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1.
Peperomia camptotricha, a tropical epiphyte from Mexico, shows variable forms of Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM). Young leaves exhibit CAM-cycling, while mature leaves show an intermediate type of metabolism, between CAM and CAM-cycling, having approximately the same amount of nighttime gas exchange as daytime. Metabolism of young leaves appears independent of daylength, but mature leaves have a tendency toward more CAM-like metabolism under short days (8 hours). Large differences in the physical appearance of plants were found between those grown under short daylengths and those grown under long daylengths (14 hours). Some anatomical differences were also detected in the leaves. Water stress caused a switch to CAM in young and mature leaves, and as water stress increased, they shifted to CAM-idling.  相似文献   

2.
Chu C  Dai Z  Ku MS  Edwards GE 《Plant physiology》1990,93(3):1253-1260
The facultative halophyte, Mesembryanthemum crystallinum, shifts its mode of carbon assimilation from the C3 pathway to Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) in response to water stress. In this study, exogenously applied abscisic acid (ABA), at micromolar concentrations, could partially substitute for water stress in induction of CAM in this species. ABA at concentrations of 5 to 10 micromolar, when applied to leaves or to the roots in hydroponic culture or in soil, induced the expression of CAM within days (as indicated by the nocturnal accumulation of total titratable acidity and malate). After applying ABA there was also an increase in phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase and NADP-malic enzyme activities. The degree and time course of induction by ABA were comparable to those induced by salt and water stress. Electrophoretic analyses of leaf soluble protein indicate that the increases in phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase activity during the induction by ABA, salt, and water stress are due to an increase in the quantity of the enzyme protein. ABA may be a factor in the stress-induced expression of CAM in M. crystallinum, serving as a functional link between stress and biochemical adaptation.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Molecular Genetics of Crassulacean Acid Metabolism   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Most higher plants assimilate atmospheric CO2 through the C3 pathway of photosynthesis using ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco). However, when CO2 availability is reduced by environmental stress conditions, the incomplete discrimination of CO2 over O2 by Rubisco leads to increased photorespiration, a process that reduces the efficiency of C3 photosynthesis. To overcome the wasteful process of photorespiration, approximately 10% of higher plant species have evolved two alternate strategies for photosynthetic CO2 assimilation, C4 photosynthesis and Crassulacean acid metabolism. Both of these biochemical pathways employ a "CO2 pump" to elevate intracellular CO2 concentrations in the vicinity of Rubisco, suppressing photorespiration and therefore improving the competitiveness of these plants under conditions of high light intensity, high temperature, or low water availability. This CO2 pump consists of a primary carboxylating enzyme, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase. In C4 plants, this CO2-concentrating mechanism is achieved by the coordination of two carboxylating reactions that are spatially separated into mesophyll and bundle-sheath cell types (for review, see R.T. Furbank, W.C. Taylor [1995] Plant Cell 7: 797-807;M.S.B. Ku, Y. Kano-Murakami, M. Matsuoka [1996] Plant Physiol 111: 949-957). In contrast, Crassulacean acid metabolism plants perform both carboxylation reactions within one cell type, but the two reactions are separated in time. Both pathways involve cell-specific changes in the expression of many genes that are not present in C3 plants.  相似文献   

5.
NAD-malic enzyme (NAD-ME) functions to decarboxylate malatein the light in leaves of certain species displaying Crassulaceanacid metabolism (CAM). The properties of NAD-ME in desaltedextracts from the inducible CAM species, Mesembryanthemum crystallinumwere examined. The shapes of the malate saturation curve andthe activity versus pH curve at 10 mM malate were dependenton the presence of the activator CoA. The malate saturationcurve was sigmoidal in the absence of an activator and hyperbolicin the presence of CoA. The pH optimum with 10mM malate andMn2+ as cofactor was as low as 6.5 without an activator, andincreased to 7.2 in the presence of CoA. Fumarate activationwas synergistic with CoA above pH 7.2. The enzyme displayedhysteretic behavior under suboptimal assay conditions. Rapid extraction and desalting of the enzyme (<1.5 mim) followedimmediately by assay did not reveal any difference in the propertiesof the enzyme on a day/night basis. It is proposed that diurnalregulation of the enzyme in vivo is mediated by pH and malatelevel without a change in the oligomeric form of the enzyme.The molecular weight of the enzyme was approximately 350,000at pH 6.5 or 7.8. The enzyme obtained from M. crystallinum inthe C3 mode was very similar to the CAM enzyme except that itdisplayed a lower Vmax. 3 Current address: MSU-DOE Plant Research Lab, Michigan StateUniversity, E. Lansing, Michigan, U.S.A. 48824. (Received October 2, 1984; Accepted December 20, 1984)  相似文献   

