首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
When Chlorella vulgaris llh cells which had been grown in airenriched with 2–4% CO2 (high-CO2 cells) were bubbled withair containing ca. 400 ppm CO2, illumination at an intensityas low as the light compensation point (350 lux) was sufficientto increase the photosynthetic rate under limiting CO2 concentrations.The same treatment induced carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity.The induction of CA activity and increase in photosyntheticrate at limiting CO2 concentrations were observed in the presenceof 10 µM DCMU which completely inhibits photosynthesis.These results indicate that photosynthetic electron transportis not involved in CA induction in Chlorella vulgaris llh cells.The parallelism between the changes in CA activity and the rateof photosynthesis under limiting CO2 concentrations agree withthe previous conclusion that the transport of CO2 from outsideto the site of CO2 fixation is facilitated by CA and hence lowersthe apparent Km(CO2) for photosynthesis. (Received December 24, 1982; Accepted May 10, 1983)  相似文献   

2.
Carbonic anhydrase (EC 4.2.1.1 [EC] ; CA) was purified by affinitychromatography from cells of the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonasreinhardtii which had been grown photoautotrophically in ordinaryair. Antiserum raised in rabbit against this purified CA crossreactedwith Chlamydomonas CA but not with spinach leaf CA nor bovineerythrocyte CA. When the CO2 concentration provided to the algalcells was decreased from 4% to the ordinary air level (0.04%),CA activity and the content of CA protein determined by theimmunodiffusion test showed parallel increases. In contrast,when the CO2 concentration was raised from air level to 4% CO2CA activity and its content expressed on the basis of culturevolume remained rather constant. These results indicate thatsynthesis of the CA protein is induced when the CO2 concentrationis lowered from 4 to 0.04% during algal growth. On the otherhand, the synthesis of CA stops when CO2 concentration is raisedfrom air level to 4%. (Received June 30, 1984; Accepted October 8, 1984)  相似文献   

3.
The photoautotrophic culture of chlorophyllous cells   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Photosynthesis in chlorophyllous cells in heterotrophic cultureswas investigated. Chlorophyllous cells from the amur cork-tree,scotch broom and tobacco, all of which had relatively high chlorophyllcontents (70 to 120 µg/g fresh weight) were selected throughoutcallus induction and cell subculture. When cultured under variouslight intensities, growth was stimulated by increases in lightintensity. This stimulation depended on the chlorophyll contentsof the cells. It disappeared on the addition of photosynthesisinhibitors (DCMU or 2-chloro-4,6-bis(ethylamino)-s-triazine).These phenomena indicate that photosynthesis accounted for athird to a half of cell growth under strong illumination. These heterotrophic cultures were then developed as autotrophiccultures. When these chlorophyllous cells were cultured withaeration using CO2-enriched air in the light condition, thescotch broom and tobacco chlorophyllous cells grew photoautotrophically.Nearly the same amount of growth as with 3% sucrose in the darkwas observed in an autotrophic culture with aeration using aircontaining 1% CO2. The green tobacco cells have been subculturedautotrophically for about one year. (Received November 28, 1977; )  相似文献   

4.
The affinity for NaHCO3 (CO2) in photosynthesis of Anabaenavariabilis ATCC 29413 was much higher in the cells grown underordinary air (low-CO2 cells) than in those grown in air enrichedwith 2–4% CO2 (high-CO2 cells) (pH 8.0, 25?C). Ethoxyzolamide(50 µM) increased the Km(NaHCO3 in low-CO2 cells aboutnine times (from 14.3 to 125), while the maximum rate of photosynthesisdecreased about 20%. When high-CO2 cells were transferred tolow-CO2 conditions, carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity increased,while Km(NaHCO3) in photosynthesis decreased from 140 to 30µM within about 5 h. The addition of CA to the suspensionof both high- and low-CO2 cells enhanced the rates of photosyntheticO2 evolution under CO2-limiting conditions. The rate of 14CO2fixation was much faster than that of H14CO3 fixation.The former reaction was greatly suppressed, while the latterwas enhanced by the addition of CA. These results indicate thatthe active species of inorganic carbon utilized for photosynthesiswas free CO2 irrespective of the CO2 concentration given duringgrowth. It is suggested that CA plays an active role in increasingthe affinity for CO2 in photosynthesis of low-CO2 cells of thisblue-green alga. (Received January 24, 1984; Accepted October 22, 1984)  相似文献   

5.
The rate of photosynthetic 14CO2 fixation in Chlorella vulgaris11h cells in the presence of 0.55 mM NaH14CO3 at pH 8.0 (20?C)was greatly enhanced by the addition of carbonic anhydrase (CA).However, when air containing 400 ppm 14CO2 was bubbled throughthe algal suspension, the rate of 14CO2 fixation immediatelyafter the start of the bubbling was suppressed by CA. Theseeffects of CA were observed in cells which had been grown inair containing 2% CO2 (high-CO2 cells) as well as those grownin ordinary air (containing 0.04% CO2, low-CO2 cells). We thereforeconcluded that, irrespective of the CO2 concentration givento the algal cells during growth, the active species of inorganiccarbon absorbed by Chlorella cells is free CO2 and they cannotutilize bicarbonate. The effects observed in the high-CO2 cellswere much more pronounced than those in the high-CO2 cells.This difference was accounted for by the difference in the affinityfor CO2 in photosynthesis between the high- and low-CO2 cells. (Received May 19, 1978; )  相似文献   

