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1.
We demonstrate for the first time the presence of species exhibiting C3-C4 intermediacy in Heliotropium (sensu lato), a genus with over 100 C3 and 150 C4 species. CO2 compensation points (Gamma) and photosynthetic water-use efficiencies (WUEs) were intermediate between C3 and C4 values in three species of Heliotropium: Heliotropium convolvulaceum (Gamma = 20 micromol CO2 mol(-1) air), Heliotropium racemosum (Gamma = 22 micromol mol(-1)) and Heliotropium greggii (Gamma = 17 micromol mol(-1)). Heliotropium procumbens may also be a weak C3-C4 intermediate based on a slight reduction in Gamma (48.5 micromol CO2 mol(-1)) compared to C3Heliotropium species (52-60 micromol mol(-1)). The intermediate species H. convolvulaceum, H. greggii and H. racemosum exhibited over 50% enhancement of net CO2 assimilation rates at low CO2 levels (200-300 micromol mol(-1)); however, no significant differences in stomatal conductance were observed between the C3 and C3-C4 species. We also assessed the response of Gamma to variation in O2 concentration for these species. Heliotropium convolvulaceum, H. greggii and H. racemosum exhibited similar responses of Gamma to O2 with response slopes that were intermediate between the responses of C3 and C4 species below 210 mmol O2 mol(-1) air. The presence of multiple species displaying C3-C4 intermediate traits indicates that Heliotropium could be a valuable new model for studying the evolutionary transition from C3 to C4 photosynthesis.  相似文献   

2.
In order to elucidate the discrete steps in phospho enolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) evolution concerning K(m)-PEP and malate tolerance a comparison was made between C3, C3-C4 and C4 species of the dicot genus Flaveria. The PEPCs of this genus are encoded by a gene family comprising three classes: ppcA, ppcB and ppcC [J. Hermans and P. Westhoff (1990) Mol Gen Genet 224:459-468, (1992) Mol Gen Genet 234:275-284]. The ppcA of F trinervia (C4) codes for the C4 PEPC isoform but other plants of the genus contain ppcA orthologues too. The C3 plant F. pringlei showed the lowest levels of ppcA PEPC mRNA followed by F. pubescens (C3-C4) while the C4-like plant F. brownii displayed RNA amounts close to the C4 species F. trinervia. In contrast to the similar expression profiles of F. brownii (C4-like) and F. trinervia (C4) the PEPC amino acid sequence of F. brownii was more similar to the C3 and C3-C4 ppcA PEPCs than to the C4 PEPC. Similarly, the C3, C3-C4 and C4-like ppcA PEPCs showed almost identical PEP saturation kinetics when activated by glucose-6-phosphate ( K(m)-PEP: 17-20 microM) while the K(m)-PEP for the C4 PEPC was determined to be 53 microM. However, without activation the ppcA PEPCs of F. pubescens and F. brownii displayed C3-C4 intermediate values. A similar picture was obtained when the malate sensitivities were compared. In the non-activated state the F. trinervia (C4) enzyme was 10 times more tolerant to malate than the F. pringlei counterpart. The ppcA enzymes of F. pubescens (C3-C4) and F. brownii (C4-like) displayed intermediate values. In contrast, the inclusion of 5 mM glucose-6-phosphate in the reaction mixture changed the order totally. Interestingly, the activation rendered the C4 enzyme about 50% less tolerant to malate than the C3 PEPC. The activation had a positive effect on malate tolerance of the F. pubescens (C3-C4) PEPC while the ppcA PEPC of F. brownii (C4-like) was almost unaffected.  相似文献   

