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1.
Potter JR 《Plant physiology》1980,66(3):528-531
Sunflower (cv. “Mammoth Greystripe”) and soybean (Merr. cv. “Amsoy 71”) leaves were exposed to continuous light for at least 52 hours in an attempt to determine the relationship between leaf starch levels and photosynthetic rates. Immature rapidly expanding and relatively mature slowly expanding sunflower leaves were studied. After 52 hours continuous light, the rapidly expanding leaves accumulated high starch levels (3.3 milligrams per square centimeter, 43% of dry weight) with only about a 10% decline from the initial photosynthetic rate of 42 milligrams CO2 per square decimeter per hour. Under the same conditions, the slowly expanding leaves accumulated less starch, but the photosynthetic rate declined 30%. Soybean leaves, which were slowly expanding, accumulated less starch than sunflower leaves (2.1 milligrams per square centimeter, 34% of dry weight), and their photosynthetic rates declined only about 10% after 54 hours continuous light.  相似文献   

2.
Explants and seeds of Brassica campestris L. were cultured on Murashige & Skoog (1962) medium with and without sucrose in a vessel with different numbers of air changes per hour under different PPF (photosynthetic photon flux) conditions. The growth and development of plantlets in the vessel were similar to those of seedlings when cultured under the same in vitro environmental conditions. The growth and development of seedlings when cultured under the same in vitro environmental conditions. The growth and development of plantlets/seedlings were greater for treatments with a higher number of air changes per hour and a higher PPF regardless of the sucrose concentration in the culture medium.The CO2 concentration in the vessel with a lower number of air changes per hour decreased to approximately 100 ppm during the photoperiod on day 21 due to the photosynthetic activities of the plantlets/seedlings. The low CO2 concentration, in turn, reduced the net photosynthetic rate of plantlets/seedlings in the vessel, and thus affected their growth and development.Abbreviations Cin CO2 concentration in the culture vessel - Cout CO2 concentration in the culture room - MS mineral composition of Murashige & Skoog (1962) medium - PPF photosynthetic photon flux  相似文献   

3.
The photosynthetic and respiratory performance of developing internodes of Populus tremuloides was evaluated by infrared gas analysis. Anatomical and morphological transitions were related to metabolic activity. Photosynthetic rates ranged from 6.0 to 10.0 milligrams CO2 per decimeter squared per hour in the youngest internodes to 2.5 to 3.8 milligrams CO2 per decimeter squared per hour in internodes with fully developed bark tissues. Respiration exceeded the rate of photosynthesis on the average by a factor of two. Stem photosynthesis increased with temperature up to 40°C and declined steeply between 40 and 50°C. Stem respiration increased nearly linearly to temperatures as high as 50°C.  相似文献   

4.
To evaluate leaf carbon balance during rapid pod-fill in soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merrill), measurements were made of CO2 assimilation at mid-day and changes in specific leaf weight, starch, and sucrose concentrations over a 9-hour interval. Assimilate export was estimated from CO2 assimilation and leaf dry matter accumulation. Chamber-grown `Amsoy 71' and `Wells' plants were subjected on the day of the measurements to one of six photosynthetic photon flux densities in order to vary CO2 assimilation rates.

Rate of accumulation of leaf dry matter and rate of export both increased as CO2 assimilation rate increased in each cultivar.

Starch concentrations were greater in Amsoy 71 than in Wells at all CO2 assimilation rates. At low CO2 assimilation rates, export rates in Amsoy 71 were maintained in excess of 1.0 milligram CH2O per square decimeter leaf area per hour at the expense of leaf reserves. In Wells, however, export rate continued to decline with decreasing CO2 assimilation rate. The low leaf starch concentration in Wells at low CO2 assimilation rates may have limited export by limiting carbon from starch remobilization.

Both cultivars exhibited positive correlations between CO2 assimilation rate and sucrose concentration, and between sucrose concentration and export rate. Carbon fixation and carbon partitioning both influenced export rate via effects on sucrose concentration.

