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1.
The effect of CO2 concentration on the rate of photorespiratory ammonium excretion and on glutamine synthetase (GS) and carbonic anhydrase (CA) isoenzymes activities has been studied in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii cw-15 mutant (lacking cell wall) and in the high CO2-requiring double mutant cia-3/cw-15 (lacking cell wall and chloroplastic carbonic anhydrase). In cw-15 cells, both the extracellular (CAext) and chloroplastic (CAchl) CA activities increased after transferring cells from media bubbled with 5% CO2 in air (v/v, high-Ci cells) to 0.03% CO2 (low-Ci cells), whereas in cia-3/cw-15 cells only the CAext was induced after adaptation to low-Ci conditions and the CAchl activity was negligible. During adaptation to low-Ci conditions in the presence of 1 mM of l-methionine-D,L-sulfoximine (MSX), a specific inhibitor of GS activity, both mutant strains excreted photorespiratory ammonium into nitrogen free medium. In addition, the ammonium excretion rate by cw-15 in the presence of MSX was lower in cells grown and kept at 5% CO2 than in high-Ci cells adapted to 0.03% CO2. The double mutant cia-3/cw-15 excreted photorespiratory ammonium at a higher rate than did cw-15. Total GS activity (GS-1 plus GS-2) increased during adaptation to 0.03% CO2 in both strains of C. reinhardtii. However, only the activity GS-2, which is located in the chloroplast, increased during the adaptation to low CO2, whereas the cytosolic GS-1 levels remained similar in high and low-Ci cells. We conclude that: (1) cia-3/cw-15 cells lack chloroplastic CA activity; (2) in C. reinhardtii photorespiratory ammonium is refixed in the chloroplasts through the GS-2/GOGAT cycle; and (3) chloroplastic GS-2 concentration changes in response to the variation of environmental CO2 concentration.  相似文献   

2.
Using mass-spectrometric measurements of 18O exchange from 13C18O2 intracellular carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity was investigated in the unicellular green algae Dunaliella tertiolecta and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii which were either grown on air enriched with 5% CO2 (high-Ci cells) or on air (low-Ci cells). In D. tertiolecta high- and low-Ci cells had detectable levels of internal CA activity when measured under in-vivo conditions and this activity could be split up into three distinct forms. One CA was not associated with the chloroplasts, while two isozymes were found to be located within the plastids. The activities of all intracellular CAs were always about twofold higher in low than in high-Ci cells of D. tertiolecta and the chloroplastic enzymes were completely induced within 4 h of adaptation to air. One of the chloroplastic CAs was found to be soluble the other was insoluble. In addition to the physical differences, MgSO4 in vitro caused a more than twofold stimulation of the soluble activity while the insoluble form of CA remained rather unaffected. In C. reinhardtii, MgSO4 increased the soluble CA activity by 346% and the concentration of MgSO4 required for half-maximum stimulation was between 10 and 15 mM. Again, the insoluble CA activity was not affected by MgSO4. Furthermore, the soluble isoenzyme was considerably more sensitive to ethoxyzolamide, a potent inhibitor of CA, than the insoluble enzyme. The concentration of inhibitor causing 50% inhibition of soluble CA activity was 110 and 85 μM ethoxyzolamide for D. tertiolecta and C. reinhardtii, respectively. From these data we conclude that the two chloroplast-associated CAs are distinct enzymes.  相似文献   