6.
The requirement of sodium for growth of Anabaena variabilisM3 was investigated under low (0.04%) and high (1.5 or 5%) CO2conditions. The growth rates under both conditions were stronglyaffected by NaCl concentrations up to 0.5 mM in the medium.In the presence of 40 µM NaCl, the cells were not ableto grow under a low CO2 condition, but were able to grow undera high CO2 condition. The sodium requirement for growth wasdependent on pH: in the Na+-deficient condition, cells couldgrow at pH6.8, while no growth occurred at pH 8.2, suggestingthat the requirement of Na+ for growth observed in the low CO2condition can be substituted for by a lower pH. In the presence of 20 mM NaCl at pH 7.8, 14CO2 as well as H14CO3were actively transported into the cells which had been grownin air. In contrast, the transport of both of these inorganiccarbon (IC) species was suppressed under the Na+-deficient condition.These results suggest that sodium is required for the stimulationof transport of IC during photosynthesis. This is one of thereasons why Na+ is required for the growth of Anabaena underordinary air and alkaline conditions. (Received September 27, 1986; Accepted March 26, 1987)  相似文献   

7.
Increase of carbonic anhydrase activity was enhanced by decreasingthe O2 concentration when Chlorella vulgaris 11h cells grownunder 3% CO22 in ordinary air were transferred to low CO2 conditions.The carbonic anhydrase activity finally attained under the steadystate was dependent on the CO2 concentration, irrespective ofthe O2 concentration used. (Received April 24, 1988; Accepted February 23, 1988)  相似文献   

8.
Photosynthetically competent chloroplasts were isolated fromcells of Euglena gracilis Z grown photoautotrophically in 1.5%CO2. The isolated chloroplasts were intact and substantiallyfree from cytosolic, mitochondrial and microbody materials.The effects of some compounds on the activity of photosynthetic14CO2 fixation were examined. The optimal pH and sorbitol concentrationwere 8.0 and 0.33 M, respectively. The chloroplasts requireda high level of P, (5 to 20 mM) for the maximal rate of photosynthesis.They were insusceptible to 10 mM of free Mg2+. ATP, ADP andAMP at 1 to 5 mM notably stimulated photosynthesis, althoughhigh concentrations of AMP were unfavorable. In the assay mediumdeveloped for this study, the chloroplasts exhibited photosyntheticactivity of 120µmoles-mg–1 Chl-h–1 at 30?C. Chloroplasts could also be isolated from cells grown under ordinaryair. The rate of photosynthetic 14CO2 fixation at 1 mM NaHl4CO3was higher in these chloroplasts than in those isolated fromcells grown in 1.5% CO2, whereas at 10 mM NaHl4CO3, the ratesof the two types of chloroplasts were nearly the same. Theseresults suggest that the CO2 concentration given during growthof the algal cells affects the affinity for dissolved inorganiccarbon at the chloroplast level. (Received March 30, 1987; Accepted August 17, 1987)  相似文献   

9.
In Dunaliella tertiolecta, D. bioculata and D. viridis the activitiesof phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase and carbonic anhydrase werehigher in the cells grown in ordinary air (low-CO2 cells) thanin those grown in air enriched with 1–5% CO2 (high-CO2cells), whereas in Porphyridium cruentum R-1 there was no differencein phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase activity between these twotypes of cells. Apparent Km(NaHCO3) values for photosynthesisin low-CO2 cells of all species tested were smaller than thosein high-CO2 cells. Most of the 14C was incorporated into 3-phosphoglycerate,sugar mono- and di-phosphates during the initial periods ofphotosynthetic NaH14CO3 indicating that both types of cellsin D. tertiolecta are C3 plants. (Received May 27, 1985; Accepted June 25, 1985)  相似文献   

10.
The activity and intracellular compartmentation of carbonicanhydrase was examined in mesophyll protoplasts of several C3terrestrial species including wheat, since this enzyme may facilitatediffusion of inorganic carbon in solution by converting CO2to bicarbonate. Carbonic anhydrase was located in the mesophyllchloroplast with little or no activity in the cytosolic fraction.In wheat, carbonic anhydrase was absent in etiolated leavesand increased in the light during greening. Thus the enzymemay have a role in photosynthesis in the chloroplast but notin the cytosol of mesophyll cells of higher C3 plants. The amount of CO2 required for half maximum rates of photosynthesis(under low O2) was about two-fold higher for isolated protoplaststhan with isolated chloroplasts of wheat. The form of inorganiccarbon taken up by protoplasts, like that of chloroplasts, isCO2. The results are discussed in relation to a possible resistanceto CO2 transfer in the cytosol of mesophyll cells. (Received February 25, 1985; Accepted May 7, 1985)  相似文献   