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5.
The effects of temperature and photosynthetically active radiation levels on photorespiration were investigated in Panicum milioides Nees ex Trin. and Panicum schenckii Hack., species known to have low photorespiration rates and other characteristics intermediate between C3 and C4 species. Comparisons were made with the C3 grass species tall fescue (Festuca arundinacea Schreb.). An increase in temperature from 20 to 35 C raised photorespiration from 7.3 to 10.2 milligrams per square decimeter per hour in tall fescue, but the increase in P. schenckii was less than 1 milligram per square decimeter per hour. Increases in temperature caused much less change in CO2 compensation concentration in P. milioides and P. schenckii than in tall fescue, values of 160 microliters per liter being obtained in tall fescue at 40 C compared to about 40 microliters per liter for P. milioides and P. schenckii. Photorespiration in P. schenckii increased by only about 1 milligram CO2 per square decimeter per hour as the photosynthetically active radiation level was raised from 100 to 2,000 microEinsteins per square meter per second. Loss of CO2 into CO2-free air actually decreased from 2.2 to 1.0 milligrams per square decimeter per hour as the radiation level was raised from 100 to 1,100 microEinsteins per square meter per second but tended to rise again at 2,000 microEinsteins per square meter per second. In contrast, photorespiration in tall fescue tripled with radiation level over the same range, reaching a maximum value of 7.2 milligrams per square decimeter per hour as determined by extrapolation of the CO2 response curves to zero CO2. The CO2 compensation concentration in tall fescue was nearly insensitive to photosynthetically active radiation above 140 microEinsteins per square meter per second but, in P. milioides and P. schenckii, it decreased from values of 69 and 62 microliters per liter, respectively, to values of 21 and 16 as the radiation level was increased from 50 to 1075 microEinsteins per square meter per second. Interpolation of CO2-response curves showed that an increase in photosynthetically active radiation level from 100 to 2,000 microEinsteins per square meter per second reduced the CO2 compensation value of P. schenckii from 38 to 19 microliters per liter. Data from these experiments indicate reduced photorespiration or a CO2-recycling mechanism in P. milioides and P. schenckii which causes apparent photorespiration to be nearly insensitive to temperature in the 20 to 35 C range and to decrease at high radiation intensities.  相似文献   

6.
Two photosynthetic periods and photosynthetic photon flux densities (PPFD) were used to study the relationship between the rate of photosynthesis and starch accumulation in vegetative soybean leaves (Merr. cv Amsoy 71). Plants grown in short daily photosynthetic periods (7 hours) had higher rates of CO2 fixation per unit leaf dry weight and of leaf starch accumulation than plants grown in long daily photosynthetic periods (14 hours) irrespective of PPFD. CO2 fixation rates per unit leaf area were similar in 7-hour and 14-hour plants grown at low PPFD but were highest in 14-hour plants at the high PPFD. When single leaves of 14-hour plants were given 7-hour photosynthetic periods, their rates of starch accumulation remained unchanged. The programming of starch accumulation rate and possibly of photosynthetic rate by the length of the daily photosynthetic period is apparently a whole-plant, not an individual leaf, phenomenon. Programming of chloroplast starch accumulation rate by length of the daily photosynthetic and/or dark periods was independent of PPFD within the ranges used in this experiment.  相似文献   

7.
Recalculations of soybean photorespiration indicate that mean rates are closer to 16.1 than 5.6 milligrams of CO2 per square decimeter per hour as previously reported. Photorespiration of soybean thus amounts to at least a 30% carbon turnover of light-saturated photosynthesis. Photorespiration showed no significant relationship to net photosynthesis. Negative correlations were found between CO2 efflux and stomatal resistance as well as between corrected photorespiration and residual intracellular resistance of the leaf to CO2 uptake.  相似文献   

8.
Nodulated and non-nodulated (not inoculated) soybeans (Glycine max [L.] Merr. cv Wells) were grown in controlled environments with N2 or nonlimiting levels of NO3, respectively, serving as sole source of nitrogen. The efficiency of the N2-fixing plants was compared with that of the nitrate-supplied plants on the basis of both plant age and plant size. Efficiency evaluations of the plants were expressed as the ratio of moles of carbon respired by the whole plant to the moles of nitrogen incorporated into plant material.

