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1.
Experiments were undertaken to identify and characterize control mechanisms in tobacco leaf tissue which decrease the relative contribution of photorespiratory CO2 release and thereby increase net photosynthetic CO2 fixation. A number of metabolites were supplied to illuminated leaf discs and their effect on the inhibition of glycolate synthesis was measured. Glycolate accumulation, in the presence of α-hydroxy-2-pyridinemethanesulfonic acid, was inhibited in leaf discs previously floated on 30 mM solutions of either L-glutamate, L-aspartate, phospho-enolpyruvate, or glyoxylate. The effect of glutamate on glycolate synthesis, which was investigated in detail, was concentration- and time-dependent. Glycolate synthesis was inhibited about 40% by treating leaf discs with 30 mM glutamate, and the inhibition continued for more than 4 hours after the glutamate solution was removed.  相似文献   

2.
Bicarbonate markedly enhances ethylene production from 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC) in model chemical systems where the conversion is free radical-mediated, in thylakoid membrane suspensions of Phaseolus vulgaris L. cv Kinghorn where the reaction is light-dependent, and in microsomal membrane suspensions and intact tissues where the reaction is enzymically mediated. In two model systems generating free radicals—the Fenton reaction and a reaction mixture containing xanthine/xanthine oxidase, NaHCO3 (200 millimolar) increased the formation of ethylene from ACC by 84-fold and 54-fold, respectively. Isolated thylakoid membranes also proved capable of ACC-dependent ethylene production, but only upon illumination, and this too was enhanced by added NaHCO3. As well, light-induced inhibition of ACC-dependent ethylene production by leaf discs was relieved by adding 200 millimolar NaHCO3. Finally, NaHCO3 (200 millimolar) augmented ACC-dependent ethylene production from young carnation flowers by about 4-fold, and the conversions of ACC to ethylene by microsomes isolated from carnation flowers and etiolated pea epicotyls were higher by 1900 and 62%, respectively, in the presence of 200 millimolar NaHCO3.

This increased production of ethylene appears not to be due to bicarbonate or CO2-induced release of the gas from putative receptor sites, since the addition of NaHCO3 to sealed reaction mixtures after the ACC to ethylene conversion had been terminated had no effect. Spin-trapping studies have confirmed that bicarbonate does not facilitate the formation of free radicals thought to be involved in the conversion of ACC to ethylene. Nor did bicarbonate alter the physical properties of the membrane bilayer, which might indirectly modulate the activity of the membrane-associated enzyme capable of converting ACC to ethylene. Rather, bicarbonate appears to directly facilitate the conversion of ACC to ethylene, and the data are consistent with the view that CO2 derived from bicarbonate is the active molecular species.

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3.
Erratum     
Glycolate synthesis was inhibited 40–50% in illuminated tobacco leaf disks, which have rapid rates of photorespiration, when floated on 20 mm potassium glycidate (2,3-epoxypropionate), an epoxide similar in structure to glycolate. The inhibitor also decreased the release of photorespiratory CO2 about 40%, and the specificity of glycidate was demonstrated by the 40–50% increase in rate of photosynthetic CO2 uptake observed in its presence. The importance of glycolate synthesis and metabolism in the production of photorespiratory CO2 and the role of glycolate in diminishing net photosynthesis in species with rapid rates of photorespiration was thus further confirmed. L-(or 2S)-Glycidate was slightly more active than DL-glycidate, but glycidate was more effective as a specific inhibitor in leaf tissue than several other epoxide analogs of glycolate examined. The products of photosynthetic 14O2 fixation after 3 or 4 min of uptake were proportionately altered in the presence of glycidate, and the specific radioactivity of the [14C]glycolate produced was closer to that of the 14CO2 supplied. Glycidate inhibited glycolate synthesis in tobacco leaf disks irreversibly, since the degree of inhibition was the same for at least 2 hr after the inhibitor solution was removed. Glycidate also blocked glycolate synthesis in maize leaf disks, tissue with low rates of photorespiration, but large increases in net photosynthesis were not observed in maize with glycidate, because glycolate synthesis is normally only about 10% as rapid in maize as in tobacco. The demonstration of increases in net photosynthesis of 40–50% when glycolate synthesis (and photorespiration) is blocked with glycidate indicates in an independent manner that the biochemical or genetic control of photorespiration should permit large increases in plant productivity in plant species possessing rapid rates of photorespiration.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of light and CO2 on both the endogenous and 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC)-dependent ethylene evolution from metabolically active detached leaves and leaf discs of Gomphrena globosa L. is reported. Treatment with varying concentrations of ACC did not appear to inhibit photosynthesis, respiration, or stomatal behavior. In all treatments, more ethylene was released into a closed flask from ACC-treated tissue, but the pattern of ethylene release with respect to light/dark/CO2 treatments was the same.