6.
Fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase) and sedoheptulose-1,7-bisphosphatase (SBPase) were identified and purified from the Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) plant, Kalanchoë daigremontiana. FBPase and SBPase showed respective molecular weights of 180,000 and 76,000, and exhibited immunological cross-reactivity with their counterparts from chloroplasts of C3 (spinach) and C4 (corn) plants. Based on Western blot analysis, FBPase was composed of four identical 45,000-dalton subunits and SBPase of two identical 38,000-dalton subunits. Immunological evidence, together with physical properties, indicated that both enzymes were of chloroplast origin.

Kalanchoë FBPase and SBPase could be activated by thioredoxin f reduced chemically by dithiothreitol or photochemically by a reconstituted Kalanchoë ferredoxin/thioredoxin system. Both enzymes were activated synergistically by reduced thioredoxin f and thier respective substrates.

Kalanchoë FBPase could be partially activated by Mg2+ at concentrations greater than 10 millimolar; however, such activation was considerably less than that observed in the presence of reduced thioredoxin and Ca2+, especially in the pH range between 7.8 and 8.3. In contrast to FBPase, Kalanchoë SBPase exhibited an absolute requirement for a dithiol such as reduced thioredoxin irrespective of Mg2+ concentration. However, like FBPase, increased Mg2+ concentrations enhanced the thioredoxin-linked activation of this enzyme.

In conjunction with these studies, an NADP-linked malate dehydrogenase (NADP-MDH) was identified in cell-free preparations of Kalanchoë leaves which required reduced thioredoxin m for activity.

These results indicate that Kalanchoë FBPase, SBPase, and NADP-MDH share physical and regulatory properties with their equivalents in C3 and C4 plants. In contrast to previous evidence, all three enzymes appear to have the capacity to be photoregulated in chloroplasts of CAM plants, thereby providing a means for the functional segregation of glucan synthesis and degradation.