Continuous 24-hour CO2 exchange measurements on shoot and root systems made at the beginning of flowering (28 days after planting) indicated that N2-fixing plants respired 8.28 moles of carbon per mole of N, fixed from dinitrogen, while nitrate-supplied plants respired only 4.99 moles of carbon per mole of nitrate reduced. Twenty-one-day-old nitrate-supplied plants were even more efficient, respiring only 3.18 moles of carbon per mole of nitrate reduced. The decreased efficiency of the N2-fixing plants was not due to plant size since, on a dry weight basis, the 28-day-old N2-fixing plants were intermediate between the 28- and 21-day-old nitrate-supplied plants.

The calculated efficiencies were predominantly a reflection of root-system respiration. N2-fixing plants lost 25% of their daily net photosynthetic input of carbon through root-system respiration, compared with 16% for 28-day-old nitrate-supplied plants and 12% for 21-day-old nitrate-supplied plants. Shoot dark respiration was similar for all three plant groups, varying between 7.9% and 9.0% of the apparent photosynthate.

The increased respiratory loss by the roots of the N2-fixing plants was not compensated for by increased net photosynthetic effectiveness. Canopy photosynthesis expressed on a leaf area basis was similar for 28-day-old N2-fixing plants (15.5 milligrams CO2 square decimeter per hour) and 21-day-old nitrate-supplied plants (14.5 milligrams CO2 square decimeter per hour). Both were similar in total canopy leaf area. The larger nitrate-supplied plants (28-day-old) had lower photosynthetic rates (12.5 milligrams CO2 square decimeter per hour), presumably due to self-shading of the leaves.

These data indicate that, during the early stages of plant development, dependence solely on N2-fixation is an expensive process compared to nitrate reduction in nitrate-supplied plants, since the N2-fixing plants retained 8% to 12% less of their photosynthate as dry matter.