Leaf tissue in the light with a source of CO2 sufficient to maintain photosynthesis always generates 3 to 4 times more ethylene than tissue in the dark. Conversely, the lowest rate of ethylene release occurs when leaf tissue is illuminated and photosynthetic activity depletes the CO2 to the compensation point. Ethylene release in the dark is also stimulated by CO2 either added to the flask as bicarbonate or generated by dark respiration. Ethylene release increases dramatically and in parallel with photosynthesis at increasing light intensities in this C4 plant. Ethylene release appears dependent on CO2 both in the light and in the dark. Therefore, it is suggested that the important factor regulating the evolution of ethylene gas from leaves of Gomphrena may be CO2 metabolism rather than light per se.

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5.
Oliver DJ 《Plant physiology》1978,62(6):938-940
The addition of glyoxylate to tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) leaf discs inhibited glycolate synthesis and photorespiration and increased net photosynthetic 14CO2 fixation. This inhibition of photorespiration was investigated further by studying the effect of glyoxylate on the stimulation of photosynthesis that occurs when the atmospheric O2 level was decreased from 21 to 3% (the Warburg effect). The Warburg effect is usually ascribed to the increased glycolate synthesis and metabolism that occurs at higher O2 concentrations. Photosynthesis in control discs increased from 59.1 to 94.7 micromoles of CO2 per gram fresh weight per hour (a 60% increase) when the O2 level was lowered from 21 to 3%, while the rate for discs floated on 15 millimolar glyoxylate increased only from 82.0 to 99.7 micromoles of CO2 per gram fresh weight per hour (a 22% increase). The decrease in the O2 sensitivity of photosynthesis in the presence of glyoxylate was explained by changes in the rate of glycolate synthesis under the same conditions.

The rate of metabolism of the added glyoxylate by tobacco leaf discs was about 1.35 micromoles per gram fresh weight per hour and was not dependent on the O2 concentration in the atmosphere. This rate of metabolism is about 10% the amount of stimulation in the rate of CO2 fixation caused by the glyoxylate treatment on a molar carbon basis. Glyoxylate (10 millimolar) had no effect on the carboxylase/oxygenase activity of isolated ribulose diphosphate carboxylase. Although the biochemical mechanism by which glyoxylate inhibits glycolate synthesis and photorespiration and thereby decreases the Warburg effect is still uncertain, these results show that cellular metabolites can regulate the extent of the Warburg effect.

