首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
A simple model based on HCO3 transport has been developed to relate photosynthesis and inorganic carbon fluxes for the marine cyanobacterium, Synechococcus sp. Nägeli (strain RRIMP N1). Predicted relationships between inorganic carbon transport, CO2 fixation, internal carbonic anhydrase activity, and leakage of CO2 out of the cell, allow comparisons to be made with experimentally obtained data. Measurements of inorganic carbon fluxes and internal inorganic carbon pool sizes in these cells were made by monitoring time-courses of CO2 changes (using a mass spectrometer) during light/dark transients. At just saturating CO2 conditions, total inorganic carbon transport did not exceed net CO2 fixation by more than 30%. This indicates CO2 leakage similar to that estimated for C4 plants.

For this leakage rate, the model predicts the cell would need a conductance to CO2 of around 10−5 centimeters per second. This is similar to estimates made for the same cells using inorganic carbon pool sizes and CO2 efflux measurements. The model predicts that carbonic anhydrase is necessary internally to allow a sufficiently fast rate of CO2 production to prevent a large accumulation of HCO3. Intact cells show light stimulated carbonic anhydrase activity when assayed using 18O-labeled CO2 techniques. This is also supported by low but detectable levels of carbonic anhydrase activity in cell extracts, sufficient to meet the requirements of the model.

  相似文献   

2.
The aim of this work concerned the study of the differences in the carbonic anhydrase activity and localization between plant species, the photosynthesis of which is carried out according to the C3 and C4 pathways respectively. The measurement of enzymatic activity was made with a titrimetric evaluation of the rate of the reaction CO2+ H2O ? H++ HCO?3. The C3 plant species showed higher activities than the C4 species. The localization of carbonic anhydrase was carried out with a histochemical method. The carbonic anhydrase appeared in the chloroplasts both in the mesophyll and the bundle sheath without any difference between C3 and C4 plants.  相似文献   

3.
Burnell JN  Hatch MD 《Plant physiology》1988,86(4):1252-1256
Bundle sheath cells from leaves of a variety of C4 species contained little or no carbonic anhydrase activity. The proportion of total leaf carbonic anhydrase in extracts of bundle sheath cells closely reflected the apparent mesophyll cell contamination of bundle sheath cell extracts as measured by the proportion of the mesophyll cell marker enzymes phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase and pyruvate,Pi dikinase. Values of about 1% or less of the total leaf activity were obtained for all three enzymes. The recorded bundle sheath carbonic anhydrase activity was compared with a calculated upper limit of carbonic anhydrase activity that would still permit efficient functioning of the C4 pathway; that is, a carbonic anhydrase level allowing a sufficiently high steady state [CO2] to suppress photorespiration. Even before correcting for mesophyll cell contamination the activity in bundle sheath cell extracts was substantially less than the calculated upper limit of carbonic anhydrase activity consistent with effective C4 function. The results accord with the notion that a deficiency of carbonic anhydrase in bundle sheath cells is vital for the efficient operation of the C4 pathway.  相似文献   

4.
By measuring 18O exchange from doubly labeled CO2 (13C18O18O), intracellular carbonic anhydrase activity was studied with protoplasts and chloroplasts isolated from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii grown either on air (low inorganic carbon [Ci]) or air enriched with 5% CO2 (high Ci). Intact low Ci protoplasts had a 10-fold higher carbonic anhydrase activity than did high Ci protoplasts. Application of dextran-bound inhibitor and quaternary ammonium sulfanilamide, both known as membrane impermeable inhibitors of carbonic anhydrase, had no influence on the catalysis of 18O exchange, indicating that cross-contamination with extracellular carbonic anhydrase was not responsible for the observed activity. This intracellular in vivo activity from protoplasts was inhibited by acetazolamide and ethoxyzolamide. Intracellular carbonic anhydrase activity was partly associated with intact chloroplasts isolated from high and low Ci cells, and the latter had a sixfold greater rate of catalysis. The presence of dextran-bound inhibitor had no effect on chloroplast-associated carbonic anhydrase, whereas 150 micromolar ethoxyzolamide caused a 61 to 67% inhibition of activity. These results indicate that chloroplastic carbonic anhydrase was located within the plastid and that it was relatively insensitive to ethoxyzolamide. Carbonic anhydrase activity in crude homogenates of protoplasts and chloroplasts was about six times higher in the low Ci than in high Ci preparations. Further separation into soluble and insoluble fractions together with inhibitor studies revealed that there are at least two different forms of intracellular carbonic anhydrase. One enzyme, which was rather insoluble and relatively insensitive to ethoxyzolamide, is likely an intrachloroplastic carbonic anhydrase. The second carbonic anhydrase, which was soluble and sensitive to ethoxyzolamide, is most probably located in an extrachloroplastic compartment.  相似文献   