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9.
The photosynthetic CO2-fixation rates, chlorophyll content, chloroplast ultrastructure and other leaf characteristics (e.g. variable fluorescence, stomata density, soluble carbohydrate content) were studied in a comparative way in sun and shade leaves of beech (Fagus sylvatica) and in high-light and low-light seedlings.
  1. Sun leaves of the beech possess a smaller leaf area, higher dry weight, lower water content, higher stomata density, higher chlorophyll a/b ratios and are thicker than the shade leaves. Sun leaves on the average contain more chlorophyll in a leaf area unit; the shade leaf exhibits more chlorophyll on a dry weight basis. Sun leaves show higher rates for dark respiration and a higher light saturation of photosynthetic CO2-fixation. Above 2000 lux they are more efficient in photosynthetic quantum conversion than the shade leaves.
  2. The development of HL-radish plants proceeds much faster than that of LL-plants. The cotyledons of HL-plants show a higher dry weight, lower water content, a higher ratio of chlorophyll a/b and a higher gross photosynthesis rate than the cotyledons of the LL-plants, which possess a higher chlorophyll content per dry weight basis. The large area of the HL-cotyledon on the one hand, as well as the higher stomata density and the higher respiration rate in the LL-cotyledon on the other hand, are not in agreement with the characteristics of sun and shade leaves respectively.
  3. The development, growth and wilting of wheat leaves and the appearance of the following leaves (leaf succession) is much faster at high quanta fluence rates than in weak light. The chlorophyll content is higher in the HL-leaf per unit leaf area and in the LL-leaf per g dry weight. There are no differences in the stomata density and leaf area between the HL- and LL-leaf. There are fewer differences between HL- and LL-leaves than in beech or radish leaves.
  4. The chloroplast ultrastructure of shade-type chloroplasts (shade leaves, LL-leaves) is not only characterized by a much higher number of thylakoids per granum and a higher stacking degree of thylakoids, but also by broader grana than in sun-type chloroplasts (sun leaves, HL-leaves). The chloroplasts of sun leaves and of HL-leaves exhibit large starch grains.
  5. Shade leaves and LL-leaves exhibit a higher maximum chlorophyll fluorescence and it takes more time for the fluorescence to decline to the steady state than in sun and HL-leaves. The variable fluorescence VF (ratio of fluorescence decrease to steady state fluorescence) is always higher in the sun and HL-leaf of the same physiological stage (maximum chlorophyll content of the leaf) than in the shade and LL-leaf. The fluorescence emission spectra of sun and HL-leaves show a higher proportion of chlorophyli fluorescence in the second emission maximum F2 than shade and LL-leaves.
  6. The level of soluble carbohydrates (reducing sugars) is significantly higher in sun and HL-leaves than in shade and LL-leaves and even reflects changes in the amounts of the daily incident light.
  7. Some but not all characteristics of mature sun and shade leaves are found in HL- and LL-leaves of seedlings. Leaf thickness, dry weight, chlorophyll content, soluble carbohydrate level, photosynthetic CO2-fixation, height and width of grana stacks and starch content, are good parameters to describe the differences between LL- and HL-leaves; with some reservations concerning age and physiological stage of leaf, a/b ratios, chlorophyll content per leaf area unit and the variable fluorescence are also suitable.
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10.
Intact air-grown (photosynthetic photon flux density, 400 microeinsteins per square meter per second) clover plants (Trifolium subterraneum L.) were transfered to high CO2 (4000 microliters CO2 per liter; photosynthetic photon flux density, 400 microeinsteins per square meter per second) or to high light (340 microliters CO2 per liter; photosynthetic photon flux density, 800 microeinsteins per square meter per second) to similarly stimulate photosynthetic net CO2 uptake. The daily increment of net CO2 uptake declined transiently in high CO2, but not in high light, below the values in air/standard light. After about 3 days in high CO2, the daily increment of net CO2 uptake increased but did not reach the high light values. Nightly CO2 release increased immediately in high light, whereas there was a 3-day lag phase in high CO2. During this time, starch accumulated to a high level, and leaf deterioration was observed only in high CO2. After 12 days, starch was two- to threefold higher in high CO2 than in high light, whereas sucrose was similar. Leaf carbohydrates were determined during the first and fourth day in high CO2. Starch increased rapidly throughout the day. Early in the day, sucrose was low and similar in high CO2 and ambient air (same light). Later, sucrose increased considerably in high CO2. The findings that (a) much more photosynthetic carbon was partitioned into the leaf starch pool in high CO2 than in high light, although net CO2 uptake was similar, and that (b) rapid starch formation occurred in high CO2 even when leaf sucrose was only slightly elevated suggest that low sink capacity was not the main constraint in high CO2. It is proposed that carbon partitioning between starch (chloroplast) and sucrose (cytosol) was perturbed by high CO2 because of the lack of photorespiration. Total phosphate pools were determined in leaves. Concentrations based on fresh weight of orthophosphate, soluble esterified phosphate, and total phosphate markedly declined during 13 days of exposure of the plants to high CO2 but changed little in high light/ambient air. During this time, the ratio of orthophosphate to soluble esterified phosphate decreased considerably in high CO2 and increased slightly in high light/ambient air. It appears that phosphate uptake and growth were similarly stimulated by high light, whereas the coordination was weak in high CO2.  相似文献   

11.
A system has been developed for the isolation of photosynthetically active chloroplasts from leaves of Populus deltoides. A high proportion of the chloroplasts appeared intact. The maximum rates of different photosynthetic processes were as follows: CO2 fixation 3.5 micromoles per milligram chlorophyll per hour, noncyclic ATP synthesis 10 micromoles per milligram chlorophyll per hour, and cyclic ATP synthesis 300 micromoles per milligram chlorophyll per hour.  相似文献   

