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1.
Enzymes of the C4, C3 pathway and photorespiration have beenanalyzed for P. hians and P. milioides, which have chlorenchymatousbundle sheath cells in the leaves. On whole leaf extracts thelevels of PEP carboxylase are relatively low compared to C4species, RuDP carboxylase is typical of C3 species, and enzymesof photorespiratory metabolism appear somewhat intermediatebetween C3 and C4. Substantial levels of PEP carboxylase, RuDPcarboxylase, and photorespiratory enzymes were found in bothmesophyll and bundle sheath cells. Low levels of C4-acid decarboxylatingenzymes may limit the capacity for C4 photosynthesis in P. hiansand P. milioides. The results on enzyme activity and distributionbetween mesophyll and bundle sheath cells are consistent withCO2 fixation via C3 pathway in these two species. 1 This research was supported by the College of Agriculturaland Life Sciences, University of Wisconsin, Madison; and bythe University of Wisconsin Research Committee with funds fromthe Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation; and by the NationalScience Foundation Grant BMS 74-09611. (Received September 16, 1975; )  相似文献   

2.
Kanai R  Edwards GE 《Plant physiology》1973,51(6):1133-1137
Mesophyll protoplasts and bundle sheath strands of maize (Zea mays L.) leaves have been isolated by enzymatic digestion with cellulase. Mesophyll protoplasts, enzymatically released from maize leaf segments, were further purified by use of a polyethylene glycol-dextran liquid-liquid two phase system. Bundle sheath strands released from the leaf segments were isolated using filtration techniques. Light and electron microscopy show separation of the mesophyll cell protoplasts from bundle sheath strands. Two varieties of maize isolated mesophyll protoplasts had chlorophyll a/b ratios of 3.1 and 3.3, whereas isolated bundle sheath strands had chlorophyll a/b ratios of 6.2 and 6.6. Based on the chlorophyll a/b ratios in mesophyll protoplasts, bundle sheath cells, and whole leaf extracts, approximately 60% of the chlorophyll in the maize leaves would be in mesophyll cells and 40% in bundle sheath cells. The purity of the preparations was also evident from the exclusive localization of phosphopyruvate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.31) and NADP-dependent malate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1) in mesophyll cells and ribulose 1,5-diphosphate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.39), phosphoribulokinase (EC 2.7.1.19), and “malic enzyme” (EC 1.1.1.40) in bundle sheath cells. NADP-glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.13) was found in both mesophyll and bundle sheath cells, while ribose 5-phosphate isomerase (EC 5.3.1.6) was primarily found in bundle sheath cells. In comparison to the enzyme activities in the whole leaf extract, there was about 90% recovery of the mesophyll enzymes and 65% recovery of the bundle sheath enzymes in the cellular preparations.  相似文献   

3.
Mesophyll protoplasts and bundle sheath strands were isolated from maize leaves. Light microscopic observation showed the preparations were pure and without cross contamination. Protein blot analysis of mesophyll and bundle sheath cell soluble protein showed that the concentration of pyruvate orthophosphate dikinase (EC 2.7.9.1) is about one-tenth as much in the bundle sheath cells as in mesophyll cells, but about eight times greater than that found in wheat leaves, on the basis of soluble protein. Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.31) was barely detectable in the bundle sheath cells, while ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.39) and NADP-dependent malic enzyme (EC 1.3.1.37) were exclusively present in the bundle sheath cells and were absent in the mesophyll cells. Whereas pyruvate, Pi dikinase was previously considered localized only in mesophyll cells of C4 plants, these results clearly demonstrate the presence of appreciable quantities of the enzyme in the bundle sheath cells of the C4 species maize.  相似文献   