5.
Carbonic anhydrase activity of intactCommelina communis L. leaves was measured using mass spectrometry, by following the18O-exchange kinetics between18O-enriched carbon dioxide and water. A gas-diffusion model (Gerster, 1971, Planta97, 155–172) was used to interpret the18O-exchange kinetics and to determine two constants, one (k) related to the hydration of CO2 and the other (ke), related to the diffusion of CO2. Both constants were determined inCommelina communis L. leaves after stripping the lower epidermis to remove any stomatal influence. The hydration constant (k) was 17200 +2200 ·min–1 (mean±SD, 12 experiments), i.e., about 8 600 times the uncatalyzed hydration of CO2 in pure water, and was specifically inhibited by ethoxyzolamide, a powerful inhibitor of carbonic anhydrases, half-inhibition occurring around 10–5 Methoxyzolamide. The diffusion constant (ke) was 1.18±0.28·min–1 (mean±SD, 12 experiments) and was only slightly inhibited (about 20%) by ethoxyzolamide. Carbonic anhydrase activity of stripped leaves was not affected by the leaf water status (up to 50% relative water deficits), was strongly inhibited by monovalent anions such as Cl or NO 3 , and decreased by about 50% when the photon flux density during growth was increased from 100 to 500 mol photons·m–2·s–1. By studying the effect of ethoxyzolamide (10–4 M) on photosynthetic O2 exchange, measured using18O2 and mass spectrometry, we found that inhibition of carbonic anhydrase activity by 92–95% had little effect on the response curves of net O2 evolution to increased CO2 concentrations. Ethoxyzolamide had no effect on the photosynthetic electron-transport rate, measured as gross O2 photosynthesis at high CO2 concentration (>350 l·–1), but was found to increase both gross O2 photosynthesis and O2 uptake at lower CO2 levels. The chloroplastic CO2 concentration calculated from O2-exchange data was not significantly modified by ethoxyzolamide. We conclude from these results that, under normal conditions of photosynthesis, most of the carbonic anhydrase activity is not involved in CO2 assimilation. Measurement of carbonic anhydrase activity using18O-isotope exchange therefore provides a suitable model to study the in-vivo regulation of this chloroplastic enzyme in plants submitted to various environmental conditions.Abbreviations CA carbonic anhydrase - Ccc chloroplastic CO2 concentration - Ce external CO2 concentration - EZA ethoxyzolamide - k CO2 hydration rate constant - ke CO2 diffusion rate constan - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density - Rubisco ribulose-1,5 bisphosphate carboxylase oxygenase - RWD relative water deficit The authors wish to thank P. Carrier for technical assistance with mass-spectrometric experiments and Dr. P. Thibault for helpful suggestions and comments. Dr. A. Vavasseur is gratefully acknowledged for supplyingCommelima communis. cultures. P.C., P.T. and A.V. are all from the CEA, Département de Physiologie Végétale et Ecosystèmes, Cadarache, France.  相似文献   

6.
Two green macroalgae, Codium decorticatum and Udotea flabellum, differ photosynthetically. Codium had high O2-sensitive, and Udotea low O2-insensitive, CO2 compensation points; Codium showed a Warburg effect at seawater dissolved inorganic carbon levels and had photorespiratory CO2 release, whereas Udotea did not. Seawater dissolved inorganic carbon levels did not saturate photosynthesis. For Codium, but not Udotea, the Warburg effect was increased by ethoxyzolamide, a carbonic anhydrase inhibitor, at high but not low pH. Isolated chloroplasts from both macroalgae showed a Warburg effect that was ethoxyzolamide-insensitive. In both macroalgae, chloroplastic and extrachloroplastic carbonic anhydrase activity was present. P-enolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK) carboxylating activity in Udotea extracts was equivalent to that of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase, and enzyme activities for C4 acid metabolism and P-enolpyruvate regeneration were sufficient to operate a limited C4-like system. In Udotea, malate and aspartate were early-labeled photosynthetic products that turned over within 60 seconds. Photorespiratory compounds were much less labeled in Udotea. Low dark fixation rates ruled out Crassulacean acid metabolism. A limited C4-like system, based on PEPCK, is hypothesized to be the mechanism reducing photorespiration in Udotea. Codium showed no evidence of photosynthetic C4 acid metabolism. Marine macroalgae, like terrestrial angiosperms, seem to have diverse photosynthetic modes.  相似文献   