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6.
Photorespiration in Chlorella pyrenoidosa Chick. was assayed by measuring 18O-labeled intermediates of the glycolate pathway. Glycolate, glycine, serine, and excreted glycolate were isolated and analyzed on a gas chromatograph/mass spectrometer to determine isotopic enrichment. Rates of glycolate synthesis were determined from 18O-labeling kinetics of the intermediates, pool sizes, derived rate equations, and nonlinear regression techniques. Glycolate synthesis was higher in high CO2-grown cells than in air-grown cells when both were assayed under the same O2 and CO2 concentrations. Synthesis of glycolate, for both types of cells, was stimulated by high O2 levels and inhibited by high CO2 levels. Glycolate synthesis in 1.5% CO2-grown Chlorella, when exposed to a 0.035% CO2 atmosphere, increased from about 41 to 86 nanomoles per milligram chlorophyll per minute when the O2 concentration was increased from 21% to 40%. Glycolate synthesis in air-grown cells increased from 2 to 6 nanomoles per milligram chlorophyll per minute under the same gas levels. Synthesis was undetectable when either the O2 concentration was lowered to 2% or the CO2 concentration was raised to 1.5%. Glycolate excretion was also sensitive to O2 and CO2 concentrations in 1.5% CO2-grown cells and the glycolate that was excreted was 18O-labeled. Air-grown cells did not excrete glycolate under any experimental condition. Indirect evidence indicated that glycolate may be excreted as a lactone in Chlorella. Photorespiratory 18O-labeling kinetics were determined for Pavlova lutheri, which unlike Chlorella and higher plants did not directly synthesize glycine and serine from glycolate. This alga did excrete a significant proportion of newly synthesized glycolate into the media.  相似文献   

7.
Tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum var. Havana Seed) leaf discs were allowed to photosynthesize for 3 to 20 minutes in the presence of 14CO2 and 3H2O. Several metabolites of the Calvin cycle and photorespiratory pathway were isolated and purified and the 3H:14C values measured. Glycolate had a 5- to 10-fold higher 3H:14C than the Calvin cycle intermediate 3-phosphoglyceric acid, or its end product sucrose. The glycolate oxidase inhibitor α-hydroxy-2-pyridinemethanesulfonic acid caused glycolate to accumulate in the tissue and lowered the 3H:14C in glycolate to a value similar to that in 3-phosphoglyceric acid. Phosphoglycolate, a possible precursor of glycolate arising from the Calvin cycle, exhibited a 3H:14C value similar to 3-phosphoglyceric acid under all conditions. The finding of a 3H enrichment in glycolate suggests that another source of glycolate, possibly the reduction of glyoxylate, exists in leaf tissue. Analyses of incorporation of 3H into the pro-2R and pro-2S hydrogens of glycolate, in the presence and absence of α-hydroxy-2-pyridinemethanesulfonic acid, suggest an alternative source of glycolate. Biochemical mechanisms to account for 3H enrichment into glycolate are evaluated.  相似文献   

8.
Mechanism of glycolate transport in spinach leaf chloroplasts   总被引:5,自引:4,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Takabe T  Akazawa T 《Plant physiology》1981,68(5):1093-1097
The incorporation of 14CO2 into glycolate by intact spinach leaf (Spinacia oleracea L. var. Kyoho) chloroplasts exposed to 14CO2 (NaH14CO3, 1 millimolar) in the light was determined as a function of O2 concentrations in the reaction media. A hyperbolic saturation curve was obtained, apparent Km (O2) of 0.28 millimolar, indicating that glycolate is produced predominantly by ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase. A concentration gradient of glycolate was invariably observed between chloroplast stroma and the outside media surrounding chloroplasts during photosynthetic 14CO2 fixation under an O2 atmosphere.  相似文献   