3.
Mass-spectrometric measurements of 16O2 and 18O2 were made to compare the rates of light-dependent O2 evolution and uptake by Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Dang. grown in air (0.035% CO2; low-Ci cells) or CO2-enriched air (5% CO2; high-Ci cells) at pH 5.5 and 8.0. While at pH 5.5, no differences were observed in the isotopic O2-gas exchange of high- and low-Ci cells, at pH 8.0 the rates of true O2 evolution and uptake were considerably higher in low-Ci than in high-Ci cells. The enhanced rates of O2 uptake and evolution by low-Ci cells were completely inducible within 6 h after transferring high-Ci cells to ambient air. At pH 8.0, O2 uptake in the light was inhibited by 2 M 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1 dimethylurea in both types of alga, but this effect was more pronounced in low-Ci than in high-Ci cells.When the cells were grown at pH 5.5 the activities of the superoxide-radical-degrading enzymes, superoxide dismutase, ascorbate peroxidase, monodehydroascorbate reductase, dehydroascorbate reductase and glutathione reductase, were similar regardless of the CO2 concentration provided during growth. At pH 8.0, however, the activities of these enzymes were 4 to 20 times higher in low-Ci than in high-Ci cells. When high-Ci cells were allowed to acclimate to ambient air for 6 h at pH 8.0, the activities of superoxide dismutase, ascorbate peroxidase and monodehydroascorbate dehydrogenase increased to more than 50% of the level observed with low-Ci cells. These results are consistent with an enhanced operation of O2 photoreduction which could provide energy to the inorganic-carbon-concentrating mechanism via pseudo-cyclic photophosphorylation.  相似文献   

4.
The unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii possesses a CO2-concentrating mechanism. In order to measure the CO2 permeability coefficients of the plasma membranes (PMs), carbonic anhydrase (CA) loaded vesicles were isolated from C. reinhardtii grown either in air enriched with 50 mL CO2 · L?1} (high-Ci cells) or in ambient air (350 μL CO2 · L?1}; low-Ci cells). Marker-enzyme measurements indicated less than 1% contamination with thylakoid and mitochondrial membranes, and that more than 90% of the PMs from high and low-Ci cells were orientated right-side-out. The PMs appeared to be sealed as judged from the ability of vesicles to accumulate [14C]acetate along a proton gradient for at least 10 min. Carbonic anhydrase-loaded PMs from high and low-Ci cells of C. reinhardtii were used to measure the exchange of 18O between doubly labelled CO2 (13C18O2) and H2O in stirred suspensions by mass spectrometry. Analysis of the kinetics of the 18O depletion from 13C18O2 in the external medium provides a powerful tool to study CO2 diffusion across the PM to the active site of CA which catalyses 18O exchange only inside the vesicles but not in the external medium (Silverman et al., 1976, J Biol Chem 251: 4428–4435). The activity of CA within loaded PM vesicles was sufficient to speed-up the 18O loss to H2O to 45360–128800 times the uncatalysed rate, depending on the efficiency of CA-loading and PM isolation. From the 18O-depletion kinetics performed at pH 7.3 and 7.8, CO2 permeability coefficients of 0.76 and 1.49·10?3} cm·s?1}, respectively, were calculated for high Ci cells. The corresponding values for low-Ci cells were 1.21 and 1.8·10?3} cm·s?1}. The implications of the similar and rather high CO2 permeability coefficients (low CO2 resistance) in high and low-Ci cells for the COi-concentrating mechanism of C. reinhardtii are discussed.  相似文献   

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

6.
Carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity associated with high- and low-dissolved inorganic carbon (C1) grown cells was examined in whole cells by measuring 18O exchange from doubly labeled CO2 (13C18O18O). Both algal species showed the presence of extracellular (periplasmic) as well as intracellular CA activity, which were both greatly increased in low-C1 cells. The periplasmic CA activity was at least 40-fold higher in lowcompared to high-C1 cells in both C. reinhardtii and S. obliquus. while low-C1 cells of S. obliquus showed the highest activity of internal CA. The CA inhibitor ethoxyzolamide showed a strong inhibition of the C1 uptake process in both C. reinhardtii and S. obliquus as in cyanobacteria. which may indicate that the nature of the primary uptake process is similar in both green algae and cyanobacteria. By using a mass spectrometnc disequilibrium technique it was possible to separate the C1 fluxes of net HCO?3-uptake and net CO2-uptake during steady-state photosynthesis in high- and Sow-C1 grown cells of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (WT. 2137+) and Scenedesmus obliquus (WT. D3). It was found that both high- and low-C1 cells of the two algae can utilize both CO2 and HCO?3 for photosynthesis, although low-C1 cells have a higher affinity for the uptake of both C1 species. Induction at low-C1 causes an increase in the affinity of both species for HCO?3 and CO2; changes in net CO2-uptake were, however, significantly greater.  相似文献   