12.
The effects of water stress and CO2 enrichment on photosynthesis, assimilate export, and sucrose-P synthase activity were examined in field grown soybean plants. In general, leaves of plants grown in CO2-enriched atmospheres (300 microliters per liter above unenriched control, which was 349 ± 12 microliters per liter between 0500 and 1900 hours EST over the entire season) had higher carbon exchange rates (CER) compared to plants grown at ambient CO2, but similar rates of export and similar activities of sucrose-P synthase. On most sample dates, essentially all of the extra carbon fixed as a result of CO2 enrichment was partitioned into starch. CO2-enriched plants had lower transpiration rates and therefore had a higher water use efficiency (milligrams CO2 fixed per gram H2O transpired) per unit leaf area compared to nonenriched plants. Water stress reduced CER in nonenriched plants to a greater extent than in CO2-enriched plants. As CER declined, stomatal resistance increased, but this was not the primary cause of the decrease in assimilation because internal CO2 concentration remained relatively constant. Export of assimilates was less affected by water stress than was CER. When CERs were low as a result of the imposed stress, export was supported by mobilization of reserves (mainly starch). Export rate and leaf sucrose concentration were related in a curvilinear manner. When sucrose concentration was above about 12 milligrams per square decimeter, obtained with nonstressed plants at high CO2, there was no significant increase in export rate. Assimilate export rate was also correlated positively with SPS activity and the quantitative relationship varied with CER. Thus, export rate was a function of both CER and carbon partitioning.  相似文献   

13.
Diurnal changes in photosynthetic parameters and enzyme activities were characterized in greenhouse grown maize plants (Zea mays L. cv Pioneer 3184). Rates of net photosynthesis and assimilate export were highest at midday, coincident with maximum irradiance. During the day, assimilate export accounted for about 80% of net carbon fixation, and the maximum export rate (35 milligrams CH2O per square decimeter per hour) was substantially higher than the relatively constant rate maintained through the night (5 milligrams CH2O per square decimeter per hour). Activities of sucrose phosphate synthase and NADP-malate dehydrogenase showed pronounced diurnal fluctuations; maximum enzyme activities were generally coincident with highest light intensity. Reciprocal light/dark transfers of plants throughout the diurnal cycle revealed that both enzymes were deactivated by 30 minutes of darkness during the day, and they could both be substantially activated by 30 minutes of illumination at night. During 24 hours of extended darkness, sucrose phosphate synthase activity declined progressively to an almost undetectable level, but was activated after 1.5 hours of illumination. Thus, the diurnal fluctuation in maize sucrose phosphate synthase can be explained by some form of light modulation of enzyme activity and is not due to an endogenous rhythm in activity. No diurnal fluctuations were observed in the activities of NADP-malic enzyme or fructose 6-phosphate-2-kinase. Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase was activated by light to some extent (about 50%) when activity was measured under suboptimal conditions in vitro. The results suggested that the rates of sucrose formation and assimilate export were closely aligned with the rate of carbon fixation and the activation state of sucrose phosphate synthase.  相似文献   

14.
Photosynthetic and stomatal responses of spinach leaves to salt stress   总被引:16,自引:5,他引:11       下载免费PDF全文
The gas exchange of spinach plants, salt-stressed by adding NaCl to the nutrient solution in increments of 25 millimolar per day to a final concentration of 200 millimolar, was studied 3 weeks after starting NaCl treatment. Photosynthesis became light saturated at 1100 to 1400 micromoles per square meter per second in salt-treated plants and at approximately 2000 micromoles per square meter per second in control plants. Photosynthetic capacity of the mesophyll measured as a function of intercellular partial pressure of CO2 at the light intensity prevailing during growth and at light saturation were both decreased in the salttreated plants. The CO2 compensation points and relative enhancements of photosynthesis at low O2 were not affected by salinity. The lower photosynthetic rates in salt-treated leaves at 450 micromoles per square meter per second were associated with a 70% reduction in stomatal conductance and low intercellular CO2 (219 microbars; cf. 285 microbars for controls). Increasing photon flux density to light saturation extended the linear portions of the CO2 response curves, increased stomatal conductances, increased intercellular CO2 in the salt-treated plants, but lowered it in controls, and accentuated differences in photosynthetic rate (area basis) between the treatments.