9.
A method was devised to quantify short-term photorespiratory rates in terrestrial plants using 18O-intermediates of the glycolate pathway, specifically glycolate, glycine, and serine. The pathway intermediates were isolated and analyzed on a GC/MS to determine molecular percent 18O-enrichment. Rates of glycolate synthesis were determined from 18O-labeling kinetics of the intermediates, derived rate equations, and nonlinear regression techniques. Glycolate synthesis in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.), a C3 plant, and maize (Zea mays L.), a C4 plant, was stimulated by high O2 concentrations and inhibited by high CO2 concentrations. The synthesis rates were 7.3, 2.1, and 0.7 micromoles per square decimeter per minute under a 21% O2 and 0.035% CO2 atmosphere for leaf tissue of wheat, maize seedlings, and 3-month-old maize, respectively. Photorespiratory CO2 evolution rates were estimated to be 27, 6, and 2%, respectively, of net photosynthesis for the three groups of plants under the above atmosphere. The results from maize tissue support the hypothesis that C4 plants photorespire, albeit at a reduced rate in comparison to C3 plants, and that the CO2/O2 ratio in the bundle sheath of maize is higher in mature tissue than in seedling tissue. The pool size of the three photorespiratory intermediates remained constant and were unaffected by changes in either CO2 or O2 concentrations throughout the 10-minute labeling period. This suggests that photorespiratory metabolism is regulated by other mechanism besides phosphoglycolate synthesis by ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase, at least under short-term conditions. Other mechanisms could be alternate modes of synthesis of the intermediates, regulation of some of the enzymes of the photorespiratory pathway, or regulation of carbon flow between organelles involved in photorespiration. The glycolate pool became nearly 100% 18O-labeled under an atmosphere of 40% O2. This pool failed to become 100% 18O-enriched under lower O2 concentrations.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Both Scenedesmus and Chlorella excreted comparable quantities of glycolate. Glycolate formation was dependent upon light and oxygen, but occured in the absence of added CO2 or NaHCO3 for net photosynthesis. In an environment of 3000 ft. c. light and an atmosphere of oxygen, about 35 g glycolate were excreted per hour per milliliter 1% (v/v) algae without NaHCO3 or CO2. Upon addition of NaHCO3 the rate increased to about 55 g. Glycolate formation in the light in the absence of CO2 may result from photometabolism of algal polysaccharides.Glycolate excretion by Scenedesmus occurred at all pH values between 6.5 and 9.5 and was not related to utilization of bicarbonate. Scenedesmus obliquus excreted glycolate when existing in plates of four or eight cells, but not when present as small individual cells.At pH 9 14C fixation by Scenedesmus was faster than fixation by Chlorella. There was no significant difference in products of 14C fixation formed by Scenedesmus at pH values between 6.5 and 9.5.For unknown reasons -hydroxy-2-pyridinemethanesulfonate stimulated CO2 fixation by Scenedesmus by at least 100%. This sulfonate had no effect on glycolate excretion nor upon the distribution of 14C among the products of 14CO2 fixation by Scenedesmus.Supported in part by NSF Grant GB-4154 and published with the approval of the Director of the Michigan Agricultural Experiment Station as journal article No. 3946. The research was initiated during the period when N. E. Tolbert was supported in part by a National Institutes of Health Senior Fellowship at the Biochemisches Institut, Universität, Freiburg/Br., Germany.  相似文献   

11.
Conditions are described whereby suspensions of Chlorella pyrenoidosa and Netrium digitus photosynthetically biosynthesize and excrete glycolate continuously in high yields. Aminooxyacetic acid, an inhibitor of pyridoxal phosphate-linked enzymes, increased the excretion of glycolate approximately 4-fold in 1 hour (8 millimolar) and 20-fold in 4 hours (40 millimolar) in the presence of 0.2% CO2 in air. The amount of glycolate excreted in the presence of aminooxyacetate and an atmosphere of 0.2% CO2 in air equaled or exceeded the amount excreted in 0.2% CO2 in O2 minus aminooxyacetate. CO2 and light were required for glycolate excretion. Aminooxyacetate also stimulated photosynthetic glycolate excretion in an atmosphere of 0.2% CO2 in nitrogen or helium, although the stimulation was not as great as when air or O2 was present.

The excreted glycolate was converted to H2 and CO2 by the combined action of glycolic oxidase and the formic hydrogenlyase complex found in Escherichia coli in total conversion yields of 80%.

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12.
Aminooxyacetate (1 millimolar) did not inhibit photosynthetic 14CO2 fixation by Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Dangeard, (−) strain (N.90) but greatly stimulated the biosynthesis and excretion of glycolate. Similar results were obtained from cells grown with 5% CO2 or low CO2 (air). After 2 minutes with air-grown cells, [14C]glycolate increased from 0.3% of the total 14C fixed by the control to 11.7% in the presence of aminooxyacetate and after 10 minutes from 3.8% to 41.1%. Ammonium nitrate (0.2 millimolar) in the media blocked the aminooxyacetate stimulation of glycolate excretion. Chromatographic analyses of the labeled products in the cells and supernatant media indicated that aminooxyacetate also completely inhibited the labeling of alanine while some pyruvate accumulated and was excreted. A high percentage (35%) of initial 14CO2 fixation was into C4 acids. Initial products of 14CO2 fixation included phosphate esters as well as malate, aspartate, and glutamate in treated or untreated cells. Lactate was also a major early product of photosynthesis, and its labeling was reduced by aminooxyacetate. Inasmuch as lactate was not excreted, glycolate excretion seemed to be specific. When photosynthesis was inhibited by 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea, labeled organic and amino acids but not phosphate esters were lost from the cells. Aminooxyacetate did not inhibit the enzymes associated with glycolate synthesis from ribulose bisphosphate.  相似文献   