7.
Synechococcus elongatus strain PCC7942 cells were grown in high or low environmental concentrations of inorganic C (high-Ci, low-Ci) and subjected to a light shift from 50 µmol m–2 s–1 to 500 µmol m–2 s–1. We quantified photosynthetic reductant (O2 evolution) and molar cellular contents of phycobilisomes, PSII, PSI, and ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase oxygenase (Rubisco) through the light shift. Upon the increase in light, small initial relative decreases in phycobilisomes per cell resulted from near cessation of phycobilisome synthesis and their dilution into daughter cells. Thus, allocation of reductant to phycobilisome synthesis dropped fivefold from pre- to post-light shift. The decrease in phycobilisome synthesis liberated enough material and reductant to allow a doubling of Rubisco and up to a sixfold increase in PSII complexes per cell. Low-Ci cells had smaller initial phycobilisome pools and upon increased light; their reallocation of reductant from phycobilisome synthesis may have limited the rate and extent of light acclimation, compared to high-Ci cells. Acclimation to increased light involved large reallocations of C, N, and reductant among different components of the photosynthetic apparatus, but total allocation to the apparatus was fairly stable at ca. 50% of cellular N, and drew 25–50% of reductant from photosynthesis.  相似文献   

8.
The studies described indicate that the UV bleached mutant, Euglena gracilis W3BUL does not serve as a suitable cytoplasmic control for the phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase system. Chromatography of wild-type E. gracilis on Sephadex G100 revealed three peaks of activity identified as the chloroplastic, cytoplasmic and mitochondrial enzymes. The chloroplastic activity was greater in log than in stationary phase cells and was the only activity recovered from purified chloroplasts. Cell-free extracts of the achloroplastic mutant, E. gracilis W3BUL, contained wild-type levels of the cytoplasmic and mitochondrial phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetases. However, no chloroplastic synthetase was detected in the mutant extracts. Anomalies in the aminoacylation behavior of the W3BUL system were observed which suggest the possibility of a mutation affecting non-chloroplastic tRNAs in this UV-induced mutant. These anomalies significantly reduce the ability of the E. gracilis W3BUL mutant to serve as a cytoplasmic control in the phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase system.  相似文献   

9.
The intracellular compartmentation of carbonic anhydrase (CA; EC 4.2.1.1), an enzyme that catalyses the reversible hydration of CO2 to bicarbonate, has been investigated in potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) leaves. Although enzyme activity was mainly located in chloroplasts (87% of total cellular activity), significant activity (13%) was also found in the cytosol. The corresponding CA isoforms were purified either from chloroplasts or crude leaf extracts, respectively. The cytosolic isoenzyme has a molecular mass of 255 000 and is composed of eight identical subunits with an estimated M r of 30000. The chloroplastic isoenzyme (M r 220000) is also an octamer composed of two different subunits with M r estimated at 27 000 and 27 500, respectively. The N-terminal amino acid sequences of both chloroplastic CA subunits demonstrated that they were identical except that the M r-27 000 subunit was three amino acids shorter than that of the M r-27 500 subunit. Cytosolic and chloroplastic CA isoenzymes were found to be similarly inhibited by monovalent anions (Cl, I, N 3 - and NO 3 - ) and by sulfonamides (ethoxyzolamide and acetozolamide). Both CA isoforms were found to be dependent on a reducing agent such as cysteine or dithiothreitol in order to retain the catalytic activity, but 2-mercaptoethanol was found to be a potent inhibitor. A polyclonal antibody directed against a synthetic peptide corresponding to the N-terminal amino acid sequence of the chloroplastic CA monomers also recognized the cytosolic CA isoform. This antibody was used for immunocytolocalization experiments which confirmed the intracellular compartmentation of CA: within chloroplasts, CA is restricted to the stroma and appears randomly distributed in the cytosol.Abbreviations BSA bovine serum albumin - CA carbonic anhydrase - PMSF phenylmethylsulphonyl fluoride - BAM benzamidine - DTT dithiothreitol - 2-ME 2-mercaptoethanol - PVDF polyvinylidene difluoride The authors thanks P. Carrier and Dr. B. Dimon for technical assistance with the mass-spectrometry measurements.  相似文献   