7.
The activity of adenosine 5′ triphosphate sulfurylase was determined in crabgrass mesophyll cells, bundle sheath strands, and whole leaf extracts. The enzyme was assayed by following molybdate-dependent pyrophosphate release from ATP, 35SO42− incorporation into adenosine 5′ phosphosulfate, and ATP synthesis dependent upon adenosine 5′ phosphosulfate and inorganic pyrophosphate. With all assays, greater than 90% of the activity was found in extracts from bundle sheath strands. The activities in whole leaf extracts were consistently intermediate between the activities of mesophyll and bundle sheath extracts and extract-mixing experiments gave no indication of enzyme activation or inhibition in vitro. Whole leaf activities were several hundred-fold less than concurrent measurements of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase activities, which is interpreted as being consistent with the relative amounts of elemental carbon and sulfur found in higher plants. A hypothesis is presented for the intercellular compartmentation of sulfur assimilation in relationship to NO3 and CO2 assimilation in leaves of C4 plants.  相似文献   

8.
Active human carbonic anhydrase II (HCAII) protein was expressed in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus PCC7942 by means of transformation with the bidirectional expression vector, pCA. This expression was driven by the bacterial Tac promoter and was regulated by the IacIQ repressor protein, which was expressed from the same plasmid. Expression levels reached values of around 0.3% of total cell protein and this protein appeared to be entirely soluble in nature and located within the cytosol of the cell. The expression of this protein has dramatic effects on the photosynthetic physiology of the cell. Induction of expression of carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity in both high dissolved inorganic carbon (Ci) and low Ci grown cells leads the creation of a high Ci requiring phenotype causing: (a) a dramatic increase in the K0.5 (Ci) for photosynthesis, (b) a loss of the ability to accumulate internal Ci, and (c) a decrease in the lag between the initial Ci accumulation following illumination and the efflux of CO2 from the cells. In addition, the effects of the expressed CA can largely be reversed by the carbonic anhydrase inhibitor ethoxyzolamide. As a result of the above findings, it is concluded that the CO2 concentrating mechanism in Synechococcus PCC7942 is largely dependent on (a) the absence of CA activity from the cytosol, and (b) the specific localization of CA activity in the carboxysome. A theoretical model of photosynthesis and Ci accumulation is developed in which the carboxysome plays a central role as both the site of CO2 generation from HCO3 and a resistance barrier to CO2 efflux from the cell. There is good qualitative agreement between this model and the measured physiological effects of expressed cytosolic CA in Synechococcus cells.  相似文献   

9.
Carbonyl sulfide (COS), a substrate for carbonic anhydrase, inhibited alkalization of the medium, O2 evolution, dissolved inorganic carbon accumulation, and photosynthetic CO2 fixation at pH 7 or higher by five species of unicellular green algae that had been air-adapted for forming a CO2-concentrating process. This COS inhibition can be attributed to inhibition of external HCO3 conversion to CO2 and OH by the carbonic anhydrase component of an active CO2 pump. At a low pH of 5 to 6, COS stimulated O2 evolution during photosynthesis by algae with low CO2 in the media without alkalization of the media. This is attributed to some COS hydrolysis by carbonic anhydrase to CO2. Although COS had less effect on HCO3 accumulation at pH 9 by a HCO3 pump in Scenedesmus, COS reduced O2 evolution probably by inhibiting internal carbonic anhydrases. Because COS is hydrolyzed to CO2 and H2S, its inhibition of the CO2 pump activity and photosynthesis is not accurate, when measured by O2 evolution, by NaH14CO3 accumulation, or by 14CO2 fixation.  相似文献   