13.
Cyclopropane carboxylic acid (CCA) at 1 to 5 millimolar, unlike related cyclopropane ring analogs of 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC) which were virtually ineffective, inhibited C2H4 production, and this inhibition was nullified by ACC. Inhibition by CCA is not competitive with ACC since there is a decline, rather than an increase, in native endogenous ACC in the presence of CCA. Similarly, short-chain organic acids from acetic to butyric acid and α-aminoisobutyric acid inhibited C2H4 production at 1 to 5 millimolar and lowered endogenous ACC levels. These inhibitions, like that of CCA, were overcome with ACC. Inhibitors of electron transfer and oxidative phosphorylation effectively inhibited ACC conversion to C2H4 in pea and apple tissues. The most potent inhibitors were 2,4-dinitrophenol (DNP) and carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP) which virtually eliminated ACC-stimulated C2H4 production in both tissues. Still other inhibitors of the conversion of ACC to C2H4 were putative free radical scavengers which reduced chemiluminescence in the free radical-activated luminol reaction. These inhibitor studies suggest the involvement of a free radical in the reaction sequence which converts ACC to C2H4. Additionally, the potent inhibition of this reaction by uncouplers of oxidative phosphorylation (DNP and CCCP) suggest the involvement of ATP or the necessity for an intact membrane for C2H4 production from ACC. In the latter case, CCCP may be acting as a proton ionophore to destroy the membrane integrity necessary for C2H4 production.  相似文献   

14.
When glycolate was metabolized in peroxisomes isolated from leaves of spinach beet (Beta vulgaris L., var. vulgaris) formate was produced. Although the reaction mixture contained glutamate to facilitate conversion of glycolate to glycine, the rate at which H2O2 became “available” during the oxidation of [1-14C]glycolate was sufficient to account for the breakdown of the intermediate [1-14C]glyoxylate to formate (C1 unit) and 14CO2. Under aerobic conditions formate production closely paralleled 14CO2 release from [1-14C]glycolate which was optimal between pH 8.0 and pH 9.0 and was increased 3-fold when the temperature was raised from 25 to 35 C, or when the rate of H2O2 production was increased artificially by addition of an active preparation of fungal glucose oxidase.  相似文献   

15.
Oliver DJ 《Plant physiology》1979,64(6):1048-1052
Isolated soybean leaf mesophyll cells decarboxylated exogenously added [1-14C]glycolate and [1-14C]glycine in the dark. The rate of CO2 release from glycine was inhibited over 90% by isonicotinic acid hydrazide and about 80% by KCN, two inhibitors of the glycine to serine plus CO2 reaction. The release of CO2 from glycolate was inhibited by less than 50% under the same conditions. This indicates that about 50% of the CO2 released from glycolate occurred at a site other than the glycine to serine reaction. The sensitivity of this alternative site of CO2 release to an inhibitor of glycolate oxidase (methyl-2-hydroxy-3-butynoate) but not an inhibitor of the glutamate:glyoxylate aminotransferase (2,3-epoxypropionate) indicates that this alternative (isonicotinic acid hydrazide insensitive) site of CO2 release involved glyoxylate. Catalase inhibited this CO2 release. Under the conditions used it is suggested that about half of the CO2 released from glycolate occurred at the conversion of glycine to serine plus CO2 while the remaining half of the CO2 loss resulted from the direct oxidation of glyoxylate by H2O2.  相似文献   