10.
A Photorespiratory Mutant of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
A mutant strain of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, designated 18-7F, has been isolated and characterized. 18-7F requires a high CO2 concentration for photoautrophic growth in spite of the apparent induction of a functional CO2 concentrating mechanism in air-adapted cells. In 2% O2 the photosynthetic characteristics of 18-7F and wild type are similar. In 21% O2, photosynthetic O2 evolution is severely inhibited in the mutant by preillumination in limiting CO2, although the apparent photosynthetic affinity for inorganic carbon is similar in preilluminated cells and in cells incubated in the dark prior to O2 evolution measurements. Net CO2 uptake is also inhibited when the cells are exposed to air (21% O2, 0.035% CO2, balance N2) for longer than a few minutes. [14C]Phosphoglycolate accumulates within 5 minutes of photosynthetic 14CO2 fixation in cells of 18-7F. Phosphoglycolate does not accumulate in wild type. Phosphoglycolate phosphatase activity in extracts from air-adapted cells of 18-7F is 10 to 20% of that in wild-type Chlamydomonas. The activity of phosphoglycolate phosphatase in heterozygous diploids is intermediate between that of homozygous mutant and wild-type diploids. It was concluded that the high-CO2 requiring phenotype in 18-7F results from a phosphoglycolate phosphatase deficiency. Genetic analyses indicated that this deficiency results from a single-gene, nuclear mutation. We have named the locus pgp-1.  相似文献   

11.
Activities of photosystems I and II were compared at a saturating irradiance in air- and 5% CO2-adapted and adapting Chlamydomonas segnis at the active phase of photosynthesis during the cell cycle. PSII activity was 200% greater in air- than in 5% CO2-adapted cells, while PSI activity was similar in both types of cells and matched the level of PSII activity in air-adapted cells. As a result, air- and 5% CO2-adapted cells were characterized by low and high PSI/PSII ratios, respectively. In air-adapted cells, the greater PSII activity (rate of O2 evolved) exceeded that of photosynthetic (Ps) O2 evolution, resulting in a Ps/PSII ratio below unity. This was associated with higher levels of catalase activity, lower l -ascorbate content, and higher dehydro-l -ascorbate content than in 5% CO2-adapted cells. During adaptation to air or 5% CO2 for 6 h in light, PSI rather than PSII was sensitive to changes in the concentration of CO2, and the adapting cells acquired the characteristics of air- and 5% CO2-adapted cells as indicated by PSI/PSII, Ps/PSII, catalase activity, l -ascorbate and dehydro-l -ascorbate contents. The results are discussed in the light of changes in the molecular organization of the thylakoid membranes and enhanced non-cyclic electron transport coupled with O2-uptake (Mehler reaction) for the generation of the ATP required for CO2/HCO?3-transport in air-adapted and adapting cells.  相似文献   

