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1.
Pea (Pisum sativum) chloroplastic glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.13) was tested for uracil DNA glycosylase activity. It was found that both the chloroplast and the recombinant subunit B dehydrogenases remove uracil from poly(dA[3H]dU). The glycosylase activity of the recombinant subunit B enzyme and that of a truncated form corresponding in length to subunit A were associated with the dehydrogenase activity in gel-filtration experiments. Both activities of the chloroplast enzyme were inhibited by antisera raised against recombinant subunit B, and both activities of the recombinant subunit B enzyme were inhibited by antisera raised against pea chloroplast glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase. Antisera raised against Escherichia coli uracil glycosylase did not affect the glycosylase activity of the recombinant subunit B enzyme. The glycosylase pH activity profile of the chloroplast dehydrogenase was unique. It is distinct from the dehydrogenase pH activity profile and from the pH activity profiles of other plant glycosylases. The glycosylase activity, but not the dehydrogenase activity, of the recombinant subunit B enzyme was inhibited by uracil. Pyridine nucleotides stimulated the glycosylase activity. To our knowledge this is the first example of a nonhuman glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase, and of an NADP-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase, that exhibits uracil glycosylase activity.  相似文献   

2.
Light activation of NADP-linked glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.13) and light inactivation of glucose-6-P dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.49) appear to be modulated within pea leaf chloroplasts by mediators which are reduced by photosynthetic electron flow from the photosystem I reaction center. Dichlorophenyl-1, 1-dimethylurea inhibition of this modulation can be completely reversed by ascorbate plus 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol in broken chloroplasts, but not in intact chloroplasts. Intact chloroplasts are impermeable to 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol at pH 7.5. Studies on the effect of light in reconstituted chloroplasts with photosystem I-enriched particles in the place of whole thylakoids revealed that photosystem I participates in the light modulation of NADP-linked glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase and of glucose-6-P dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

3.
We report here a method for the isolation of high specific activity phosphoglycerate kinase (EC 2.7.2.3) from chloroplasts. The enzyme has been purified over 200-fold from pea (Pisum sativum L.) stromal extracts to apparent homogeneity with 23% recovery. Negative cooperativity is observed with the two enzyme phosphoglycerate kinase/glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.13) couple restored from the purified enzymes when NADPH is the reducing pyridine nucleotide, consistent with earlier results obtained with crude chloroplastic extracts (J Macioszek, LE Anderson [1987] Biochim Biophys Acta 892: 185-190). Michaelis Menten kinetics are observed when 3-phosphoglycerate is held constant and phosphoglycerate kinase is varied, which suggests that phosphoglycerate kinase-bound 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate may be the preferred substrate for glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase in the chloroplast.  相似文献   

4.
NADP-glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase of spinach (Spinacia oleracea) chloroplasts was activated by thioredoxin that was reduced either photochemically with ferredoxin and ferredoxin-thioredoxin reductase or chemically with dithiothreitol. The activation process that was observed with the soluble protein fraction from chloroplasts and with the purified regulatory form of the enzyme was slow relative to the rate of catalysis. The NAD-linked glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase activity that is also present in chloroplasts and in the purified enzyme preparation was not affected by reduced thioredoxin.

When activated by dithiothreitol-reduced thioredoxin, the regulatory form of NADP-glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase was partly deactivated by oxidized glutathione. The enzyme activated by photochemically reduced thioredoxin was not appreciably affected by oxidized glutathione. The results suggest that although it resembles other regulatory enzymes in its requirements for light-dependent activation by the ferredoxin/thioredoxin system, NADP-glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase differs in its mode of deactivation and in its capacity for activation by enzyme effectors independently of thioredoxin.

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5.
Carboxy-terminal amino acids of NADP-dependent malate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.82) from pea chloroplasts were removed by treatment with carboxypeptidase Y. This results in the activation of the inactive oxidized enzyme, while activation by light in vivo is thought to occur via reduction of an intrasubunit disulfide bridge. After proteolytic activation the oxidized enzyme had a specific activity of 100 U/mg protein, which is 50% of the maximal activity of the control enzyme in the reduced state. When the truncated enzyme was reduced with dithiothreitol (DTT), the specific activity was further increased to 1200 U/mg. While the native enzyme is composed of four identical subunits of 38,900 Da, the truncated malate dehydrogenase forms dimers composed of two subunits of 38,000 Da. No further change of molecular mass or activity was noticed subsequent to prolonged incubation of native NADP-malate dehydrogenase with carboxypeptidase Y for several days. When the enzyme is denatured by 2 M guanidine-HCl, the proteolytic activation proceeds more rapidly, but only transiently. The truncated enzyme is less accessible to activation by reduced thioredoxin, but the stimulation of activity by DTT alone is more rapid than that of the native enzyme. These results indicate that only a small carboxy-terminal peptide of native NADP-malate dehydrogenase from pea chloroplasts is accessible to proteolytic degradation and that this peptide is involved in the regulation of activity, tetramer formation, and thioredoxin binding. While the pH optimum for catalytic activity of the intact reduced enzyme is at pH 8.0-8.5, it is shifted to more acidic values upon proteolysis of NADP-malate dehydrogenase. At pH values below 8 the reduced truncated enzyme exhibits substrate inhibition by oxaloacetate.  相似文献   

