a Lys residue at the catalytic sites to allow the binding of Mg2+ and ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP; Andrews and Lorimer, 1987). Rubisco activase facilitates carbamylation and the maintenance of Rubisco activity by removing inhibitors such as tight-binding sugar phosphates from Rubisco catalytic sites in an ATP-dependent manner (Andrews, 1996; Spreitzer and Salvucci, 2002; Portis, 2003; Parry et al., 2008). The activity of Rubisco activase is regulated by the ATP/ADP ratio and redox state in the chloroplast (Zhang and Portis, 1999; Zhang et al., 2002; Portis, 2003).In many plant species, Rubisco activation state decreases at high temperature in vivo (Crafts-Brandner and Salvucci, 2000; Salvucci and Crafts-Brandner, 2004b; Cen and Sage, 2005; Yamori et al., 2006b; Makino and Sage, 2007). However, it is unclear what the primary mechanisms underlying the inhibition of Rubisco activation are and whether Rubisco deactivation limits CO2 assimilation rate at high temperature. It has been proposed that Rubisco activation state decreases at high temperature, because the activity of Rubisco activase is insufficient to keep pace with the faster rates of Rubisco inactivation at high temperatures (Crafts-Brandner and Salvucci, 2000; Salvucci and Crafts-Brandner, 2004a, 2004c; Kim and Portis, 2006). In in vitro assays using purified Rubisco and Rubisco activase, the activity of Rubisco activase was sufficient for the activation of Rubisco at the optimum temperature but not at high temperatures (Crafts-Brandner and Salvucci, 2000; Salvucci and Crafts-Brandner, 2004a, 2004c). ATP hydrolysis activity of Rubisco activase in vitro has varying temperature optima among species (e.g. 25°C in Antarctic hairgrass [Deschampsia antarctica] and spinach [Spinacia oleracea] but 35°C in tobacco [Nicotiana tabacum] and cotton [Gossypium hirsutum]), and Rubisco activase more readily dissociates into inactive forms at high temperature, causing a loss of Rubisco activase capacity (Crafts-Brandner and Law, 2000; Salvucci and Crafts-Brandner, 2004b). Moreover, the rates of inhibitor formation by misprotonation of RuBP during catalysis increased at higher temperatures (Salvucci and Crafts-Brandner, 2004c; Kim and Portis, 2006). CO2 assimilation rates and plant growth were improved under heat stress in transgenic Arabidopsis expressing thermotolerant Rubisco activase isoforms generated by either gene-shuffling technology (Kurek et al., 2007) or chimeric Rubisco activase constructs (Kumar et al., 2009). These results support the view that the reduction of Rubisco activase activity limits the Rubisco activation and, therefore, the CO2 assimilation rates at high temperatures.It has also been suggested that the decrease in CO2 assimilation rate at high temperatures is caused by a limitation of RuBP regeneration capacity (e.g. electron transport capacity) rather than by Rubisco deactivation per se (Schrader et al., 2004; Wise et al., 2004; Cen and Sage, 2005; Makino and Sage, 2007; Kubien and Sage, 2008). These groups suggest that Rubisco deactivation at high temperature may be a regulatory response to the limitation of one of the processes contributing to electron transport capacities. For example, at high temperature, protons can leak through the thylakoid membrane, impairing the coupling of ATP synthesis to electron transport (Pastenes and Horton, 1996; Bukhov et al., 1999, 2000). As the electron transport capacity becomes limiting, ATP/ADP ratios and the redox potential of the chloroplast decline, causing a loss of Rubisco activase activity and, in turn, a reduction in the Rubisco activation state (Zhang and Portis, 1999; Zhang et al., 2002; Sage and Kubien, 2007). Based on this understanding, the decline in the Rubisco activation state at high temperature may be a regulated response to a limitation in electron transport capacity rather than a consequence of a direct effect of heat on the integrity of Rubisco activase.Temperature dependence of CO2 assimilation rate shows a considerable variation with growth temperature (Berry and Björkman, 1980; Hikosaka et al., 2006; Sage and Kubien, 2007). Plants grown at low temperature generally exhibit higher CO2 assimilation rates at low temperatures compared with plants grown at high temperature, but they exhibit lower rates at high temperature. Furthermore, both the temperature response of Rubisco activation state and the limiting step of CO2 assimilation rate (a Rubisco versus RuBP regeneration limitation) have been shown to differ depending on growth temperature (Hikosaka et al., 1999; Onoda et al., 2005; Yamori et al., 2005, 2006a, 2006b, 2008). This suggests that the regulation of Rubisco activation state could also differ in plants grown at different growth temperatures. Here, we analyzed the effects of Rubisco activase content on Rubisco activation state and CO2 assimilation rate at leaf temperatures ranging from 15°C to 40°C in tobacco grown under two different temperature regimes (day/night temperatures of 20°C/15°C or 30°C/25°C). We used wild-type and transgenic tobacco with a range of reductions in Rubisco activase content to examine the dependence of Rubisco activation on Rubisco activase content over the range of leaf temperatures (Mate et al., 1993, 1996).  相似文献   