  相似文献   

7.
8.
Although leaves have to accommodate markedly different metabolic flux patterns in the light and the dark, models of leaf metabolism based on flux-balance analysis (FBA) have so far been confined to consideration of the network under continuous light. An FBA framework is presented that solves the two phases of the diel cycle as a single optimization problem and, thus, provides a more representative model of leaf metabolism. The requirement to support continued export of sugar and amino acids from the leaf during the night and to meet overnight cellular maintenance costs forces the model to set aside stores of both carbon and nitrogen during the day. With only minimal constraints, the model successfully captures many of the known features of C3 leaf metabolism, including the recently discovered role of citrate synthesis and accumulation in the night as a precursor for the provision of carbon skeletons for amino acid synthesis during the day. The diel FBA model can be applied to other temporal separations, such as that which occurs in Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) photosynthesis, allowing a system-level analysis of the energetics of CAM. The diel model predicts that there is no overall energetic advantage to CAM, despite the potential for suppression of photorespiration through CO2 concentration. Moreover, any savings in enzyme machinery costs through suppression of photorespiration are likely to be offset by the higher flux demand of the CAM cycle. It is concluded that energetic or nitrogen use considerations are unlikely to be evolutionary drivers for CAM photosynthesis.Photosynthetic metabolism continues to be studied intensively because of its importance for crop performance and the global carbon cycle in relation to climate change. The metabolic pathways and enzymes involved in carbon fixation and related metabolic processes, such as the synthesis of Suc and starch, have been well-characterized. However, it is apparent that full appreciation of leaf metabolism requires these metabolic processes to be placed in the context of the wider metabolic network (Szecowka et al., 2013). This is particularly important for predicting how strategies for engineering improved photosynthesis (Maurino and Weber, 2013) may affect network properties, such as redox and energy balancing (Kramer and Evans, 2011).Flux balance analysis (FBA) has emerged as the method of choice for predicting fluxes in large metabolic network models (Sweetlove and Ratcliffe, 2011), and several flux balance models have explicitly considered photosynthetic metabolism in a variety of plants species and microorganisms, including cyanobacteria (Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803; Knoop et al., 2010, 2013; Montagud et al., 2010; Nogales et al., 2012; Saha et al., 2012), Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (Boyle and Morgan, 2009; de Oliveira Dal''Molin et al., 2011), Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana; de Oliveira Dal’Molin et al., 2010a), rapeseed (Brassica napus) embryos (Hay and Schwender, 2011), rice (Oryza sativa; Poolman et al., 2013), maize (Zea mays; Saha et al., 2011), and several C4 plants (de Oliveira Dal’Molin et al., 2010b). These models successfully predicted the metabolic routes involved in the fixation of CO2 into different biomass components in the light. However, one major feature of metabolism of photosynthetic organisms, namely the interaction between light and dark metabolism, is neglected in most of these studies. Effectively, most models assume that the organism grows in constant light, which is rarely true in natural conditions.Apart from the obvious switch from photoautotrophic to heterotrophic metabolism between day and night, interactions between the two phases can occur through the temporal separation of storage compound synthesis and subsequent mobilization. For example, it has been shown that the carbon skeletons used for nitrogen assimilation during the day are largely provided by carboxylic acids that were synthesized and stored during the previous night (Gauthier et al., 2010). Such temporal shifts of carbon and nitrogen metabolism have substantial implications for fluxes in the central metabolic network of leaves in the light (Tcherkez et al., 2009). Interactions between temporally separated metabolic events are also a critical feature of Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) photosynthesis, in which CO2 is initially fixed at night by phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC), leading to night storage of carboxylic acids (mainly malic acid) that are decarboxylated during the day to provide CO2 for the conventional photosynthetic carbon assimilation cycle. Although this is principally an adaptation to arid environments, there are unresolved questions as to whether CAM photosynthesis is energetically more efficient than C3 photosynthesis (Winter and Smith, 1996). Such questions are becoming more important in the light of the proposed use of CAM plants as a source of biofuel (Yan et al., 2011).One recent study used FBA to consider both light and dark metabolism in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 over a complete diel cycle divided into 192 time steps (Knoop et al., 2013). Time courses of metabolic flux predictions over a diel cycle were simulated by altering the constraints on metabolic outputs (biomass composition) depending on the time point and based on empirical rules. This simulation led to a highly constrained model and did not allow the range of potential interactions between the day and night phases to be fully explored. We have developed an alternative modeling framework for integrated day-night FBA, in which the metabolic fluxes in the light and dark phases were simulated simultaneously in a single optimization problem. A predefined list of storage compounds that can accumulate freely over the diurnal cycle was made available to the model. The model was then free to choose among these storage compounds, the choice being dictated by the need to satisfy the objective function within the applied constraints. This diurnal modeling framework was used to explore the interactions between light and dark metabolism and to predict the metabolic fluxes in the light in both C3 and CAM photosynthesis. We show that accounting for day-night interactions leads to an altered pattern of fluxes during the day that provides a better match with experimental observations. We were also able to simulate network flux distributions in CAM metabolism. The model successfully predicts the classic CAM cycle in the different CAM subtypes and allows a comparison of the energetic efficiency and metabolic costs between CAM and C3 photosynthetic metabolism.  相似文献   