6.
Light activation of NADP-linked glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase involves reductive cleavage of a disulfide bond. We have proposed that the inactivating disulfide locks the two domains of the enzyme, preventing catalysis, and we have tentatively identified the two critical cysteine residues in the chloroplast enzyme (D. Li, F.J. Stevens, M. Schiffer and L.E. Anderson (1994) Biophys J. 67: 29–35). We reasoned that if activation of this enzyme involves these cysteines that enzymes lacking one or both should be active in the dark and insensitive to reductants. One of these cysteines is present in the enzymes from Anabaena variabilis and Synechocystis PCC 6803 but the other is not. Consistent with the proposed mechanism, glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase is not affected by DTT-treatment in extracts of either of these cyanobacteria. Fructosebisphosphatase is DTT-activated in extracts of both of these cyanobacteria and glucose-6-P dehydrogenase is inactivated in Synechocystis, as in higher plant chloroplasts. Apparently reductive modulation is possible in these cyanobacteria but glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase is not light activated.  相似文献   

7.
The intra-chloroplastic distribution of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RuBisCO) between thylakoid membranes and stroma was studied by determining the enzyme activities in the two fractions, obtained by the rapid centrifugation of hypotonically disrupted chloroplast preparations of spinach and pea leaf tissues. The membrane-associated form of RuBisCO was found to increase in proportion to the concentration of MgCl2 in the disrupting medium; with 20 mM MgCl2 approximately 20% of the total RuBisCO of spinach chloroplasts and 10% of that of pea chloroplasts became associated with thylakoid membranes. Once released from membranes in the absence of MgCl2, addition of MgCl2 did not cause reassociation of the enzyme. The inclusion of KCl in the hypotonic disruption buffer also caused the association of RuBisCO with membranes; however, up to 30 mM KCl, only minimal enzyme activities could be detected in the membranes, whereas above 40 mM KCl there was a sharp increase in the membrane-associated form of the enzyme.Higher concentrations of chloroplasts during the hypotonic disruption, as well as addition of purified preparations of RuBisCO to the hypotonic buffer, resulted in an increase of membrane-associated activity. Therefore, the association of the enzyme with thylakoid membranes appears to be dependent on the concentration of RuBisCO. P-glycerate kinase and aldolase also associated to the thylakoid membranes but NADP-linked glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase did not. The optimal conditions for enzyme association with the thylakoid membranes were examined; maximal association occurred at pH 8.0. The association was temperature-insensitive in the range of 4° to 25° C. RuBisCO associated with the thylakoid membranes could be gradually liberated to the soluble form upon shaking in a Vortex mixer at maximal speed, indicating that the association is loose.Abbreviations DTT dithiothreitol - RuBP ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate - RuBisCO ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - MES 2-(N-morpholino) ethane sulfonic acid  相似文献   

8.
Lipid peroxidation and the degradation of cytochrome P-450 heme   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
The enzyme content and functional capacities of mesophyll chloroplasts from Atriplex spongiosa and maize have been investigated. Accompanying evidence from graded sequential blending of leaves confirmed that mesophyll cells contain all of the leaf pyruvate, Pi dikinase, and PEP carboxylase activities and a major part of the adenylate kinase and pyrophosphatase. 3-Phosphoglycerate kinase, NADP glyceraldehyde-3-P-dehydrogenase, and triose-P isomerase activities were about equally distributed between mesophyll and bundle sheath cells but other Calvin cycle enzymes were very largely or solely located in bundle sheath cells. In A. spongiosa extracts of predominantly mesophyll origin the proportion of the released pyruvate, Pi dikinase, adenylate kinase, pyrophosphatase, 3-phosphoglycerate kinase, and NADP glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase retained in pelleted chloroplasts was similar but varied between 30 and 80% in different preparations. The proportion of these enzymes and NADP malate dehydrogenase recovered in maize chloroplast preparations varied between 15 and 35%. Washed chloroplasts retained most of the activity of these enzymes but ribulose diphosphate carboxylase and other Calvin cycle enzyme activities were undetectable. Among the evidence for the integrity of these chloroplasts was their capacity for light-dependent conversion of pyruvate to phosphoenolpyruvate and O2 evolution when 3-phosphoglycerate or oxaloacetate were added. These results support our previous conclusions about the function of mesophyll chloroplasts in C4-pathway photosynthesis and clearly demonstrate that they lack Calvin cycle activity.  相似文献   