10.
After a 5-second exposure of illuminated bermudagrass (Cynodon dactylon L. var. `Coastal') leaves to 14CO2, 84% of the incorporated 14C was recovered as aspartate and malate. After transfer from 14CO2-air to 12CO2-air under continuous illumination, total radioactivity decreased in aspartate, increased in 3-phosphoglyceric acid and alanine, and remained relatively constant in malate. Carbon atom 1 of alanine was labeled predominantly, which was interpreted to indicate that alanine was derived from 3-phosphoglyceric acid. The activity of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase, alkaline pyrophosphatase, adenylate kinase, pyruvate-phosphate dikinase, and malic enzyme in bermudagrass leaf extracts was distinctly higher than those in fescue (Festuca arundinacea Schreb.), a reductive pentose phosphate cycle plant. Assays of malic enzyme activity indicated that the decarboxylation of malate was favored. Both malic enzyme and NADP+-specific malic dehydrogenase activity were low in bermudagrass compared to sugarcane (Saccharum officinarum L.). The activities of NAD+-specific malic dehydrogenase and acidic pyrophosphatase in leaf extracts were similar among the plant species examined, irrespective of the predominant cycle of photosynthesis. Ribulose-1, 5-diphosphate carboxylase in C4-dicarboxylic acid cycle plant leaf extracts was about 60%, on a chlorophyll basis, of that in reductive pentose phosphate cycle plants.  相似文献   

11.
A shortage in the zinc supply to spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) drastically reduced carbonic anhydrase levels with little effect on net CO2 uptake per unit leaf area, except with the most severe zinc stresses. Under these conditions, carbonic anhydrase was below 10% and photosynthesis 60 to 70% of the control levels. When photosynthesis was measured at a range of CO2 supply levels, zinc-deficient leaves were less efficient at 300 to 350 microliters per liter CO2 and above, but the same as controls at lower CO2 levels. This suggests that carbonic anhydrase does not affect the diffusion of CO2, and that the effect of zinc deficiency was on the photosynthetic process itself. Our evidence does not support the hypothesis that carbonic anhydrase has some role in facilitating the supply of CO2 to the sites of carboxylation within the chloroplast.  相似文献   

12.
The role of external carbonic anhydrase in inorganic carbon acquisition and photosynthesis by Chlamydomonas reinhardii at alkaline pH (8.0) was studied. Acetazolamide (50 micromolar) completely inhibited external carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity as determined from isotopic disequilibrium experiments. Under these conditions, photosynthetic rates at low dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) were far greater than could be maintained by CO2 supplied from the spontaneous dehydration of HCO3 thereby showing that C. reinhardii has the ability to utilize exogenous HCO3. Acetazolamide increased the concentration of DIC required to half-saturate photosynthesis from 38 to 80 micromolar, while it did not affect the maximum photosynthetic rate. External CA activity was also removed from the cell-wall-less mutant (CW-15) by washing. This had no effect on the photosynthetic kinetics of the algae while the addition of acetazolamide to washed cells (CW-15) increased the K½DIC from 38 to 80 micromolar. Acetazolamide also caused a buildup of the inorganic carbon pool upon NaHCO3 addition, indicating that this compound partially inhibited internal CA activity. The effects of acetazolamide on the photosynthetic kinetics of C. reinhardii are likely due to the inhibition of internal rather than a consequence of the inhibition of external CA. Further analysis of the isotopic disequilibrium experiments at saturating concentration of DIC provided evidence consistent with active CO2 transport by C. reinhardii. The observation that C. reinhardii has the ability to take up both CO2 and bicarbonate throws into question the role of external CA in the accumulation of DIC in this alga.  相似文献   