3.
Plants using the C(4) pathway of carbon metabolism are marked by greater photosynthetic water and nitrogen-use efficiencies (PWUE and PNUE, respectively) than C(3) species, but it is unclear to what extent this is the case in C(3) -C(4) intermediate species. In this study, we examined the PWUE and PNUE of 14 species of Flaveria Juss. (Asteraceae), including two C(3) , three C(4) and nine C(3) -C(4) species, the latter containing a gradient of C(4) -cycle activities (as determined by initial fixation of (14) C into C-4 acids). We found that PWUE, PNUE, leaf ribulose 1·5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) content and intercellular CO(2) concentration in air (C(i) ) do not change gradually with C(4) -cycle activity. These traits were not significantly different between C(3) species and C(3) -C(4) species with less than 50% C(4) -cycle activity. C(4) -like intermediates with greater than 65% C(4) -cycle activity were not significantly different from plants with fully expressed C(4) photosynthesis. These results indicate that a gradual increase in C(4) -cycle activity has not resulted in a gradual change in PWUE, PNUE, intercellular CO(2) concentration and leaf Rubisco content towards C(4) levels in the intermediate species. Rather, these traits arose in a stepwise manner during the evolutionary transition to the C(4) -like intermediates, which are contained in two different clades within Flaveria.  相似文献   

4.
C(4) plants have been reported to have Rubiscos with higher maximum carboxylation rates (kcat(CO(2))) and Michaelis-Menten constants (K(m)) for CO(2) (K(c)) than the enzyme from C(3) species, but variation in other kinetic parameters between the two photosynthetic pathways has not been extensively examined. The CO(2)/O(2) specificity (S(C/O)), kcat(CO(2)), K(c), and the K(m) for O(2) (K(o)) and RuBP (K(m-RuBP)), were measured at 25 degrees C, in Rubisco purified from 16 species of Flaveria (Asteraceae). Our analysis included two C(3) species of Flaveria, four C(4) species, and ten C(3)-C(4) or C(4)-like species, in addition to other C(4) (Zea mays and Amaranthus edulis) and C(3) (Spinacea oleracea and Chenopodium album) plants. The S(C/O) of the C(4) Flaveria species was about 77 mol mol(-1), which was approximately 5% lower than the corresponding value in the C(3) species. For Rubisco from the C(4) Flaverias kcat(CO(2)) and K(c) were 23% and 45% higher, respectively, than for Rubisco from the C(3) plants. Interestingly, it was found that the K(o) for Rubisco from the C(4) species F. bidentis and F. trinervia were similar to the C(3) Flaveria Rubiscos (approximately 650 microM) while the K(o) for Rubisco in the C(4) species F. kochiana, F. australasica, Z. mays, and A. edulis was reduced more than 2-fold. There were no pathway-related differences in K(m-RuBP). In the C(3)-C(4) species kcat(CO(2)) and K(c) were generally similar to the C(3) Rubiscos, but the K(o) values were more variable. The typical negative relationships were observed between S(C/O) and both kcat(CO(2)) and K(c), and a strongly positive relationship was observed between kcat(CO(2)) and Kc. However, the statistical significance of these relationships was influenced by the phylogenetic relatedness of the species.  相似文献   

5.
A well-resolved phylogeny of Flaveria is used to infer evolutionary relationships among species, biogeographical distributions, and C(4) photosynthetic evolution. Data on morphology, life history, and DNA sequences (chloroplastic trnL-F, nuclear ITS and ETS) for 21 of 23 known species were collected. Each data set was analyzed separately and in combination using maximum parsimony and Bayesian analyses. The phylogeny of Flaveria is based on the combined analysis of all data. Our phylogenetic evidence indicates that C(3) Flaveria are all basal to intermediate (C(3)-C(4) and C(4)-like) and fully expressed C(4) Flaveria species. Two strongly supported clades (A and B) are present. Using this phylogeny, we evaluate the current systematics of the genus and suggest the removal and reevaluation of certain taxa. We also infer the center of origin and dispersal of Flaveria species. Multiple origins of photosynthetic pathway intermediacy in Flaveria are recognized. C(3)-C(4) intermediacy has evolved twice in the genus and is found to be evolutionarily intermediate in clade A, but not necessarily in clade B. C(4)-like photosynthesis is also derived once in each clade. In addition, fully expressed C(4) photosynthesis may have evolved up to three times within clade A.  相似文献   