9.
Carbon dioxide-dependent and 3-phosphoglycerate (PGA)-dependent O2 evolution by isolated chloroplasts of wheat is inhibited by micromolar levels of iodoacetol phosphate (IAP). Loss of the activity is time-dependent and a higher concentration of PGA increases the half-time for inhibition (e.g. at 40 micromolar IAP the half-time is about 0.5 minutes at 1 millimolar PGA compared to 1.5 minutes at 10 millimolar PGA). A marked inhibition of NADP glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase was observed when chloroplasts were pretreated with micromolar levels of IAP, osmotically shocked, and several stromal enzymes assayed.  相似文献   

10.
Nearest neighbor analysis of immunocytolocalization experiments indicates that the enzymes glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase, triose-P isomerase and aldolase are located close to one another in the pea leaf chloroplast stroma, and that aldolase is located close to sedoheptulose bisphosphatase. Direct transfer of the triose phosphates between glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase and triose-P isomerase, and from glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase and triose-P isomerase to aldolase, is then a possibility, as is direct transfer of sedoheptulose bisphosphate from aldolase to sedoheptulose bisphosphatase. Spatial organization of these enzymes may be important for efficient CO2 fixation in photosynthetic organisms. In contrast, there is no indication that fructose bisphosphatase is co-localized with aldolase, and direct transfer of fructose bisphosphate from aldolase to fructose bisphosphatase seems unlikely.  相似文献   

11.
Hydrogen-peroxide-scavenging systems within pea chloroplasts   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
D. J. Gillham  A. D. Dodge 《Planta》1986,167(2):246-251
The subcellular distribution of ascorbate peroxidase and glutathione reductase (EC 1.6.4.2) in pea leaves was compared with that of organelle markers. Enzyme distribution was found to be similar to that of the chloroplast enzyme NADPH-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.13). Isolated chloroplasts showed a close correlation between intactness and the percentage of enzyme activity recovered. Chloroplasts of 85% intactness were found to contain a high proportion of leaf dehydroascorbate reductase activity (EC 1.8.5.1), 10% of leaf glutathione and 30% of leaf ascorbate. These results are discussed in relation to the potential role of chloroplast antioxidant systems in plant resistance to environmental and other stress conditions.Abbreviations GSH reduced glutathione - GSSG oxidized glutathione - NADPH-GPD glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase - SOD superoxide dismutase  相似文献   

12.
High hydrostatic pressure enhanced the specific activity of regulatory enzymes of the Benson-Calvin cycle (fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase, glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase, phosphoribulokinase) which are modulated by the ferredoxin-thioredoxin system. High activity of chloroplast fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase required dithiothreitol, fructose 1,6-bisphosphate, and Ca2+. At 100 bar the A0.5 for fructose 1,6-bisphosphate (0.3 mM) was lower than that at 1 bar (1.5 mM), whereas similar variations of pressure did not alter the A0.5 for Ca2+ (55 microM). The response of chloroplast glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase exposed to 500 bar was a 4-fold increase in the NADP-linked activity; conversely, the NAD-dependent activity remained unchanged. The concerted action of high pressure and Pi (or ATP), both activators of chloroplast glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase, led to inactivation. On the other hand, the activity of phosphoribulokinase increased 10-fold when the enzyme was incubated at 1500 bar; the activation process was strictly dependent on the presence of dithiothreitol. At variance with these enzymes, bovine liver fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase, yeast glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase, and chloroplast ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase, whose activities are not modulated by reduced thioredoxin, were inactivated by high pressure. The comparison of oligomeric enzymes revealed that the stimulation of specific activity by high pressure correlated with thioredoxin-mediated activation, and it did not depend on a particular subunit composition. Present results show that high pressure resembled thioredoxin, cosolvents, and chaotropic anions in its action on regulatory enzymes of the Benson-Calvin cycle. The comparison of physiological and non-physiological modulators suggested that thioredoxin-mediated modifications of noncovalent interactions is an important event in light-dependent regulation of chloroplast enzymes.  相似文献   