9.
Cell-free preparations of the Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) plant, Kalanchoë daigremontiana, were analyzed for thioredoxins and ferredoxin-thioredoxin reductase. Three distinct forms of thioredoxin were identified in Kalanchoë leaves, two of which specifically activated fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase (designated f1 and f2) and a third which activated NADP-malate dehydrogenase (thioredoxin m). The apparent molecular weight of both forms of thioredoxin f was 11,000 and that of thioredoxin m was 10,000. In parallel studies, ferredoxin and ferredoxin-thioredoxin reductase were purified from Kalanchoë leaf preparations. Kalanchoë ferredoxin-thioredoxin reductase was similar to that of C3 and C4 plants in molecular weight (31,000) and immunological cross-reactivity. Kalanchoë ferredoxin-thioredoxin reductase exhibited an affinity for ferredoxin as demonstrated by its binding to an immobilized ferredoxin affinity column. The purified components of the Kalanchoë ferredoxin-thioredoxin system could be recombined to function in the photoregulation of chloroplast enzymes. The data suggest that the ferredoxin/thioredoxin system plays a role in enzyme regulation of all higher plants irrespective of whether they show C3, C4, or CAM photosynthesis.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Diurnal patterns of CO2 exchange and fluctuations of tissuemalic acid concentrations were investigated in three speciesof Commelinaceae: Callisia fragrans and Tripogandra multiflorafrom Jamaica, and Tradescantia brevifolia from southern Texas.Very low levels of CAM gas exchange were induced by droughtstress in C. fragrans and T. multiflora. In addition, past indicationsof CAM-cycling in the two Jamaican species were confirmed indrought-stressed plants; however, only C. fragrans exhibitedCAM-cycling under well-watered conditions. CAM-cycling underdrought stress was also found in T. brevifolia. This constitutesthe first report of CAM (sensu lato) in the genus Tradescantia.The importance of low-level CAM in these three species is discussedas a potential adaptation to drought.Copyright 1994, 1999 AcademicPress Callisia fragrans, Tradescantia brevifolia, Tripogandra multiflora, Commelinaceae, CO2 exchange, Crassulacean acid metabolism, CAM-cycling, CAM-idling, drought stress, malic acid fluctuations  相似文献   

12.
Zotz G  Winter K 《Plant physiology》1993,102(3):835-841
Diel courses of net CO2 exchange of leaves were studied in Clusia uvitana (Clusiaceae), a tropical Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) hemiepiphyte, growing in the crown of a 47-m tall kapok tree on Barro Colorado Island, Panama. Measurements on days without precipitation showed that net uptake of atmospheric CO2 occurred at night, a feature of CAM, as well as in the early morning and late afternoon. During 36 h of almost continuous rainfall, nocturnal net CO2 uptake was abolished and the diel pattern of net CO2 exchange became similar to that of a C3 plant. Exposing well-watered, potted plants of Clusia in the laboratory to temperatures and photosynthetic photon flux densities similar to those during the tropical rainstorm also abolished nocturnal net CO2 uptake. In contrast, Kalanchoe pinnata (Crassulaceae), an obligate CAM plant, still showed net CO2 dark fixation following the same low-light and moderate-temperature conditions, albeit at decreased rates. During these 12-h photoperiods, titratable acidity in Clusia increased slightly above its high level measured at the end of the previous dark period, whereas in Kalanchoe, the acid content decreased by about 40%. A survey among outer canopy leaves of Clusia on Barro Colorado Island showed that leaves that exhibited little or no nocturnal acidification maintained high levels of H+ at dawn and dusk. Progressively lower levels of H+ at dusk were accompanied by progressively higher nocturnal increases in H+. The data suggest that in C. uvitana the rapid switching between CAM- and C3-type carbon fixation that may occur within 24 h in response to environmental changes is controlled by the acidity status of the leaves in the light. Nocturnal CO2 fixation is enhanced by conditions that decrease the organic acid content during the light period.  相似文献   

13.
Ecophysiology of Crassulacean Acid Metabolism (CAM)   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
Lüttge U 《Annals of botany》2004,93(6):629-652
BACKGROUND AND SCOPE: Crassulacean Acid Metabolism (CAM) as an ecophysiological modification of photosynthetic carbon acquisition has been reviewed extensively before. Cell biology, enzymology and the flow of carbon along various pathways and through various cellular compartments have been well documented and discussed. The present attempt at reviewing CAM once again tries to use a different approach, considering a wide range of inputs, receivers and outputs. INPUT: Input is given by a network of environmental parameters. Six major ones, CO(2), H(2)O, light, temperature, nutrients and salinity, are considered in detail, which allows discussion of the effects of these factors, and combinations thereof, at the individual plant level ('physiological aut-ecology'). RECEIVERS: Receivers of the environmental cues are the plant types genotypes and phenotypes, the latter including morphotypes and physiotypes. CAM genotypes largely remain 'black boxes', and research endeavours of genomics, producing mutants and following molecular phylogeny, are just beginning. There is no special development of CAM morphotypes except for a strong tendency for leaf or stem succulence with large cells with big vacuoles and often, but not always, special water storage tissues. Various CAM physiotypes with differing degrees of CAM expression are well characterized. OUTPUT: Output is the shaping of habitats, ecosystems and communities by CAM. A number of systems are briefly surveyed, namely aquatic systems, deserts, salinas, savannas, restingas, various types of forests, inselbergs and paramós. CONCLUSIONS: While quantitative census data for CAM diversity and biomass are largely missing, intuition suggests that the larger CAM domains are those systems which are governed by a network of interacting stress factors requiring versatile responses and not systems where a single stress factor strongly prevails. CAM is noted to be a strategy for variable, flexible and plastic niche occupation rather than lush productivity. 'Physiological syn-ecology' reveals that phenotypic plasticity constitutes the ecophysiological advantage of CAM.  相似文献   