6.
The activity of the enzymes catalyzing the first two steps of sulfate assimilation, ATP sulfurylase and adenosine 5'-phosphosulfate reductase (APR), are confined to bundle sheath cells in several C(4) monocot species. With the aim to analyze the molecular basis of this distribution and to determine whether it was a prerequisite or a consequence of the C(4) photosynthetic mechanism, we compared the intercellular distribution of the activity and the mRNA of APR in C(3), C(3)-C(4), C(4)-like, and C(4) species of the dicot genus Flaveria. Measurements of APR activity, mRNA level, and protein accumulation in six Flaveria species revealed that APR activity, cysteine, and glutathione levels were significantly higher in C(4)-like and C(4) species than in C(3) and C(3)-C(4) species. ATP sulfurylase and APR mRNA were present at comparable levels in both mesophyll and bundle sheath cells of C(4) species Flaveria trinervia. Immunogold electron microscopy demonstrated the presence of APR protein in chloroplasts of both cell types. These findings, taken together with results from the literature, show that the localization of assimilatory sulfate reduction in the bundle sheath cells is not ubiquitous among C(4) plants and therefore is neither a prerequisite nor a consequence of C(4) photosynthesis.  相似文献   

7.
Limited information exists regarding molecular events that occurred during the evolution of C(4) plants from their C(3) ancestors. The enzyme β-carbonic anhydrase (CA; EC 4.2.1.1), which catalyses the reversible hydration of CO(2), is present in multiple forms in C(3) and C(4) plants, and has given insights into the molecular evolution of the C(4) pathway in the genus Flaveria. cDNAs encoding three distinct isoforms of β-CA, CA1-CA3, have been isolated and examined from Flaveria C(3) and C(4) congeners. Sequence data, expression analyses of CA orthologues, and chloroplast import assays with radiolabelled CA precursor proteins from the C(3) species F. pringlei Gandoger and the C(4) species F. bidentis (L.) Kuntze have shown that both contain chloroplastic and cytosolic forms of the enzyme, and the potential roles of these isoforms are discussed. The data also identified CA3 as the cytosolic isoform important in C(4) photosynthesis and indicate that the C(4) CA3 gene evolved as a result of gene duplication and neofunctionalization, which involved mutations in coding and non-coding regions of the ancestral C(3) CA3 gene. Comparisons of the deduced CA3 amino acid sequences from Flaveria C(3), C(4), and photosynthetic intermediate species showed that all the C(3)-C(4) intermediates investigated and F. brownii, a C(4)-like species, have a C(3)-type CA3, while F. vaginata, another C(4)-like species, contains a C(4)-type CA3. These observations correlate with the photosynthetic physiologies of the intermediates, suggesting that the molecular evolution of C(4) photosynthesis in Flaveria may have resulted from a temporally dependent, stepwise modification of protein-encoding genes and their regulatory elements.  相似文献   

8.
Kranz anatomy and C(4) vein pattern are required for C(4) biochemical functioning in C(4) plants; however, the evolutionary timing of anatomical and biochemical adaptations is unknown. From the genus Flaveria, 16 species (C(3), C(4), intermediates [C(3)-C(4), C(4)-like]) were analyzed, novel anatomical and vein pattern characters were analyzed and key anatomical differences among photosynthetic groups were highlighted. A stepwise acquisition of anatomical and vein pattern traits prior to derived biochemistry was outlined on the basis of the phylogeny of Flaveria. Increased vein density represents a potential "precondition" contributing to lower ratios of photosynthetic tissues (mesophyll, bundle sheath) and precedes further anatomical and biochemical modifications observed in derived C(3)-C(4) intermediates. In derived Flaveria species, bundle sheath volume is modified through cell expansion, whereas mesophyll volume is altered through mesophyll cell expansion, reductions in the number of ground tissue layers, and increased vein density. Results demonstrated that key anatomical features of C(4) plants are also required for C(3)-C(4) biochemical intermediacy, and anatomical and biochemical alterations acquired during evolution of intermediacy may predispose a species for evolution of C(4) photosynthesis. C(4)-like species are similar to C(4) species, demonstrating that Kranz anatomy is fully evolved before complete C(4) biochemistry is achieved.  相似文献   