13.
A homogeneous multimeric protein isolated from the green alga, Scenedesmus obliquus, has both latent phosphoribulokinase activity and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase activity. The glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase was active with both NADPH and NADH, but predominantly with NADH. Incubation with 20 mM dithiothreitol and 1 mM NADPH promoted the coactivation of phosphoribulokinase and NADPH-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, accompanied by a decrease in the glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase activity linked to NADH. The multimeric enzyme had a Mr of 560,000 and was of apparent subunit composition 8G6R. R represents a subunit of Mr 42,000 conferring phosphoribulokinase activity and G a subunit of 39,000 responsible for the glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase activity. On SDS-PAGE the Mr-42,000 subunit comigrates with the subunit of the active form of phosphoribulokinase whereas that of Mr-39,000 corresponds to that of NADPH-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. The multimeric enzyme had a S20,W of 14.2 S. Following activation with dithiothreitol and NADPH, sedimenting boundaries of 7.4 S and 4.4 S were formed due to the depolymerization of the multimeric protein to NADPH-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (4G) and active phosphoribulokinase (2R). It has been possible to isolate these two enzymes from the activated preparation by DEAE-cellulose chromatography. Prolonged activation of the multimeric protein by dithiothreitol in the absence of nucleotide produced a single sedimenting boundary of 4.6 S, representing a mixture of the active form of phosphoribulokinase and an inactive dimeric form of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. Algal thioredoxin, in the presence of 1 mM dithiothreitol and 1 mM NADPH, stimulated the depolymerization of the multimeric protein with resulting coactivation of phosphoribulokinase and NADPH-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. Light-induced depolymerization of the multimeric protein, mediated by reduced thioredoxin, is postulated as the mechanism of light activation in vivo. Consistent with such a postulate is the presence of high concentrations of the active forms of phosphoribulokinase and NADPH-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase in extracts from photoheterotrophically grown algae. By contrast, in extracts from the dark-grown algae the multimeric enzyme predominates.  相似文献   

14.
Interaction of DNA gyrase A- and B-subunits during the process of DNA supercoiling was studied. For this purpose a E. coli Cour-1 mutant resistant to coumermycin and containing a mutation in the B-subunit of DNA gyrase was isolated and the influence of the DNA gyrase A-subunit specific inhibitor-nalidixic acid-on DNA supercoiling by wild-type and mutant enzymes was investigated. It turned out that the enzyme from the Cour-1 mutant strain was more sensitive to nalidixic acid than the DNA gyrase from the wild-type strain. Hence, the mutation affecting the B-subunit is capable to change A-subunit properties. That makes it possible to draw the conclusion about a close structural interaction of DNA gyrase subunits during DNA supercoiling.  相似文献   

15.
Acetyl-CoA carboxylase regulates the rate of fatty acid synthesis. This enzyme in plants is localized in plastids and is believed to be composed of biotin carboxyl carrier protein, biotin carboxylase, and carboxyltransferase made up of alpha and beta polypeptides, although the enzyme has not been purified yet. Accumulated evidence shows that pea plastidic acetyl-CoA carboxylase is activated by light and the activation is caused by light-dependent reduction of carboxyltransferase, but not of biotin carboxylase, via a redox cascade. To understand the reductive activation of carboxyltransferase at the molecular level here, we obtained the active enzyme composed of decahistidine-tagged (His tag) alpha and beta polypeptides through the expression of the pea plastidic carboxyltransferase gene in Escherichia coli. Gel filtration showed that the molecular size of the recombinant carboxyltransferase is in agreement with that of partially purified carboxyltransferase from pea chloroplasts. The catalytic activity of the recombinant enzyme was similar to that of native carboxyltransferase. These results indicate that the molecular structure and conformation of recombinant carboxyltransferase resemble those of its native counterpart and that native carboxyltransferase is indeed composed of alpha and beta polypeptides. This recombinant enzyme was activated by dithiothreitol, a known reductant of S-S bonds, with a profile similar to that of its native counterpart. The recombinant enzyme was activated by reduced thioredoxin-f, a signal transducer of redox potential in chloroplasts under irradiation. Thus, this enzyme was redox-regulated, like that of the native carboxyltransferase.  相似文献   