17.
Inhibition of Ribulose-P2 Carboxylase/Oxygenase by Fluoride   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Fluoride is a potent inhibitor of both reactions of ribulose-P2carboxylase/oxygenase. Inhibition is almost totally competitivewith respect to CO2, but uncompetitive with respect to ribulose-P2Inhibition of photosynthesis after exposure to HF may resultfrom the inhibition of ribulose-P2 carboxylase by F– accumulatedin the leaves. Key words: Fluoride inhibition, Ribulose P2 carboxylase, Activation  相似文献   

18.
Zhu G  Jensen RG 《Plant physiology》1991,97(4):1348-1353
Xylulose 1,5-bisphosphate (XuBP) is synthesized from ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) at carbamylated catalytic sites on ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (Rubisco) with significant amounts of XuBP being formed at pH less than 8.0. XuBP has been separated by high performance liquid chromatography and identified by pulsed amperometry from compounds bound to Rubisco during catalysis with the purified enzyme and from celery (Apium graveolens var Utah) leaf extracts. XuBP does not bind tightly to carbamylated sites, but does bind tightly to decarbamylated sites. Upon incubation of fully activated Rubisco with 5 micromolar XuBP, loss of activator CO2 occurred before XuBP bound to the enzyme catalytic sites, even in the presence of excess CO2 and Mg2+. Binding of XuBP to decarbamylated Rubisco sites was highly pH dependent. At pH 7.0 and 7.5 with 10 millimolar MgCl2 and 10 millimolar KHCO3, the apparent dissociation constant for XuBP, Kd, was 0.03 micromolar, whereas at pH 8.0 and 8.5, the apparent Kd was 0.35 and 2.0 micromolar, respectively. This increase in Kd with pH was a result of a decrease in the association rate constant and an increase in the dissociation rate constant of XuBP bound to decarbamylated sites on Rubisco. The Kd of 2-carboxyarabinitol 1-phosphate binding to carbamylated sites was only slightly pH dependent.  相似文献   

19.
The high-CO2-requiring mutant of Synechococcus sp. PCC 7942, EK6, was obtained after extension of the C terminus of the small subunit of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco). The carboxysomes in EK6 were much larger than in the wild type, but the cellular distribution of the large and small sub-units of Rubisco was not affected. The kinetic parameters of in vitro-activated Rubisco were similar in EK6 and in the wild type. On the other hand, Rubisco appeared to be in a low state of activation in situ in EK6 cells pretreated with an air level of CO2. This was deduced from the appearance of a lag phase when carboxylation was followed with time in cells permeabilized by detergent and subsequently supplied with saturating CO2 and RuBP. Pretreatment of the cells with high CO2 virtually abolished the lag. After low-CO2 treatment, the internal RuBP pool was much higher in mutant cells than in the wild-type cells; pretreatment with high CO2 reduced the pool in mutant cells. We suggest that the high-CO2-requiring phenotype in mutants that possess aberrant carboxysomes arises from the inactivated state of Rubisco when the cells are exposed to low CO2.  相似文献   

20.
An investigation was made of the proposal that the slow inactivation of ribulosebisphosphate carboxylase (Rubisco) activity, which occurs during in vitro assays, is due to decarbamylation of the enzyme. The level of carbamylation was compared with catalytic activity during assay conditions in which activity was both increasing and decreasing. Carbamylation level was measured using the reaction-intermediate analogue 2' -carboxy-D-arabinitol-1, 5-bisphosphate (carboxyarabinitol-P(2)). A dual isotope procedure was used in which [(3)H]carboxyarabinitol-P(2) measured total active sites and (14)CO(2) reported the level of carbamylation. The efficacy of the procedure was verified both in the presence and in the absence of the substrate d-ribulose-1, 5-bisphosphate (ribulose-P(2)). These measurements showed that changes in activity during assays were not correlated with carbamylation status. Inactivation during assays initiated with both fully and partially carbamylated enzyme was not associated with any change in carbamylation level. This implies that the loss of activity during assays is not due to ribulose-P(2) binding and sequestering the E form of the enzyme. Ribulose-P(2) did not appear to alter the equilibrium between carbamylated and uncarbamylated enzyme, but it did slow the rate at which enzyme was both decarbamylated and carbamylated. The most likely explanation for the loss of activity during assays appears to be the sequestration of carbamylated, Mg(2+)-bound active sites by an inhibitor.  相似文献   

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