4.
Mesophyll cells and bundle sheath strands were isolated from Cyperus rotundus L. leaf sections infiltrated with a mixture of cellulase and pectinase followed by a gentle mortar and pestle grind. The leaf suspension was filtered through a filter assembly and mesophyll cells and bundle sheath strands were collected on 20-μm and 80-μm nylon nets, respectively. For the isolation of leaf epidermal strips longer leaf cross sections were incubated with the enzymes and gently ground as above. Loosely attached epidermal strips were peeled off with forceps. The upper epidermis, which lacks stomata, could be clearly distinguished from the lower epidermis which contains stomata. Microscopic evidence for identification and assessment of purity is provided for each isolated tissue.Enzymes related to the C4-dicarboxylic acid cycle such as phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase, malate dehydrogenase (NADP+), pyruvate, Pi dikinase were found to be localized, ≥98%, in mesophyll cells. Enzymes related to operating the reductive pentose phosphate cycle such as RuDP carboxylase, phosphoribulose kinase, and malic enzyme are distributed, ≥99%, in bundle sheath strands. Other photosynthetic enzymes such as aspartate aminotransferase, pyrophosphatase, adenylate kinase, and glyceraldehyde 3-P dehydrogenase (NADP+) are quite active in both mesophyll and bundle sheath tissues.Enzymes involved in photorespiration such as RuDP oxygenase, catalase, glycolate oxidase, hydroxypyruvate reductase (NAD+), and phosphoglycolate phosphatase are preferentially localized, ≥84%, in bundle sheath strands.Nitrate and nitrite reductase can be found only in mesophyll cells, while glutamate dehydrogenase is present, ≥96%, in bundle sheath strands.Starch- and sucrose-synthesizing enzymes are about equally distributed between the mesophyll and bundle sheath tissues, except that the less active phosphorylase was found mainly in bundle sheath strands. Fructose-1,6-diP aldolase, which is a key enzyme in photosynthesis and glycolysis leading to sucrose and starch synthesis, is localized, ≥90%, in bundle sheath strands. The glycolytic enzymes, phosphoglyceromutase and enolase, have the highest activity in mesophyll cells, while the mitochondrial enzyme, cytochrome c oxidase, is more active in bundle sheath strands.The distribution of total nutsedge leaf chlorophyll, protein, and PEP carboxylase activity, using the resolved leaf components, is presented. 14CO2 Fixation experiments with the intact nutsedge leaves and isolated mesophyll and bundle sheath tissues show that complete C4 photosynthesis is compartmentalized into mesophyll CO2 fixation via PEP carboxylase and bundle sheath CO2 fixation via RuDP carboxylase. These results were used to support the proposed pathway of carbon assimilation in C4-dicarboxylic acid photosynthesis and to discuss the individual metabolic characteristics of intact mesophyll cells, bundle sheath cells, and epidermal tissues.  相似文献   

5.
The intracellular localization of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase in plants belonging to the C4, Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) and C3 types was invetigated using an immunocytochemical method with an immune serum raised against the sorghum leaf enzyme. The plants studied were sorghum, maize (C4 type), kalanchoe (CAM type), french bean, and spinach (C3 type). In the green leaves of C4 plants, it was shown that the carboxylase was located in the mesophyll and stomatic cells, being largely cytosolic in the mesophyll cells. Similarly, in CAM plants, the enzyme was found mainly outside the chloroplasts. In contrast, in C3 plants, the PEP carboxylase appeared to be distributed between the cytosol and the chloroplasts of foliar parenchyma. Examination of sections from etiolated leaves showed fluorescence emission from etioplasts and cytosol for the parenchyma of french bean as well as for the bundle sheath and mesophyll of sorghum leaves. This data indicated that during the greening process photoregulation and evolution of PEP carboxylase is dependent on the tissue and on the metabolic type of the plant considered.Abbreviations CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate  相似文献   

6.
A seven-step sequential grinding procedure was applied to leaves of Atriplex rosea, Sorghum sudanense, and Spinacia oleracea to study the distribution of carboxylases and microbody enzymes. In the extracts from C4 species there were 7- to 10-fold reciprocal changes in specific activities of ribulose-1, 5-diphosphate carboxylase and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase. No such changes occurred in sequential extracts from spinach. No inhibitors of ribulose-1, 5-diphosphate carboxylase were detected when the mesophyll extracts of Sorghum were assayed together with spinach extracts. These results reaffirm the conclusion of others that phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase is largely confined to the mesophyll in these species and ribulose-1, 5-diphosphate carboxylase to the bundle sheath. The specific activities of glycolate oxidase and hydroxypyruvate reductase in bundle sheath extracts were two to three times those in mesophyll fractions. Catalase behaved similarly in Atriplex rosea but in Sorghum the specific activity was virtually the same in all fractions. From the relative amounts of these enzymes present, and comparison with the data obtained from spinach, it is concluded that typical leaf peroxisomes are present in the bundle sheaths of both C4 species and in the mesophyll of Atriplex rosea. The relative enzyme activities in the mesophyll of Sorghum suggest that the microbodies there are of the non-specialized type found in many nongreen tissues. The activities of the microbody enzymes in the bundle sheath of Sorghum seem quite inadequate to support photorespiration.  相似文献   