12.
The inorganic carbon (Ci) accumulation and the intracellular location of carbonic anhydrase (CA, EC 4.2.1.1) in the halotolerant unicellular alga Dunaliella salina have been investigated. The rate of HCO3 -dependent O2 evolution was determined by growth conditions. Algae grown under high CO2 conditions (5% CO2 in air, v/v; high Ci cells) had a very low affinity for HCO3? at pH 7.0 and 8.2, whereas algae grown under low CO2 conditions (0.03% CO2 in air; low Ci cells) showed a high affinity for HCO3? at both pH values and were sensitive to Dextran-bound sulfonamide (DBS), an inhibitor of extracellular CA. The photosynthetic rate or HCO4? dependent O2 evolution was always higher at pH 7.0 than at pH 8.2. Ethoxyzolamide (EZ), an inhibitor of total (extacellular plus intracellular) CA activity, strongly inhibited photosynthesis at both pH values. During adaptation from high to low CO2 conditions CA activity increased in chloroplasts in a process dependent on the novo protein synthesis. Carbonic anhydrase activity was found in the supernatant and pellet fractions of chloroplast homogenates. The rate of photosynthesis of chloroplasts from low Ci cells was higher at pH 7.0 than at pH 8.2. The alkalinization of the growth medium, which took place only in the presence of Ci, was partially inhibited by DBS and completely by EZ. We suggest that in D. salina CO2 is the general form of Ci transported across the plasma membrane and the chloroplast envelope and that bicarbonate enters the cell mainly, although not entirely, by an ‘indirect’ mechanism after dehydration to CO2.  相似文献   

13.
G. R. Findenegg 《Planta》1977,135(1):33-38
Excretion and absorption of glycolate by young cells of Scenedesmus obliquus (Turp.) Krüger strain D3 grown synchronously with 2% CO2 was compared after no pretreatment with air (CO2-adapted) or after a 2 h adaptation to normal air (0.03% CO2) (air-adapted). At 21% O2, excretion occurred only from CO2-adapted cells at high pH (pH 8.0). Under conditions where no excretion occurred, external glycolate (0.2 mM) was taken up by both air-and CO2-adapted cells at a much faster rate at pH 5 than at pH 8. The uptake was accompanied by an apparent stoichiometric uptake of H+. CO2-adapted algae exhibited high uptake rates that were even higher in the dark than in the light. Air-adapted algae showed high uptake rates in the light but only minimal uptake in the dark. The uptake rate was decreased to about 1/3 with 5% CO2, except with CO2-adapted cells in the light, in which a slight stimulation occurred. Cl- ions inhibited glycolate uptake by air-adapted cells in the light; conversely, light-stimulated Cl- uptake of these cells was inhibited by glycolate. A hypothesis is discussed according to which the internal pH regulates the uptake and release of Cl-, HCO 3 - , and glycolate.Abbreviations DCMU 3-(3,4 dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethyl urea - FCCP carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoro-methoxyphenylhydrazone - HEPES 2-(4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-piperazinyl) ethanesulfonic acid - HPMS -hydroxypyridinemethanesulfonate - MES 2-morpholinoethanesulfonic acid - PCV packed cell volume  相似文献   

14.
Scavenger enzyme activities in subcellular fractions under polyethylene glycol (PEG)-induced water stress in white clover (Trifolium repens L.) were studied. Water stress decreased ascorbic acid (AA) content and catalase (CAT) activity and increased the contents of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS) (measure of lipid peroxidation), and activities of superoxide dismutase (SOD), its various isozymes, ascorbate peroxidase (APOX), and glutathione reductase (GR) in cellular cytosol, chloroplasts, mitochondria, and peroxisomes of Trifolium repens leaves. In both the PEG-treated plants and the control, chloroplastic fractions showed the highest total SOD, APOX, and GR activities, followed by mitochondrial fractions in the case of total SOD and GR activities, whereas cytosolic fractions had the second greatest APOX activity. However, CAT activity was the highest in peroxisomes, followed by the cytosol, mitochondria, and chloroplasts in decreasing order. Although Mn-SOD activity was highest in mitochondrial fractions, residual activity was also observed in cytosolic fractions. Cu/Zn-SOD and Fe-SOD were observed in all subcellular fractions; however, the activities were the highest in chloroplastic fractions for both isoforms. Total Cu/Zn-SOD activity, the sum of activities observed in all fractions, was higher than other SOD isoforms. These results suggest that cytosolic and chloroplastic APOX, chloroplastic and mitochondrial GR, mitochondrial Mn-SOD, cytosolic and chloroplastic Cu/Zn-SOD, and chloroplastic Fe-SOD are the major scavenger enzymes, whereas cellular CAT may play a minor role in scavenging of O2 and H2O2 produced under PEG-induced water stress in Trifolium repens.  相似文献   