16.
Bundle sheath strands capable of assimilating up to 68 μmoles CO2 per mg chlorophyll per hr in the dark have been isolated from fully expanded leaves of Zea mays L. This dark CO2-fixing system is dependent on exogenous ribose-5-phosphate, ADP or ATP, and Mg2+ for maximum activity. The principal product of dark fixation in this system is 3-phosphoglycerate, indicating that the CO2-fixing reaction is mediated by ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.39). The rate of dark CO2 uptake in the strands in the presence of saturating levels of ribose-5-phosphate plus ADP is inhibited by oxygen. The inhibitory effect of oxygen is rapidly and completely reversible, and is relieved by increased levels of CO2. Glycolate is synthesized in this dark system in the presence of [U-14C]ribose-5-phosphate, ADP, oxygen, and an inhibitor of glycolate oxidase (EC 1.1.3.1). Glycolate formation is completely abolished by heating the strands, and the rate of glycolate synthesis is markedly reduced by either lowering the oxygen tension or increasing the level of CO2.These results, obtained with intact cells in the absence of light, indicate that the direct inhibitory effect of oxygen on photosynthesis is associated with photosynthetic carbon metabolism, probably at the level of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase, and not with photophosphorylation or photosynthetic electron transport. Furthermore, the findings indicate that the synthesis of glycolate from exogenous substrate can readily occur in the absence of photosynthetic electron transport, an observation consistent with the ribulose-1, 5-bisphosphate “oxygenase” scheme for glycolate formation during photosynthesis.  相似文献   

17.
The effects of long-term and transient exposure to elevatedCO2 concentrations on photosynthetic gas exchange and ethylenerelease by tomato leaves were investigated. The net CO2 assimilationrate was enhanced when leaf tissue grown at ambient (35 Pa CO2)levels was assayed at 100 Pa CO2. Leaf tissue grown at high(130 Pa) CO2 exhibited a lower net CO2 assimilation rate athigh CO2 levels than leaf tissue grown at ambient (35 Pa) CO2.This decrease in CO2 exchange rate in response to growth athigh CO2 is typical of C3 species. Rates of endogenous and 1-aminocyclopropane-l-carboxylicacid (ACC)-stimulated ethylene release from leaf tissue wereenhanced by exposure to elevated CO2 levels whether the leaftissue had been grown at ambient or enriched CO2 levels. Thedata demonstrate that CO2 enhanced C2H4 release from leaf tissuein response to both short-term perturbations in CO2 concentrationand long-term growth and development under high CO2. Prolongedgrowth at elevated CO2 concentrations induced a higher endogenousrate of C2H4 release relative to that of leaf tissue grown atlower CO2 levels. Leaf tissue from all leaf positions of plantsgrown at high CO2 consistently evolved more C2H4 than correspondingtissue from ambient-grown plants when assayed under standardizedconditions. Endogenous (ACC) tissue contents and rates of ACC-stimulatedethylene release were also higher at all leaf positions in CO2-enrichedtissue. Thus the higher rates appeared to be due to both higherendogenous precursor (ACC) levels in the tissue and greaterACC to C2H4 conversion capacity. Growth at elevated CO2 levelsresulted in a persistent increase in the rate of endogenousC2H4 release in leaf tissue. The capacity for increased ethylenerelease in response to CO2 did not decline after prolonged growthat high CO2. Key words: CO2enrichment, ethylene, leaves, tomato  相似文献   

18.
Bergman B 《Plant physiology》1986,80(3):698-701
Addition of millimolar concentrations of glyoxylate to nitrogen-fixing cultures of Anabaena cylindrica, grown aerobically in the light, caused the following effects: an increase in the number of glycogen granules and in the excretion of carbohydrates; a decreased phycocyanin concentration, but an increase in the chlorophyll a to phycocyanin ratio. Also, an enhancement in the carbon to nitrogen ratio was noted, but this was restored if NH4+ was added simultaneously. The most pronounced effect of glyoxylate addition was a 20-fold increase in the glycine pool. The effect of glyoxylate on N2 fixation (acetylene reduction) was enhanced at high light intensities, but it did not affect the in vitro ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase activity. However, addition of millimolar concentrations of glycolate did not cause changes in nitrogenase activity, CO2 fixation, and NH3 release comparable to those caused by glyoxylate. The primary mechanism of action of glyoxylate appears to be within the glycolate pathway of the vegetative cells and metabolically downstream from glycolate.  相似文献   