16.
Mark Stitt  Tom Ap Rees 《Phytochemistry》1979,18(12):1905-1911
The aim of this work was to measure the capacities of pea (Pisum sativum) shoot chloroplasts to catalyse the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway and glycolysis. Of the total activities in the unfractionated homogenates, appreciable proportions of those of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase, and phosphofructokinase, and smaller but significant proportions of those of phosphopyruvate hydratase and pyruvate kinase were recovered in crude preparations of chloroplasts, and co-purified with intact chloroplasts on sucrose gradients. The activities in the chloroplasts showed considerable latency that was closely correlated with chloroplast integrity. Phosphoglyceromutase activity in the above preparations of chloroplasts did not exceed that expected from cytoplasmic contamination. The mass-action ratio for phosphoglyceromutase in illuminated isolated chloroplasts differed markedly from the enzyme's equilibrium constant. Isolated chloroplasts converted 2-phosphoglycerate to pyruvate. The enzyme activities of the chloroplasts were compared with the rates of respiration and starch breakdown in pea leaves in the dark. It is concluded that in the dark chloroplasts could metabolize all the products of starch breakdown and catalyse much of the respiration of pea shoots via the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway and/or glycolysis as far as 3-phosphoglycerate. It is suggested that pea shoot chloroplasts lack phosphoglyceromutase but contain some phosphopyruvate hydratase and pyruvate kinase.  相似文献   

17.
C. Brunold  M. Suter 《Planta》1982,155(4):321-327
Intact chloroplasts isolated from spinach leaves by a combination of differential and Percoll density gradient centrifugation and free of mitochondrial and peroxisomal contamination contained about 35% of the total leaf serine acetyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.30) activity. No appreciable activity of the enzyme could be detected in the gradient fractions containing broken chloroplasts, mitochondria, and peroxisomes. L-cysteine added to the incubation mixture at 1 mM almost completely inhibited serine acetyltransferase activity, both of leaf and chloroplast extracts. D-cysteine was much less inhibitory. L-cystine up to 5 mM and O-acetyl-L-serine up to 10 mM had no effect on the enzyme activity. When measured at pH 8.4, the enzyme extracted from the leaves had a K m for L-serine of 2.4, the enzyme from the chloroplasts a K m of 2.8 mM.Abbreviations NAS N-acetyl-L-serine - NADP-GPD NADP-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase - OAS O-acetyl-L-serine - OASSase O-acetyl-L-serine sulfhydrylase - 3-PGA D-3-phosphoglycerate - SATase serine acetyltransferase  相似文献   

18.
A rapid and convenient procedure for isolating human glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase from erythrocytes has been developed and yields enzyme with a specific activity of 33–52. The physical and catalytic properties of the enzyme are similar to those of rabbit muscle enzyme. Reassociation of freshly isolated human glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase with washed erythrocyte membranes increases the specific activity and stability of the enzyme suggesting that enzyme-membrane interactions may have an important effect on the conformation and catalytic activity. That the human enzyme behaves as a dimer of dimers, similar to the behavior or rabbit muscle glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, is suggested by its half-of-the-sites reactivity toward 4-iodoacetamido-1-naphthol. The human enzyme binds nicotinamide hypoxanthine dinucleotide, a structural analog of NAD+, with negative cooperativity, further indicating its similarity to rabbit muscle enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
《BBA》1987,892(2):185-190
The kinetics of the two enzyme phosphoglycerate kinase (EC 2.7.2.3)/NADP-linked glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.13) couple are negatively cooperative and will also fit a model for two enzymes acting on one substrate. When the chloroplast is illuminated apparent negative cooperativity is reduced; maximal velocity of only one of the two enzymes in the two-enzyme model is increased. Even after light activation the activity of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase appears to be too low to support photosynthesis at calculated levels of glycerate-1,3-bisphosphate in isolated chloroplasts (Marques, I.A., Ford, D.M., Muschinek, G. and Anderson, L.E. (1987) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 252, 458–466). The activity of the coupled reaction is apparently sufficient to support observed rates of CO2 fixation, which suggests that glycerate-1,3-bisphosphate may be channeled from the kinase to the dehydrogenase in vivo.  相似文献   

20.
We report here that enzyme activation precedes the rise in metabolite levels, which appear to limit photosynthetic CO2 fixation during induction in pea leaf chloroplasts. Therefore light activation may be required for the build-up of photosynthetic intermediates and hence for photosynthesis in isolated chloroplasts. Analysis of metabolite levels and the known kinetic properties of the chloroplast enzymes indicates that the reductive pentose phosphate cycle is subject to control which fluctuates between several points during induction and when CO2 fixation is maximal. The transketolase-aldolase-catalyzed reactions around sedoheptulose-biphosphatase appear to provide a simple and effective primary control for photosynthetic CO2 fixation. When substrate levels and enzyme active site concentrations are taken into account, there is insufficient glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase, aldolase, and transketolase activity to support photosynthetic CO2 fixation at observed rates. These results suggest that there may be direct transfer of glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate among these enzymes in the pea chloroplast.  相似文献   

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