15.
16.
The effect of blue and red light on the adaptation to low CO2 conditions was studied in high-CO2 grown cultures of Chlorella Pyrenoidosa (82T) and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii(137+) by measuring O2 exchange under various inorganic carbon (Ci) concentrations. At equal photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD), blue light was more favourable for adaptation in both species, compared to red light. The difference in photosynthetic oxygen evolution between cells adapted to low Ciunder blue and red light was more pronounced when oxygen evolution was measured under low Ci compared to high Ci conditions. The effect of light quality on adaptation remained for several hours. The different effects caused by blue and red light was observed in C. pyrenoidosa over a wide range of PPFD with increasing differences at increasing PPFD. The maximal difference was obtained at a PPFD above 1 500 μmol m?2s?1. We found no difference in the extracellular carbonic anhydrase activity between blue- and red light adapted cells. The light quality effect recorded under Ci-limiting conditions in C. reinhardtii cells adapted to air, was only 37% less when instead of pure blue light red light containing 12.5% of blue light (similar PPFD as blue light) was used during adaptation to low carbon. This indicates that in addition to affecting photosynthesis, blue light affected a sensory system involved in algal adaptation to low Ci conditions. Since the affinity for Ci of C. Pyrenoidosa and C. reinhardtii cells adapted to air under blue light was higher than that of cells adapted under red light, we suggest that induction of some component(s) of the Ci accumulating mechanism is regulated by the light quality.  相似文献   

17.
A total of 24 high CO2-requiring-mutants of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus PCC7942 have been isolated and partially characterized. These chemically induced mutants are able to grow at 1% CO2, on agar media, but are incapable of growth at air levels of CO2. All the mutants were able to accumulate inorganic carbon (Ci) to levels similar to or higher than wild type cells, but were apparently unable to generate intracellular CO2. On the basis of the rate of Ci release following a light (5 minutes) → dark transition two extreme phenotypes (fast and slow release mutants) and a number of `intermediate' mutants (normal release) were identified. Compared to wild-type cells, Type I mutants had the following characteristics: fast Ci release, normal internal Ci pool, normal carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity in crude extracts, reduced internal exchange of 18O from 18O-labeled CO2, 1% CO2 requirement for growth in liquid media, normal affinity of carboxylase for CO2, and long, rod-like carboxysomes. Type II mutants had the following characteristics: slow Ci release, increased internal Ci pool, normal CA activity in crude extracts, normal internal 18O exchange, a 3% CO2 requirement for growth in liquid media, high carboxylase activity, normal affinity of carboxylase for CO2, and normal carboxysome structure but increased in numbers per cell. Both mutant phenotypes appear to have genetic lesions that result in an inability to convert intracellular HCO3 to CO2 inside the carboxysome. The features of the type I mutants are consistent with a scenario where carboxysomal CA has been mistargeted to the cytosol. The characteristics of the type II phenotype appear to be most consistent with a scenario where CA activity is totally missing from the cell except for the fact that cell extracts have normal CA activity. Alternatively the type II mutants may have a lesion in their capacity for H+ import during photosynthesis.  相似文献   