9.
10.
11.
The physiological implications of C(3)-C(4) photosynthesis were investigated using closely related Panicum species exposed to industrial-age climate change. Panicum bisulcatum (C(3)), P. milioides (C(3)-C(4)), and P. coloratum (C(4)) were grown in a glasshouse at three CO(2) concentrations ([CO(2)]: 280, 400, and 650?μl l(-1)) and two air temperatures [ambient (27/19?°C day/night) and ambient + 4?°C] for 12 weeks. Under current ambient [CO(2)] and temperature, the C(3)-C(4) species had higher photosynthetic rates and lower stomatal limitation and electron cost of photosynthesis relative to the C(3) species. These photosynthetic advantages did not improve leaf- or plant-level water (WUE) or nitrogen (NUE) use efficiencies of the C(3)-C(4) relative to the C(3) Panicum species. In contrast, the C(4) species had higher photosynthetic rates and WUE but similar NUE to the C(3) species. Increasing [CO(2)] mainly stimulated photosynthesis of the C(3) and C(3)-C(4) species, while high temperature had no or negative effects on photosynthesis of the Panicum species. Under ambient temperature, increasing [CO(2)] enhanced the biomass of the C(3) species only. Under high temperature, increasing [CO(2)] enhanced the biomass of the C(3) and C(3)-C(4) species to the same extent, indicating increased CO(2) limitation in the C(3)-C(4) intermediate at high temperature. Growth [CO(2)] and temperature had complex interactive effects, but did not alter the ranking of key physiological parameters amongst the Panicum species. In conclusion, the ability of C(3)-C(4) intermediate species partially to recycle photorespired CO(2) did not improve WUE or NUE relative to congeneric C(3) or C(4) species grown under varying [CO(2)] and temperature conditions.  相似文献   

12.
In the present study, we aimed to elucidate how strategies of reactive oxygen species (ROS) regulation and the antioxidant defense system changed during transition from C3 to C4 photosynthesis, by using the model genus Flaveria, which contains species belonging to different steps in C4 evolution. For this reason, four Flaveria species that have different carboxylation mechanisms, Flaveria robusta (C3), Flaveria anomala (C3–C4), Flaveria brownii (C4-like) and Flaveria bidentis (C4), were used. Physiological (growth, relative water content (RWC), osmotic potential), and photosynthetical parameters (stomatal conductance (gs), assimilation rate (A), electron transport rate (ETR)), antioxidant defense enzymes (superoxide dismutase (SOD), catalase (CAT), peroxidase (POX), ascorbate peroxidase (APX), glutathione reductases(GR)) and their isoenzymes, non-enzymatic antioxidant contents (ascorbate, glutathione), NADPH oxidase (NOX) activity, hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) content and lipid peroxidation levels (TBARS) were measured comparatively under polyethylene glycol (PEG 6000) induced osmotic stress. Under non-stressed conditions, there was a correlation only between CAT (decreasing), APX and GR (both increasing) and the type of carboxylation pathways through C3 to C4 in Flaveria species. However, they responded differently to PEG-induced osmotic stress in regards to antioxidant defense. The greatest increase in H2O2 and TBARS content was observed in C3F. robusta, while the least substantial increase was detected in C4-like F. brownii and C4F. bidentis, suggesting that oxidative stress is more effectively countered in C4-like and C4 species. This was achieved by a better induced enzymatic defense in F. bidentis (increased SOD, CAT, POX, and APX activity) and non-enzymatic antioxidants in F. brownii. As a response to PEG-induced oxidative stress, changes in activities of isoenzymes and also isoenzymatic patterns were observed in all Flaveria species, which might be related to ROS produced in different compartments of cells.  相似文献   