13.
A theoretical model of the composition of the inorganic carbon pool generated in C4 leaves during steady-state photosynthesis was derived. This model gives the concentrations of CO2 and O2 in the bundle sheath cells for any given net photosynthesis rate and inorganic carbon pool size. The model predicts a bundle sheath CO2 concentration of 70 micromolar during steady state photosynthesis in a typical C4 plant, and that about 13% of the inorganic carbon generated in bundle sheath cells would leak back to the mesophyll cells, predominantly as CO2. Under these circumstances the flux of carbon through the C4 acid cycle would have to exceed the net rate of CO2 assimilation by 15.5%. With the calculated O2 concentration of 0.44 millimolar, the potential photorespiratory CO2 loss in bundle sheath cells would be about 3% of CO2 assimilation. Among the factors having a critical influence on the above values are the permeability of bundle sheath chloroplasts to HCO3, the activity of carbonic anhydrase within these chloroplasts, the assumed stromal volume, and the permeability coefficients for CO2 and O2 diffusion across the interface between bundle sheath and mesophyll cells. The model suggests that as the net photosynthesis rate changes in C4 plants, the level and distribution of the components of the inorganic carbon pool change in such a way that C4 acid overcycling is maintained in an approximately constant ratio with respect to the net photosynthesis rate.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
Young bean plants (Phaseolus vulgaris L. cv Seafarer) grew faster in air enriched with CO2 (1200 microliters per liter) than in ambient CO2 (330 microliters per liter). However, by 7 days when increases in overall growth (dry weight, leaf area) were visible, there was a significant decline (about 25%) in the leaf mineral content (N, P, K, Ca, Mg) and a drop in the activity of two enzymes of carbon fixation, carbonic anhydrase and ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) carboxylase under high CO2. Although the activity of neither enzyme was altered in young, expanding leaves during the acclimation period, in mature leaves the activity of carbonic anhydrase was reduced 95% compared with a decline of 50% in ambient CO2. The drop in RuBP carboxylase was less extreme with 40% of the initial activity retained in the high CO2 compared with 50% in the ambient atmosphere. While CO2 enrichment might alter the flow of carbon into the glycolate pathway by modifying the activities of carbonic anhydrase or RuBP carboxylase, there is no early change in the ability of photosynthetic tissue to oxidize glycolate to CO2.  相似文献   

16.
Jenkins CL 《Plant physiology》1989,89(4):1231-1237
The effect of 3,3-dichloro-2-(dihydroxyphosphinoylmethyl)-propenoate (DCDP), an analog of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP), on PEP carboxylase activity in crude leaf extracts and on photosynthesis of excised leaves was examined. DCDP is an effective inhibitor of PEP carboxylase from Zea mays or Panicum miliaceum; 50% inhibition was obtained at 70 or 350 micromolar, respectively, in the presence of 1 millimolar PEP and 1 millimolar HCO3. When fed to leaf sections via the transpiration stream, DCDP at 1 millimolar strongly inhibited photosynthesis in C4 species (79-98% inhibition for a range of seven C4 species), but only moderately in C3 species (12-46% for four C3 species), suggesting different mechanisms of inhibition for each photosynthetic type. The response of P. miliaceum (C4) net photosynthesis to intercellular pCO2 showed that carboxylation efficiency, as well as the CO2 saturated rate, are lowered in the presence of DCDP and supported the view that carboxylation efficiency in C4 species is directly related to PEP carboxylase activity. A fivefold increase in intercellular pCO2 over that occurring in P. miliaceum under normal photosynthesis conditions only increased net photosynthesis rate in the presence of 1 millimolar DCDP from zero to about 5% of the maximal uninhibited rate. Therefore, it seems unlikely that direct fixation of atmospheric CO2 by the bundle sheath cells makes any significant contribution to photosynthetic CO2 assimilation in C4 species. The results support the concept that C4-selective herbicides may be developed based on inhibitors of C4 pathway reactions.  相似文献   

17.
The steady-state kinetic parameters for the hydration of CO2 catalyzed by membrane-bound carbonic anhydrase from the renal brush-border of the dog are compared with the same parameters for water-soluble bovine erythrocyte carbonic anhydrase. For the membrane-bound enzyme, the turnover number kcat is 6.5 × 105 s?1 and the Michaelis constant is 7.5 mm for CO2 hydration at pH 7.4 and 25 °C. The corresponding constants for bovine carbonic anhydrase under these conditions are 6.3 × 105 s?1 and 15 mm (Y. Pocker and D.W. Bjorkquist (1977)Biochemistry16, 5698–5707). The rate constant for the transfer of a proton between carbonic anhydrase and buffer was determined from the dependence of the catalytic rate on the concentration of the buffers imidazole and N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N′-2-ethanesulfonic acid (Hepes); the value of 2 × 108m?1s?1 describes this constant for both forms of carbonic anhydrase at pH 7.4. Furthermore, the pH dependence of the initial velocity of hydration of CO2 in the range of pH 6.5 to 8.0 is identical for the membrane-bound and soluble enzyme at low buffer concentration (1–2 mm imidazole). We conclude that the membrane plays no detectable role in affecting the CO2 hydration activity and that the active site of the renal, membrane-bound carbonic anhydrase is exposed to the aqueous phase.  相似文献   