7.
Chloroplasts, mitochondria and cytoplasm, isolated from pea,wheat, maize and sorghum mesophyll protoplasts, contain distinctforms of superoxide dismutase (SOD). In all species evaluated,chloroplasts exhibited a single cyanide-sensitive SOD. Thischloroplastic enzyme was the most anionic SOD observed in wholeleaf and protoplast extracts and constitutes 50–80% ofthe total soluble SOD. Pea and wheat protoplasts had only onecytoplasmic SOD, a cyanide-sensitive form of intermediate mobility;maize and sorghum had two such cytoplasmic enzymes. A singlecyanide-insensitive SOD was present in extracts from both C3and C4 tissues and was associated with mitochondria. Although bundle sheath cells of sorghum and maize are knownto be deficient in Photosystem II, there was no apparent differencein SOD between mesophyll and bundle sheath cells. Mesophyllprotoplasts and bundle sheath strands from these C4 plants containedthe same forms of SOD. Levels of soluble SOD were similar, ona chlorophyll basis, in the two cell types as was distributionof activity among the various forms of the enzyme. (Received May 19, 1980; )  相似文献   

8.
Acetyl-coenzyme A carboxylase in maize leaves   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Purified chloroplasts from mesophyll and bundle sheath cells of maize leaves have been shown to be the location of acetyl-CoA carboxylase. In disrupted chloroplasts the enzyme was recovered in the stromal fraction, along with protein-bound biotin; acetyl-CoA carboxylase activity did not require a membrane component. Mg2+ and ATP are required for activity and sulfhydryl protecting agents enhance stability of the enzyme. Acetyl-CoA carboxylase activity was independent of leaf development in cell-free extracts of maize. Comparison of acetyl-CoA carboxylase activity with [14C]acetate incorporation into lipids, in isolated chloroplasts from developing leaves of maize, indicate that acetyl-CoA carboxylase is not limiting fatty acid synthesis.  相似文献   

9.
Photosynthetic CO2 fixation was studied using cells of Rhodospirillumrubrum grown heterotrophically on malate or butyrate. Ratesof CO2 fixation were higher in the malategrown cells than inthe butyrate-grown bacteria but ribulosebisphosphate (RUP2)carboxylase/oxygenase activities were higher in the extractsprepared from the butyrate-grown bacteria. The photosyntheticCO2 fixation in the butyrate-grown R. rubrum cells was inhibitedby KCN, and the inhibitory effect of O2 on CO2 fixation wasreversed when cells were returned to an N2 atmosphere. In themalate-grown cells, photosynthetic CO2 fixation was insensitiveto KCN and the inhibitory effect exerted by O2 was practicallyirreversible. 14CO2 was not incorporated into glycolate by either malate-or butyrate-grown cells in an N2 atmosphere, but small amountsof labeled glycolate were found in malate- and butyrate-growncells in air or 100% O2. Glycolate excreted by these cells in100% O2 was measured colorimetrically and its identity establishedby mass spectrometry. When the O2 atmosphere was labeled with18O2, only one of the carboxyl oxygens of the excreted glycolatewas labeled, and the enrichment of 18O in this carboxyl oxygenrelative to the 18O2 provided was greater than 80%. These studiesshow that significant glycolate production by R. rubrum onlyoccurs in the presence of O2 and that in both malateand butyrate-growncells, the glycolate so formed is presumably produced via RuP2oxygenase. 1 Paper No. 46 in the series "Structure and Function of ChloroplastProteins", and research supported in part by research grantsfrom the Japanese Ministry of Education (No. 211113), the TorayScience Foundation (Tokyo), and the Nissan Science Foundation(Tokyo). (Received August 19, 1978; )  相似文献   