13.
Evolution of C4 phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
C4 plants are known to be of polyphyletic origin and to have evolved independently several times during the evolution of angiosperms. This implies that the C4 isoform of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) originated from a nonphotosynthetic PEPC gene that was already present in the C3 ancestral species. To meet the special requirements of the C4 photosynthetic pathway the expression program of the C4 PEPC gene had to be changed to achieve a strong and selective expression in leaf mesophyll cells. In addition, the altered metabolite concentrations around C4 PEPC in the mesophyll cytoplasm necessitated changes in the enzyme's kinetic and regulatory properties. To obtain insight into the evolutionary steps involved in these altered enzyme characteristics, and even the order of these steps, the dicot genus Flaveria (Asteraceae) appears to be the experimental system of choice. Flaveria contains closely related C3, C3-C4, and C4 species that can be ordered by their gradual increase in C4 photosynthetic traits. The C4 PEPC of F. trinervia, which is encoded by the ppcA gene class, possesses typical kinetic and regulatory features of a C4-type PEPC. Its nearest neighbor is the orthologous ppcA gene of the C3 species F. pringlei. This latter gene encodes a typical nonphotosynthetic C3-type PEPC which is believed to be similar to the C3 ancestral PEPC. This pair of orthologous PEPCs has been used to map C4-specific molecular determinants for the kinetic and regulatory characteristics of C4 PEPCs. The most notable finding from these investigations was the identification of a C4 PEPC invariant site-specific mutation from alanine (C3) to serine (C4) at position 774 that was a necessary and late step in the evolution of C3 to C4 PEPC. The C3-C4 intermediate ppcA PEPCs are used to identify the sequence of events leading from a C3- to a C4-type PEPC.  相似文献   

14.
Artificial hybridization studies have been carried out between plants with different photosynthetic types to study the genetic mechanism of photosynthetic types. However, there are only few reports describing the possibility of natural hybridization between plants with different photosynthetic types. A previous cytological and morphological study suggested that a cruciferous allotetraploid species, Diplotaxis muralis (L.) DC. (2n = 42), originated from natural hybridization between D. tenuifolia (L.) DC. (2n = 22) and D. viminea (L.) DC. (2n = 20). These putative parents have recently been reported to be a C (3)-C (4) intermediate and a C (3) species, respectively. If this hybridization occurred, D. muralis should have characteristics intermediate between those of the C (3)-C (4) intermediate and C (3) types. We compared leaf structures and photosynthetic characteristics of the three species. The bundle sheath (BS) cells in D. tenuifolia included many centripetally located chloroplasts and mitochondria, but those of D. viminea had only a few organelles. The BS cells in D. muralis displayed intermediate features between the putative parents. Glycine decarboxylase P protein was confined to the BS mitochondria in D. tenuifolia, but accumulated mainly in the mesophyll mitochondria in D. viminea. In D. muralis, it accumulated in both the BS and the mesophyll mitochondria. Values of CO (2) compensation point and its response to changing light intensity were also intermediate between the putative parents. These data support the theory that D. muralis was created by natural hybridization between species with different photosynthetic types.  相似文献   