Leaves from salt-treated plants were thicker but contained about 73% of the chlorophyll per unit area of control plants. When photosynthetic rates were expressed on a chlorophyll basis there was no difference in initial slope of assimilation versus intercellular CO2 between treatments. Photosynthetic rates (chlorophyll basis) at light saturation differed only by 20% which was also observed earlier with isolated, intact chloroplasts (Robinson et al. 1983 Plant Physiol 73: 238-242).

Measurement of carbon isotope ratio revealed less discrimination against 13C with salt treatment and confirmed the persistence of low intercellular partial pressures of CO2 during plant growth. The development of a thicker leaf with less chlorophyll per unit area during salt treatment permitted stomatal conductance and intercellular partial pressure of CO2 to decline without restricting photosynthesis and had the benefit of greatly increasing water use efficiency.

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15.
Ginger (Zingiber officinale Rosc.) plantlets were propagated in vitro and acclimated under different photosynthetic photon flux densities (60 and 250 μmol m−2 s−1 = LI and HI, respectively). Increases in chlorophyll (Chl) content and Chl a/b ratio were found under both irradiances. In vitro plantlets (day 0) exhibited a low photosynthesis, but chloroplasts from in vitro leaves contained well developed grana and osmiophillic globules. Photoinhibition in leaves formed in vitro was characterized by decrease of photochemical efficiency and quantum efficiency of photosystem 2 photochemistry in HI treatment during acclimation. The new leaves formed during acclimation in both treatments showed a higher photosynthetic capacity than the leaves formed in vitro. Also activities of antioxidant enzymes of micropropagated ginger plantlets changed during acclimation.  相似文献   

16.
A leaf chamber has been designed which allows the measurement of both CO2 and water vapor exchange in Spinacia oleracea leaf discs. The center of the disc lies within a cylindrical gas chamber and its margins are enclosed within a cavity through which water or various metabolites can be pumped. In saturating light and normal atmospheres, the leaf discs have a relatively low resistance to H2O vapor transfer (rw = 1.87 seconds per centimeter) and can support high rates of photosynthesis for several hours. The abaxial surface of a disc had a higher resistance to water vapor transfer (rw = 3.22 seconds per centimeter) than the adaxial (rw = 2.45 seconds per centimeter) despite having a higher stomatal frequency (abaxial, 105/square millimeter; adaxial, 58/square millimeter). In 2% O2, the discs required an internal concentration of CO2 of 115 microliters per liter to support one-half of the maximal velocity of apparent photosynthesis (average value, 66 milligrams CO2 per square decimeter per hour). In 20% O2, the comparable values are 156 microliters per liter and 56 milligrams CO2 per square decimeter per hour. In air, apparent photosynthesis saturated at intensities (750 microeinsteins per square meter per second) well below that of daylight but, when the internal CO2 was raised to 700 to 900 microliters per liter, photosynthesis was not saturated even at daylight intensities (2025 microeinsteins per square meter per second). The distribution of Prussian blue crystals, formed after ferrocyanide feeding, showed that water entered the disc via the vasculature. When 25-minute pulses of orthophosphate were provided in the feeding solution, there were concentration-dependent increases in both rw and rm leading to inhibition of photosynthesis. The orthophosphate-dependent inhibitions were reversible.  相似文献   