10.
Arundinella hirta L. is a C4 plant having an unusual C4 leaf anatomy. Besides mesophyll and bundle sheath cells, A. hirta leaves have specialized parenchyma cells which look morphologically like bundle sheath cells but which lack vascular connections and are located between veins, running parallel to them. Activities of phosphoenolpyruvate and ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylases and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, NADP-and NAD-malic enzymes were determined for whole leaf extracts and isolated mesophyll protoplasts, specialized parenchyma cells, and bundle sheath cells. The data indicate that A. hirta is a NADP-malic enzyme type C4 species. In addition, specialized parenchyma cells and bundle sheath cells are enzymatically alike. Compartmentation of enzymes followed the C4 pattern with phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase being restricted to mesophyll cells while ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase and decarboxylating enzymes were restricted to bundle sheath and specialized parenchyma cells.  相似文献   

11.
Mature leaves of Cyperus rotundus, Cyperus polystachyos, Digitaria decumbens, and Digitaria sanguinalis were separated, using pectinase and cellulase, into pure preparations of mesophyll cells and bundle sheath strands. Assays on these distinct leaf cell types show a clear compartmentation of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase, >98%, into mesophyll cells and of ribulose-1, 5-diphosphate carboxylase and malic enzyme, >98%, into the bundle sheath strands. The results clearly establish that the major CO2 uptake in mesophyll cells is via a β-carboxylation and that both a decarboxylation and a carboxylation reaction occurs in the bundle sheath strands of plants using C4-dicarboxylic acid photosynthesis.  相似文献   

12.
Immunolocalization of the bundle sheath-specific enzyme, ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RuBPCase), and of the mesophyll-specific enzyme, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPCase), was used to follow development of the C4 pattern of photosynthetic enzyme expression during leaf growth in Atriplex rosea. The leaf tissue used for this characterization was also used in a parallel ultrastructural study, so that the temporal coordination of developmental changes in enzyme expression and cell structure could be monitored. Bundle sheath-specific accumulation of RuBPCase occurs early, at the time that bundle sheath tissue is delimited from the ground meristem, and follows the order of vein initiation. PEPCase proteins were detected 2–4 days after the first appearance of RuBPCase. PEPCase accumulation is restricted to ground meristem cells that are in direct contact with bundle sheath tissue and that will become C4 mesophyll; PEPCase was never found in more distant ground tissue. This pattern suggests that, while bundle sheath-specific accumulation of RuBPCase coincides with formation of the appropriate precursor cells, PEPCase expression is delayed until mesophyll tissue reaches a critical developmental stage. Cell-specific expression of both photosynthetic enzymes occurs well before the striking anatomical divergence of bundle sheath and mesophyll tissues, suggesting that biochemical compartmentation might serve as a developmental signal for subsequent structural differentiation.  相似文献   

13.
Lipid peroxidation and the degradation of cytochrome P-450 heme   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
The enzyme content and functional capacities of mesophyll chloroplasts from Atriplex spongiosa and maize have been investigated. Accompanying evidence from graded sequential blending of leaves confirmed that mesophyll cells contain all of the leaf pyruvate, Pi dikinase, and PEP carboxylase activities and a major part of the adenylate kinase and pyrophosphatase. 3-Phosphoglycerate kinase, NADP glyceraldehyde-3-P-dehydrogenase, and triose-P isomerase activities were about equally distributed between mesophyll and bundle sheath cells but other Calvin cycle enzymes were very largely or solely located in bundle sheath cells. In A. spongiosa extracts of predominantly mesophyll origin the proportion of the released pyruvate, Pi dikinase, adenylate kinase, pyrophosphatase, 3-phosphoglycerate kinase, and NADP glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase retained in pelleted chloroplasts was similar but varied between 30 and 80% in different preparations. The proportion of these enzymes and NADP malate dehydrogenase recovered in maize chloroplast preparations varied between 15 and 35%. Washed chloroplasts retained most of the activity of these enzymes but ribulose diphosphate carboxylase and other Calvin cycle enzyme activities were undetectable. Among the evidence for the integrity of these chloroplasts was their capacity for light-dependent conversion of pyruvate to phosphoenolpyruvate and O2 evolution when 3-phosphoglycerate or oxaloacetate were added. These results support our previous conclusions about the function of mesophyll chloroplasts in C4-pathway photosynthesis and clearly demonstrate that they lack Calvin cycle activity.  相似文献   