18.
The p-nitrophenyl phosphatase activity of muscle carbonic anhydrase   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Carbonic anhydrase III from rabbit muscle, a newly discovered major isoenzyme of carbonic anhydrase, has been found to be also a p-nitrophenyl phosphatase, an activity which is not associated with carbonic anhydrases I and II. The p-nitrophenyl phosphatase activity has been shown to chromatograph with the CO2 hydratase activity; both activities are associated with each of its sulfhydryl oxidation subforms; and both activities follow the same pattern of pH stability. This phosphomonoesterase activity of carbonic anhydrase III has an acidic pH optimum (<5.3); its true substrate appears to be the phosphomonoanion with a Km of 2.8 mm. It is competitively inhibited by the typical acid phosphatase inhibitors phosphate (Ki = 1.22 × 10?3M), arsenate (Ki = 1.17 × 10?3M), and molybdate (Ki = 1.34 × 10?7M), with these inhibitors having no effect on the CO2 hydratase or the p-nitrophenyl acetate esterase activities of carbonic anhydrase III. The p-nitrophenyl acetate esterase activity of carbonic anhydrase III, on the other hand, has the sigmoidal pH profile with an inflection at neutral pH, typical of carbonic anhydrases for all of their substrates, and is inhibitable by acetazolamide (a highly specific carbonic anhydrase inhibitor) to the same degree as the CO2 hydratase activity. The acid phosphatase-like activity of carbonic anhydrase III is slightly inhibited by acetazolamide at acidic pH, and inhibited to nearly the same degree at neutral pH. These data are taken to suggest that the phosphatase activity follows a mechanism different from that of the CO2 hydratase and p-nitrophenyl acetate esterase activities and that there is some overlap of the binding sites.  相似文献   

19.
The use of mesophyll protoplast extracts from various C4 species has provided an effective method for studying light-and substrate-dependent formation of oxaloacetate, malate, and asparate at rates equivalent to whole leaf C4 photosynthesis. Conditions regulating the formation of the C4 acids were studied with protoplast extracts from Digitaria sanguinalis, an NADP-malic enzyme C4 species, Eleusineindica, an NAD-malic enzyme C4 species, and Urochloa panicoides, a phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxykinase C4 species. Light-dependent induction of CO2 fixation by the mesophyll extracts of all three species was relatively low without addition of exogenous substrates. Pyruvate, alanine and α-ketoglutarate, or 3-phosphoglycerate induced high rates of CO2 fixation in the mesophyll extracts with oxaloacetate, malate, and aspartate being the primary products. In all three species, it appears that pyruvate, alanine, or 3-phosphoglycerate may serve as effective precursors to the formation of PEP for carboxylation through PEP-carboxylase in C4 mesophyll cells. Induction by pyruvate or alanine and α-ketoglutarate was light-dependent, whereas 3-phosphoglycerate-induced CO2 fixation was not.  相似文献   

20.
Synchronised cells of Dunaliella tertiolecta were used to investigate the expression of the CO2 concentrating mechanism over the cell cycle during growth in either ambient air (low Ci cells) or air enriched with 5% CO2 (high Ci cells). The cultures were analysed for extracellular carbonic anhydrase activity, affinity of photosynthesis for inorganic carbon (Ci) and the ability to accumulate Ci. In high Ci cells, carbonic anhydrase activity changed between 2 ? 4 units mg?1 Chi during the light-dark rhythm showing no clear periodicity. Similarly, the apparent affinity for Ci remained rather constant over the cell cycle. This was judged from the Ci concentrations required for half maximum rate of photosynthesis (K1/2(Ci)) of 72 ? 80μM. In the same cells the accumulation ratio of internal Ci versus external Ci ranged between 5 and 9.5 without a clear rhythm. In contrast, these parameters showed distinct periodical changes in synchronised low Ci cells. Carbonic anhydrase activity changed from 10 to 350 units mg?1 Chl with maximum and minimum activities occurring in the middle and at the end of the light period, respectively. The K1/2(Ci) values showed similar periodicity ranging between 13 ? 36μM. In addition the accumulation ratio increased up to 30 in the middle of illumination and decreased to its lowest level of 12 at the end of the light period. These results indicate the presence of a common step in regulating the induction of the measured parameters and that light is not an absolute requirement for the induction of the CO2 concentrating mechanism in synchronous low CO2 grown cells of Dunaliella tertiolecta.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号