18.
Cyanobacterial cells accumulate substantial amounts of a membrane-associated 42 kilodalton polypeptide during adaptation to low CO2 conditions. The role of this polypeptide in the process of adaptation and in particular in the large increase in the ability to accumulate inorganic carbon (Ci), which accompanies this process, is not yet understood. We have isolated a mutant Synechococcus PCC7942 that does not accumulate the 42 kilodalton polypeptide. The mutant requires a high-CO2 concentration for growth and exhibits a very low apparent photosynthetic affinity for extracellular Ci. The latter might be attributable to the observed defective ability of the mutant to utilize the intracellular Ci pool for photosynthesis. The 42 kilodalton polypeptide does not appear to participate directly in the active transport of Ci, since the difference between the observed capabilities for CO2 and HCO3 uptake of the mutant and the wild type is not sufficient to account for their different growth and photosynthetic performance. Furthermore, high CO2-grown wild-type cells, where we could not detect the 42 kilodalton polypeptide, transported CO2 faster than the mutant. An analysis of the curves relating the rate of accumulation of Ci to the concentration of CO2 or HCO3 supplied, in the presence or absence of carbonic anhydrase, indicated that under the experimental conditions used here, CO2 was the preferred Ci species taken up by Synechococcus.  相似文献   

19.
Molybdenum is required for induction of nitrate reductase and of NAD-linked formate dehydrogenase activities in suspensions of wild type Paracoccus denitrificans; tungsten prevents the development of these enzyme activities. The wild type forms a membrane protein M r150,000 when incubated with tungsten and inducers of nitrate reductase and this is presumed to represent an inactive form of the enzyme. Suspensions of mutant M-1 did not develop nitrate reductase or formate dehydrogenase activities but the membrane protein M r150,000 was formed under all conditions tested, including without inducers and without molybdenum. Analysis of membranes, solubilized with deoxycholate, by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under nondenaturing conditions showed that the mutant protein had similar electrophoretic mobility to the active nitrate reductase formed by the wilde type. Autoradiography of preparations from cells incubated with 55Fe showed that the mutant and wild type proteins contained iron. However, in similar experiments with 99Mo, incorporation of molybdenum into the mutant protein was not detectable.We conclude that mutant M-1 is defective in one or more steps required to process molybdenum for incorporation into molybdoenzymes. This failure affects the normal regulation of nitrate reductase protein with respect to the role of inducers.Non-Standard Abbreviations DOC deoxycholate - PAGE polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate  相似文献   

20.
Changes in activities and levels of superoxide dismutase (SOD, EC 1.15.1.1) isoenzymes were studied during air adaptation of submerged rice (Oryza sativa L.) seedlings. Seeds were germinated for 6 d in the dark under water (submerged), and then for another day in air (air-adapted). For a control, seeds were germinated for 6 d throughout in air (aerobic). Staining for activity of SOD of shoot extracts showed a total of five major distinct forms of SOD: one mitochondrial Mn enzyme (mtSOD) and four CuZn enzymes, one of which was plastidic (plSOD) and the other three cytosolic (cytSOD). Activity of plSOD was much lower in submerged seedlings than in aerobic controls and increased after exposure to air. In contrast, mtSOD activity in submerged seedlings was as high as that found in aerobic controls, and did not increase upon exposure to air. One of the cytSODs showed responses similar to those of plSOD. The activities of another two cytSODs were slightly lower in submerged seedlings than those in aerobic controls, but decreased after 24 h of air adaptation. Western blot analysis revealed that these changes in activities of SODs are due to changes in the levels of their enzyme proteins. We also followed changes in the levels of cytochrome c and ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase (EC 1.6.99.4) as indices of the development of mitochondria and plastids, respectively. Organelle SODs were always present at higher levels than would be expected in view of the development of the electron-transport systems of the corresponding organelles during submergence and the subsequent air-adaptation period.Abbreviations cytSOD cytosolic CuZn-superoxide dismutase - FNR ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase - mtSOD mitochondrial Mn-superoxide dismutase - plSOD plastidic CuZn-superoxide dismutase - SOD superoxide dismutase We gratefully acknowledge Dr. A. Wada, Kyoto University, for the use of a densitometer for this work, and also would like to thank Y. Maki, Kyoto University, for help with the densitometry of the photographs.  相似文献   

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