14.
The influence of varying light intensity and quality on thecarbon labelling patterns in Rumex vesicarius (a C3 plant),Setaria italica (a malate-formingC4 plant), and Amaranthus paniculatus(an aspartate-forming C4 plant) was studied. In A. paniculatusand B. vesicarius blue light decreased the transfer of radioactivityto sugars and starch but in S. italica only slightly decreasedradioactivity in sugar phosphates, sucrose, and insolubles.Negligible transfer was observed from the C4 acids to sugarphosphates, sucrose, and starch under dim blue-green and blue-yellowlights in S. italica and A. paniculatus. Blue light favouredthe formation of malate, aspartate, and alanine in all threeplants. The differential effect of blue and red light suggesteda variation in the mechanisms of C4-photosynthesis in Setariaand Amaranthus. Leaves of S. italica and A. paniculatus were allowed to photosynthesizein 14CO2 for 5 s and then the distribution of the labelled productsbetween the mesophyll and the bundle sheath cells was determinedduring subsequent photosynthesis in 12CO2. Malate and aspartatewhich appeared initially in the mesophyll layer moved rapidlyinto the bundle sheath cells. Phosphoglyceric acid originatingin the bundle sheath moved swiftly to the mesophyll layer. Sugarphosphates were recovered from both the mesophyll and the bundlesheath cells. Most of the starch was found in the bundle sheathcells while sucrose and alanine were localized in the mesophyllcells.  相似文献   

15.
The distribution of nitrite reductase (EC 1.7.7.1) and sulfite reductase (EC 1.8.7.1) between mesophyll ceils and bundle sheath cells of maize ( Zea mays L. cv. Seneca 60) leaves was examined. This examination was complicated by the fact that both of these enzymes can reduce both NO-2 and SO2-3 In crude extracts from whole leaves, nitrite reductase activity was 6 to 10 times higher than sulfite reductase activity. Heat treatment (10 min at 55°C) caused a 55% decrease in salfite reductase activity in extracts from bundle sheath cells and mesophyll cells, whereas the loss in nitrite reductase activity was 58 and 82% in bundle sheath cells and mesophyll cell extracts, respectively. This result was explained, together with results from the literature, by the hypothesis that sulfite reductase is present in both bundle sheath cells and mesophyll cells, and that nitrite reductase is restricted to the mesophyll cells. This hypothesis was tested i) by comparing the distribution of nitrite reductase activity and sulfite reductase activity between bundle sheath and mesophyll cells with the presence of the marker enzymes ribulose-l, 5-bisphosphate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.39) and phosphoe-nolpyruvate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.32), ii) by examining the effect of cultivation of maize plants in the dark without a nitrogen source on nitrite reductase activity and sulfite reductase activity in the two types of cells, and iii) by studying the action of S2-on the two enzyme activities in extracts from bundle sheath and mesophyll cells. The results from these experiments are consistent with the above hypothesis.  相似文献   

16.
Photosynthetic rates, chlorophyll content, and activities of several photosynthetic enzymes were determined per cell, per unit DNA, and per unit leaf area in five ploidal levels of the C4 dicot Atriplex confertifolia. Volumes of bundle sheath and mesophyll protoplasts were measured in enzymatic digestions of leaf tissue. Photosynthetic rates per cell, contents of DNA per cell, and activities of the bundle sheath enzymes ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (RuBPC) and NAD-malic enzyme per cell were correlated with ploidal level at 99% or 95% confidence levels, and the results suggested a near proportional relationship between gene dosage and gene products. There was also a high correlation between volume of mesophyll and bundle sheath cells and the ploidal level. Contents of DNA per cell, activity of RuBPC per cell, and volumes of cells were correlated with photosynthetic rate per cell at the 95% confidence level. The mesophyll cells did not respond to changes in ploidy like the bundle sheath cells. In the mesophyll cells the chlorophyll content per cell was constant at different ploidal levels, there was less increase in cell volume than in bundle sheath cells with an increase in ploidy, and there was not a significant correlation (at 95% level) of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase activity or content and pyruvate,Pi dikinase activity with increase in ploidy. The number of photosynthetic cells per unit leaf area progressively decreased with increasing ploidy from diploid to hexaploid, but thereafter remained constant in octaploid and decaploid plants. Numbers of cells per leaf area were not correlated with cell volumes. The mean photosynthetic rates per unit leaf area were lowest in the diploid, similar in 4×, 6×, and 8×, and highest in the decaploid. The photosynthetic rate per leaf area was highly correlated with the DNA content per leaf area.  相似文献   