15.
Abstract. The photosynthetic responses to temperature in C3, C3-C4 intermediate, and C4 species in the genus Flaveria were examined in an effort to identify whether the reduced photorespiration rates characteristic of C3-C4 intermediate photosynthesis result in adaptive advantages at warm leaf temperatures. Reduced photorespiration rates were reflected in lower CO2 compensation points at all temperatures examined in the C3-C4 intermediate, Flaveria floridana, compared to the C3 species, F. cronquistii. The C3-C4 intermediate, F. floridana, exhibited a C3-like photosynthetic temperature dependence, except for relatively higher photosynthesis rates at warm leaf temperatures compared to the C3 species, F. cronquistii. Using models of C3 and C3-C4 intermediate photosynthesis, it was predicted that by recycling photorespired CO2 in bundle-sheath cells, as occurs in many C3-C4 intermediates, photosynthesis rates at 35°C could be increased by 28%, compared to a C3 plant. Without recycling photorespired CO2, it was calculated that in order to improve photosynthesis rates at 35°C by this amount in C3 plants, (1) intercellular CO2 partial pressures would have to be increased from 25 to 31 Pa, resulting in a 57% decrease in water-use efficiency, or (2) the activity of RuBP carboxylase would have to be increased by 32%, resulting in a 22% decrease in nitrogen-use efficiency. In addition to the recycling of photorespired CO2, leaves of F. floridana appear to effectively concentrate CO2 at the active site of RuBP carboxylase, increasing the apparent carboxylation efficiency per unit of in vitro RuBP carboxylase activity. The CO2-concentrating activity also appears to reduce the temperature sensitivity of the carboxylation efficiency in F. floridana compared to F. cronquistii. The carboxylation efficiency per unit of RuBP carboxylase activity decreased by only 38% in F. floridana, compared to 50% in F. cronquistii, as leaf temperature was raised from 25 to 35°C. The C3-C4 intermediate, F. ramosissima, exhibited a photosynthetic temperature temperature response curve that was more similar to the C4 species, F. trinervia, than the C3 species, F. cronquistii. The C4-like pattern is probably related to the advanced nature of C4-like biochemical traits in F. ramosissima The results demonstrate that reductions in photorespiration rates in C3-C4 intermediate plants create photosynthetic advantages at warm leaf temperatures that in C3 plants could only be achieved through substantial costs to water-use efficiency and/or nitrogen-use efficiency.  相似文献   

16.
B McGonigle  T Nelson 《Plant physiology》1995,108(3):1119-1126
In C4 plants of the NADP-malic enzyme type, an abundant, mesophyll cell-localized NADP-malate dehydrogenase (MDH) acts to convert oxaloacetate, the initial product of carbon fixation, to malate before it is shuttled to the bundle sheath. Since NADP-MDH has different but important roles in leaves of C3 and C4 plants, we have cloned and characterized a nearly full-length cDNA encoding NADP-MDH from Flaveria trinervia (C4) to permit comparative structure/expression studies within the genus flaveria. The dicot genus Flaveria includes C3-C4 intermediate species, as well as C3 and C4 species. We show that the previously noted differences in NADP-MDH activity levels among C3, C4, and C3-C4 Flaveria species are in part due to interspecific differences in mRNA accumulation. We also show that the NADP-MDH gene appears to be present as a single copy among different Flaveria species, suggesting that a pre-existing gene has been reregulated during the evolution from C3 to C4 plants to accommodate the abundance and localization requirements of the C4 cycle.  相似文献   

17.
A cytosolic NADP-malic enzyme (CYTME) has been described previously in several plants, all C3 species. CYTME is distinct from the chloroplastic NADP-malic enzyme (CHLME) that is highly active in C4 species. We show that at least one CytMe gene is present in all Flaveria spp., including C3, C4, and C3-C4 intermediate types. Based on the CytMe expression patterns in Flaveria pringlei (C3) and Flaveria trinervia (C4), we suggest CYTME has several distinct roles, including the supplying of NADPH for cytosolic metabolism, the supporting of wound response or repair, and the balancing of cellular pH in illuminated leaves. These three roles are likely correlated with CytMe mRNAs of apparent sizes 2.0, 2.2, and 2.4 kb, respectively, which differ in the length of the 5' untranslated regions. Various regulatory mechanisms involving RNA processing and translational efficiency are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
In the most common C4 pathway for carbon fixation, an NADP-malic enzyme (NADP-ME) decarboxylates malate in the chloroplasts of bundle sheath cells. Isoforms of plastidic NADP-ME are encoded by two genes in all species of Flaveria, including C3, C3-C4 intermediate, and C4 types. However, only one of these genes, ChlMe1, encodes the enzyme that functions in the C4 pathway. We compared the expression patterns of the ChlMe1 and ChlMe2 genes in developing leaves of Flaveria pringlei (C3) and Flaveria trinervia (C4) and in transgenic Flaveria bidentis (C4). ChlMe1 expression in C4 species increases in leaves with high C4 pathway activity. In the C3 species F. pringlei, ChlMe1 expression is transient and limited to early leaf development. In contrast, ChlMe2 is expressed in C3 and C4 species concurrent with stages in chloroplast biogenesis. Because previous studies suggest that NADP-ME activities generally reflect the level of its mRNA abundance, we discuss possible roles of ChlMe1 and ChlMe2 based on these expression patterns.  相似文献   