14.
NADP-malic enzyme (EC 1.1.1.40 [EC] ), which is involved in Crassulaceanacid metabolism (CAM), was purified to electrophoretic homogeneityfrom the leaves of the inducible CAM plant Mesembryanthemumcrystallinum. The NADP-malic enzyme, which was purified 1,146-fold,has a specific activity of 68.8 µmol (mg protein)–1min–1. The molecular weight of the subunits of the enzymewas 64 kDa. The native molecular weight of the enzyme was determinedby gel-filtration to be 390 kDa, indicating that the purifiedNADP-malic enzyme is a hexamer of identical subunits. The optimalpH for activity of the enzyme was around 7.2. Double-reciprocalplots of the enzymatic activity as a function of the concentrationof L-malate yielded straight lines both at pH 7.2 and at pH7.8 and did not reveal any evidence for cooperativity of bindingof L-malate. The Km value for L-malate was 0.35 mM. Hill plotsof the activity as a function of the concentration of NADP+indicated positive cooperativity in the binding of NADP+ tothe enzyme with a Hill coefficient (nH) of 2.0. An S0.5 value(the concentration giving half-maximal activity) of 9.9 µMfor NADP+ was obtained. Oxaloacetate inhibited the activityof the NADP-malic enzyme. Effects of succinate and NaHCO3 onthe activity of NADP-malic enzyme were small. (Received October 30, 1991; Accepted May 1, 1992)  相似文献   

15.
Cockburn W 《Plant physiology》1979,63(6):1029-1032
Measurements of internal gas phase CO2 concentration, stomatal resistance, and acid content were made in Crassulacean acid metabolism plants growing under natural conditions. High CO2 concentrations, sometimes in excess of 2%, were observed during the day in a range of taxonomically widely separated plants (Opuntia ficus-indica L., Opuntia basilaris Engelm. and Bigel., Agave desertii Engelm., Yucca schidigera Roezl. ex Ortiges, Ananas comosus [L.] Merr., Aloe vera L., Cattleya sp. and Phalanopsis sp.) and below ambient air concentrations were observed at night.  相似文献   

16.
Intact plants of the halophilic species Mesembryanthemum crystallinum were induced to exhibit Crassulacean acid metabolism by irrigation with nutrient solution containing 500 millimolar NaCl. During the induction period, the extractable activity of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPcase) increased approximately 40-fold. This increase was linearly correlated with a mass increase of PEPcase protein as measured by single radial immunodiffusion. De novo synthesis of PEPcase protein was shown by immunoprecipitation of the newly synthesized, radioactively labeled protein in leaf discs from salt-treated plants. Nontreated plants were characterized by a low level of the enzyme and low rates of PEPcase synthesis. Synthesis of this enzyme in leaf discs was correlated with the concentration of NaCl in the nutrient solution during growth.  相似文献   

17.
Summary The effect of photoperiod on Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) in Kalanchoe blossfeldiana Poellniz, cv. Tom Thumb, has characteristics similar to its effect on flowering in this plant (although these two phenomena are not causally related). The photoperiodic control of CAM is based on (a) dependance on phytochrome, (b) an endogenous circadian rhythm of sensitivity to photoperiodic signals, (c) a balance between specific positive (increase in enzyme capacity) and negative (inhibitory substances) effects of the photoperiod. Variations in malate content, capacity of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase, and capacity of CAM inhibitors in young leaves were measured under photoperiodic conditions noninductive for CAM and after transfer into photoperiodic conditions inductive for CAM. Essential characteristics of the photoperiodic induction of CAM are: 1) lag time for malate accumulation; 2) after-effect of the inductive photoperiod on the malate accumulation, on the increase in PEP carboxylase capacity, and on the decrease in the level of long-day produced inhibitors; final levels of malate, enzyme capacity and inhibitor are proportional to the number of inductive day-night cycles; 3) cireadian rhythm in PEP carboxylase capacity with a fixed phase under noninductive photoperiods and a continuously shifting phase under inductive photoperiods, after complex advancing and delaying transients. Kinetic similarities indicate that photoperiodic control of different physiological functions, namely, CAM and flowering, may be achieved through similar mechanisms. Preliminary results with species of Bryophyllum and Sedum support this hypothesis. Phase relationships suggest different degrees of coupling between endogenous enzymic rhythm and photoperiod, depending on whether the plants are under long days or short days.  相似文献   