17.
Cultivars of cassava, Manihot esculenta Crantz, were studiedto determine the mechanism of photosynthetic carbon assimilationin this species. The results, contrary to recent reports, indicatethat cassava is a C3 plant based on a number of physiologicaland biochemical photosynthetic characteristics. The CO2 compensationpoints among 10 cassava cultivars ranged from 55 to 62 µlliter–1, which was typical for C3 plants including castorbean, a member of the same family (Euphorbiaceae). The initialproducts of photosynthesis in cassava are C3-like; the activitiesof several key C4 enzymes in cassava are low and similar tothose of C3 plants. Data on the rates of photosynthesis perunit of leaf area and the photosynthetic response of cassavato CO2 is also consistent with C3 photosynthesis. Cassava hasa distinctive chlorenchymatous vascular bundle sheath locatedbelow a single layer of palisade cells. Unlike C3-C4 intermediatesand C4 species, the bundle sheaths of cassava are not surroundedby mesophyll cells. The bundle sheath cells which occur at highfrequency in cassava may function in both photosynthesis andtransport of photosynthates in the leaf. (Received July 31, 1990; Accepted September 25, 1990)  相似文献   

18.
Salsola arbusculiformis is identified as a C3–C4intermediatespecies based on anatomical, biochemical and physiological characteristics.This is the first report of a naturally occurring intermediatespecies in the Chenopodiaceae, the family with the largest numberof C4species amongst the dicots. In the genus Salsola, mostspecies have Salsoloid anatomy with Kranz type bundle sheathcells and C4photosynthesis, while a few species have Sympegmoidanatomy and were found to have non-Kranz type bundle sheathcells and C3photosynthesis. In the cylindrical leaves of C4Salsolawith Salsoloid type anatomy, there is a continuous layer ofdistinct, chlorenchymatous Kranz type bundle sheath cells surroundedby a single layer of mesophyll cells; whereas species with Sympegmoidtype anatomy have an indistinct bundle sheath with few chloroplastsand multiple layers of chlorenchymatous mesophyll cells. However,S. arbusculiformis has intermediate anatomical features. Whileit has two-to-three layers of mesophyll cells, characteristicof Sympegmoid anatomy, it has distinctive, Kranz-like bundlesheath cells with numerous chloroplasts and mitochondria. Measurementsof its CO2compensation point and CO2response of photosynthesisshow S. arbusculiformis functions as an intermediate specieswith reduced levels of photorespiration. The primary means ofreducing photorespiration is suggested to be by refixing photorespiredCO2in bundle sheath cells, since analysis of photosyntheticenzymes (activity and immunolocalization) and14CO2labellingof initial fixation products suggests minimal operation of aC4cycle. Copyright 2001 Annals of Botany Company Immunolocalization, photosynthetic enzymes, C3–C4intermediate, C4-plants, leaf anatomy, Chenopodiaceae, Salsola arbusculiformis  相似文献   

19.
In vitro translation of polyA+ mRNAs isolated from purified maize bundle sheath and mesophyll cells results in the production of distinctive, cell-specific polypeptides. Immunoprecipitation experiments show that translatable polyA+ mRNAs for phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC), pyruvate orthophosphate dikinase (PPDK) and NADP-malate dehydrogenase (MDH) are prominent in mesophyll but not bundle sheath cells. On the contrary, those for sedoheptulose-1,7-bisphosphatase (SBP), fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (FBP), NADP-malic enzyme (ME) and the small subunit of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (RuBPC SS) are present only in bundle sheath cells. Moreover, polyA+ mRNAs encoding the 33 kD, 23 kD and 16 kD polypeptides of the oxygen-evolving complex (OE33, OE23 and OE16) and the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b binding protein of photosystem II (LHCP II) are much more abundant in mesophyll than in bundle sheath cells. Northern blot analyses with cDNA clones of PEPC, PPDK, ME, RuBPC SS, OE33, OE23, OE16 and LHCP II are consistent with the conclusion that the cell-specific expression of these genes is regulated at the RNA level. The RNA level differences are especially dramatic in dark-grown maize seedlings after illumination for 24 h.  相似文献   

20.
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