19.
The genus Flaveria consists of 23 species with significant variation in photosynthetic physiologies. We tested whether photosynthetic pathway variation in seven co-existing Flaveria species corresponds to geographic distributions or physiological performance in C3, C4, and intermediate species growing under natural conditions in south-central Mexico. We found that Flaveria pringlei (C3) was the most widely distributed species with multiple growth habits. Numerous populations of Flaveria kochiana (C4), a recently described species with a previously unknown distribution, were located in the Mixtec region of Oaxaca. Flaveria cronquistii (C3) and Flaveria ramosissima (C3-C4) were only located in the Tehuacán Valley region while Flaveria trinervia (C4) was widely distributed. Only one population of Flaveria angustifolia (C3-C4) and Flaveria vaginata (C4-like) were located near Izúcar de Matamoros. Midday leaf water potential differed significantly between Flaveria species, but did not vary according to growth habit or photosynthetic pathway. The quantum yield of photosystem II did not vary between species, despite large differences in leaf nitrogen content, leaf shape, plant size and life histories. We did not find a direct relationship between increasing C4 cycle characteristics and physiological performance in the Flaveria populations examined. Furthermore, C3 species were not found at higher elevation than C4 species as expected. Our observations indicate that life history traits and disturbance regime may be the primary controllers of Flaveria distributions in south-central Mexico.  相似文献   

20.
Rubisco, the primary photosynthetic carboxylase, evolved 3-4 billion years ago in an anaerobic, high CO(2) atmosphere. The combined effect of low CO(2) and high O(2) levels in the modern atmosphere, and the inability of Rubisco to distinguish completely between CO(2) and O(2), leads to the occurrence of an oxygenation reaction that reduces the efficiency of photosynthesis. Among land plants, C(4) photosynthesis largely solves this problem by facilitating a high CO(2)/O(2) ratio at the site of Rubisco that resembles the atmosphere in which the ancestral enzyme evolved. The prediction that such conditions favor Rubiscos with higher kcat(CO2) and lower CO(2)/O(2) specificity (S(C/O)) is well supported, but the structural basis for the differences between C(3) and C(4) Rubiscos is not clear. Flaveria (Asteraceae) includes C(3), C(3)-C(4) intermediate, and C(4) species with kinetically distinct Rubiscos, providing a powerful system in which to study the biochemical transition of Rubisco during the evolution from C(3) to C(4) photosynthesis. We analyzed the molecular evolution of chloroplast rbcL and nuclear rbcS genes encoding the large subunit (LSu) and small subunit (SSu) of Rubisco from 15 Flaveria species. We demonstrate positive selection on both subunits, although selection is much stronger on the LSu. In Flaveria, two positively selected LSu amino acid substitutions, M309I and D149A, distinguish C(4) Rubiscos from the ancestral C(3) species and statistically account for much of the kinetic difference between the two groups. However, although Flaveria lacks a characteristic "C(4)" SSu, our data suggest that specific residue substitutions in the SSu are correlated with the kinetic properties of Rubisco in this genus.  相似文献   

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