19.
C. K. M. Rathnam 《Planta》1979,145(1):13-23
The potential for glycolate and glycine metabolism and the mechanism of refixation of photorespiratory CO2 in leaves of C4 plants were studied by parallel inhibitor experiments with thin leaf slices, different leaf cell types and isolated mitochondria of C3 and C4 Panicum species. CO2 evolution by leaf slices of P. bisulcatum, a C3 species, fed glycolate or glycine was light-independent and O2-sensitive. The C4 P. maximum and P. miliaceum leaf slices fed glycolate or glycine evolved CO2 in the dark but not in the light. In C4 species, dark CO2 evolution was abolished by the addition of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP)4. The addition of maleate, a PEP carboxylase inhibitor, resulted in photorespiratory CO2 efflux by C4 leaf slices in the light also. However, PEP and maleate had no effect on either glycolate-dependent O2 uptake by the C4 leaf slices or on glycolate and glycine metabolism in C3 leaf slices. The rate of photorespiratory CO2 evolution in the C3 Panicum species was 3 times higher than that observed with the C4 species. The ratio of glycolate-dependent CO2 evolution to O2 uptake in both groups was 1:2. Isolated C4 mesophyll protoplasts or their mitochondria did not metabolize glycolate or glycine. However, both C3 mesophyll protoplasts and C4 bundle sheath strands readily metabolized glycolate and glycine in a light-independent, O2-sensitive manner, and the addition of PEP or maleate had no effect. C4 bundle sheath- and C3-mitochondria were capable of oxidizing glycine. This oxidation was linked to the mitochondrial electron transport chain, was coupled to three phosphorylation sites and was sensitive to electron transport inhibitors. C4 bundle sheath- and C3-mitochondrial glycine decarboxylation was stimulated by oxaloacetate and NAD had no effect. In marked contrast, mitochondria isolated from C4 mesophyll cells were incapable of oxidizing or decarboxylating added glycine. The results suggest that in leaves of C4 plants bundle sheath cells are the primary site of O2-sensitive photorespiratory CO2 evolution and the PEP carboxylase present in the mesophyll cells has the Potential for efficiently refixing CO2 before it escapes out of the leaf. The relative role of the PEP carboxylase mediated CO2 pump and reassimilation of photorespiratory CO2 are discussed in relation to the apparent lack of photorespiration in leaves of C4 species.Abbreviations BSA bovine serum albumin - Chl chlorophyll - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - Rbu-P 2 ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate - Rib-5-P ribose-5-phosphate - Ru-5-P ribuluse-5-phosphate - FCCP carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone Journal Series Paper, New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station  相似文献   

20.
d-Galactose has been shown to have toxic and growth inhibitory effects in plants. When applied at levels of 50 millimolar to tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv Xanthi) leaf discs galactose caused a rapid increase in ethylene production during the first 2 days of incubation, followed by a rapid return to the basal level on the third day. This pattern of galactose-stimulated ethylene production was accompanied by increased formation of 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC), which accumulated without being metabolized to ethylene or to the ACC-conjugate. The inhibitory effect of galactose (50 millimolar) on the conversion of ACC of ethylene was relieved partially by d-glucose or sucrose (50 millimolar), and completely by CO2 (10%), which were shown to enhance this conversion by themselves. Consequently, application of galactose plus any one of these compounds increased ethylene production and decreased free ACC levels. The data suggest that galactose toxicity may result in both an increased ethylene production as well as in accumulation of free ACC in aged discs. The increased ethylene production rates and ACC levels may, in turn, play a role in the development of symptoms associated with galactose toxicity.  相似文献   

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