18.
Gravatt  D.A. 《Photosynthetica》2003,41(3):449-452
In Sedum wrightii grown in a growth chamber, detached leaves could survive for at least 120 d with a high rate of success for propagule formation. The pattern of gas exchange, associated with CAM, may be important in extending the period during which the detached leaf remains physiologically active. The added benefit for the developing propagule, still attached to the parent leaf, is an additional source of water and saccharide reserves over an extended period necessary for rooting. Drought survival of propagules may be determined by the amount of water-storing tissue in the detached leaf.  相似文献   

19.
Species of the large family Orchidaceae display a spectacular array of adaptations and rapid speciations that are linked to several innovative features, including specialized pollination syndromes, colonization of epiphytic habitats, and the presence of Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM), a water-conserving photosynthetic pathway. To better understand the role of CAM and epiphytism in the evolutionary expansion of tropical orchids, we sampled leaf carbon isotopic composition of 1,103 species native to Panama and Costa Rica, performed character state reconstruction and phylogenetic trait analysis of CAM and epiphytism, and related strong CAM, present in 10% of species surveyed, to climatic variables and the evolution of epiphytism in tropical regions. Altitude was the most important predictor of photosynthetic pathway when all environmental variables were taken into account, with CAM being most prevalent at low altitudes. By creating integrated orchid trees to reconstruct ancestral character states, we found that C3 photosynthesis is the ancestral state and that CAM has evolved at least 10 independent times with several reversals. A large CAM radiation event within the Epidendroideae, the most species-rich epiphytic clade of any known plant group, is linked to a Tertiary species radiation that originated 65 million years ago. Our study shows that parallel evolution of CAM is present among subfamilies of orchids, and correlated divergence between photosynthetic pathways and epiphytism can be explained by the prevalence of CAM in low-elevation epiphytes and rapid speciation of high-elevation epiphytes in the Neotropics, contributing to the astounding diversity in the Orchidaceae.  相似文献   

20.
Expanded leaves of Mesembryanthemum crystallinum L. performingC3 photosynthesis were induced to perform pronounced Crassulaceanacid metabolism (CAM) by exposing the plant roots to higherNaCl concentration. Levels of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylaseactivity increased 10-fold during the 7-day induction period.Densitometric analysis of Coomassie-stained sodium dodecyl sulfate(SDS) polyacrylamide gradient slab gels of leaf extracts, preparedduring the course of CAM induction, revealed that at least fivebands of polypeptides increased in content (kilodalton valuesof 98, 91, 45, 41, 38). Higher levels of three additional polypeptides(kilodalton values of 102, 76, 33) became apparent after tissuehad been grown for 2 weeks at 400 mM NaCl. Of these polypeptides,that having a mass of 98 kilodaltons was identified as the subunitof PEP carboxylase by comparison with the corresponding bandfrom partially purified PEP carboxylase from the same tissue.Only a faint 98 kilodalton band was evident on SDS gels fortissue operating in the C3 mode; staining intensity at thislocation increased with increasing NaCl-salinity in the rootingmedium until CAM was fully induced. These data provide evidencefor net synthesis of PEP carboxylase and several other proteinsduring the induction of CAM in M. crystallinum. 1 Present address: USDA, P. O. Box 867 Airport Rd., Beckley,WV. 25801, U.S.A. 2 Present address: Department of Botany, Washington State University,Pullman, Washington 99164, U.S.A. 3 Present address: Botanisches Institut der Universit?t, MittlererDallenbergweg 64, 8700 W?rzburg, W.-Germany. (Received October 27, 1981; Accepted March 15, 1982)  相似文献   

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