17.
Measurements of the dependence of photosynthesis on light, CO2, and temperature are reported for two species of Encelia (Compositae) which differ in leaf pubescence and in geographical distribution. Encelia californica is glabrous and occurs in relatively mild, but arid habitats and Encelia farinosa is heavily pubescent and occurs in hot, arid habitats. Both species possess the C3 photosynthetic pathway. Under high irradiances and normal atmospheric conditions the two species have high photosynthetic rates, exceeding 3 nanomoles of CO2 per square centimeter per second (48 milligrams of CO2 per square decimeter per hour) and complete light saturation does not occur by full noon sunlight. The high photosynthetic capacity is related to a high efficiency of utilization of intercellular CO2 combined with high stomatal conductance. Leaf estimates of total soluble protein and fraction I protein are higher in these species than in most plants, although the proportion of fraction I protein is not higher. Both E. californica and E. farinosa attain a maximum rate of photosynthesis between 25 and 30 C, despite the fact that the two species grow in very different thermal habitats. Neither E. californica nor E. farinosa shows significant acclimation in the temperature dependence of photosynthesis when grown under different temperature regimes. The presence of leaf hairs which reduce leaf absorptance and consequently leaf temperature plays an important part in the ability of E. farinosa to survive in its native high temperature environment. When the effects of pubescence are taken into account, there are few if any significant differences in the photosynthetic characteristics of the two species.  相似文献   

18.
Carbon dioxide fixation in isolated kalanchoe chloroplasts   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Levi C  Gibbs M 《Plant physiology》1975,56(1):164-166
Chloroplasts isolated from Kalanchoe diagremontiana leaves were capable of photosynthesizing at a rate of 5.4 μmoles of CO2 per milligram of chlorophyll per hour. The dark rate of fixation was about 1% of the light rate. A high photosynthetic rate was associated with low starch content of the leaves. Ribose 5-phosphate, fructose 1,6-diphosphate, and dithiothreitol stimulated fixation, whereas phosphoenolpyruvate and azide were inhibitors. The products of CO2 fixation were primarily those of the photosynthetic carbon reduction cycle.  相似文献   

19.
We previously reported that the net photosynthetic rate of a decaploid genotype (I-16-2) of tall fescue (Festuca arundinacea Schreb.) was 32 to 41 versus 22 milligrams CO2 per square decimeter per hour in a hexaploid genotype (V6-802) (Randall, Nelson, Asay Plant Physiol 59: 38-41). The high rate was later correlated with increases in total ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase protein (17%) and activity (27%) (Joseph, Randall, Nelson Plant Physiol 68: 894-898). This report characterizes photosynthesis with respect to light saturation and early products of photosynthesis in an attempt to identify regulatory metabolic site(s) in these two genotypes. Analysis of the early products of photosynthesis indicated that both genotypes fixed CO2 via the Calvin-Benson cycle with phosphoglyceric acid as the initial primary product. Both genotypes had similar 14C-labeled intermediates. Sucrose was the primary sink of 14CO2 assimilation. After 10 min of 14CO2 assimilation with attached leaves, sucrose accounted for 89% (decaploid) and 81% (hexaploid) of the total 14C incorporated. In 10 min, this amounted to 1.3 (decaploid) and 0.8 (hexaploid) μmol [14C]sucrose formed g fresh weight−1 and reflected the observed differences in photosynthetic rates. There was limited labeling of starch (1%) and fructan (1%). Results of total nonstructural carbohydrates and Pi analysis also demonstrated sucrose was the predominant carbohydrate in fescue leaves. Quantitative differences in sucrose and Pi between the two genotypes may reflect changes in partitioning and this possibility is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
The photosynthetic rates of intact sporophytes or gametophytes of the fern Todea barbara grown in sterile culture were measured using an infrared gas analyzer. Sporophytes consisted of single whole plants with roots and leaves grown in tubes of agar. Gametophytes were grown as several plants covering the surface of the agar. Sporophytes had photosynthetic rates at light saturation of 8.50 microliters CO2 per hour per milligram dry weight and 1,300 microliters CO2 per hour per milligram chlorophyll, whereas rates for gametophytes were lower, 2.36 microliters CO2 per hour per milligram dry weight and 236 microliters CO2 per hour per milligram chlorophyll.  相似文献   

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