11.
When air-grown cells of Chlorococcum littorale was enrichedwith CO2, growth was enhanced after a lag period of one to twodays at 20% CO2, and 3 to 6 days at 40% CO2. Changes in therate of photosynthesis measured as oxygen evolution and CO2fixation, were similar to those observed for growth. Duringthe initial inhibition of photosynthesis in 40% CO2, the activityof PSII was suppressed. In contrast, PSI activity was greatlyenhanced. Air-grown cells of C. littorale possessed comparatively highcarbonic anhydrase (CA) activity which was localized insidethe cells and on the cell surface. Under high CO2 concentrationsextracellular CA activity was greatly suppressed and intracellularactivity almost completely abolished. Phosphoenol pyruvate carboxylaseactivity was also suppressed in high CO2-grown cells. Ribulose-l,5-bisphosphatecarboxylase activity was higher in high-CO2 grown cells thanin air-grown cells. The above results indicated that the lagphase induced by 40% CO2 was due to suppression of PSII activity. 1Part of this work was reported in the International PhotosynthesisCongress, Nagoya, 1992.  相似文献   

12.
Affinity for inorganic carbon in photosynthesis of Euglena gracilisZ was higher in the cells grown in ordinary air than in thosegrown in 4% CO2. The cells grown in ordinary air accumulatedinorganic carbon in the cells to the level far in excess ofthat expected from passive diffusion due to pH gradient acrossthe cell surface membrane. (Received April 5, 1986; Accepted June 25, 1986)  相似文献   

13.
Cells of Dunaliella tertiolecta which had been grown in ordinaryair (low-CO2 cells) had high carbonic anhydrase (CA) activityon the cell surface and mainly utilized HCO3 for photosynthesis.When CA activity on the cell surface was inhibited by Diamoxor subtilisin, the cells utilized CO2. When bovine CA was added,the subtilisin-treated low-CO2 cells utilized mainly HCO3.When grown in air containing 2% CO2, the cells had low CA activityon the cell surface, and preferred CO2 to HCO3. Kineticanalysis of these results indicated that low-CO2 cells of D.tertiolecta absorb CO2 which was converted from HCO3via the CA located on the cell surface. (Received June 29, 1985; Accepted October 9, 1985)  相似文献   

14.
A soybean suspension culture (SB-P) which can grow photoautotrophically in 5% CO2 will not grow in ambient CO2 levels. This elevated CO2 requirement seems to be due to the additive effects of a number of factors. The in vivo activity of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (RuBPcase) is much lower in the SB-P cells, compared to soybean plants. This may be due to the low light intensity used to culture the cells, which has been shown to decrease both the amount and activity in whole plants, resulting in a low rate of net photosynthesis. The RuBPcase activation level is also lowered in air CO2 levels. The presence of the liquid medium raises the cells CO2 compensation concentration (the CO2 concentration reached when the rates of CO2 fixed by photosynthesis and the CO2 respired by the cells are equal). These factors, coupled with the high respiratory loss of CO2 all contribute to reduced net photosynthesis in air, resulting in a photosynthetic capacity that is inadequate for cell survival. Active cell division, low photosynthetic capacity, elevated respiration, and a low ratio of RuBPcase(initial)/phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase are traits that SB-P cells share with young leaf cells, indicating SB-P cell physiology may be comparable to that of young expanding leaves rather than to that of mature leaves.  相似文献   

15.
Intracellular accumulation of inorganic carbon (Ci) and itsfixation in photosynthesis were investigated using siliconeoil layer filtering centrifugation technique with the cellsof Chlorella vulgaris 11h grown under ordinary air. Both CO2and HCO3 were transported into the cells from the reactionmedium and accumulated in the cells, but the rate of transportwas much faster for the former than the latter. 14C-fixationfrom the total transported Ci was much more efficient when CO2was added in the external medium than when HCO3 was added.This indicates that CO2 and HCO3 were not converted tothe common compound in the cells during the initial period ofphotosynthesis. Accumulation of Ci into the cells was much lesssusceptible to low temperature than its fixation. Accumulationof Ci was also observed in the dark. Ethoxyzolamide, an inhibitorof carbonic anhydrase (CA), inhibited the fixation of accumulatedCO2 in the cells, suggesting that CA enhanced the supply ofCO2 to the reaction site of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylasein the stroma. Mechanism for transport and fixation of Ci duringphotosynthesis in low-CO2 cells of C. vulgaris 1lh was proposedfrom these results. (Received March 19, 1986; Accepted June 26, 1986)  相似文献   

16.
Transfer of algal cells of Chlorella regularis from 3% CO2 inair into ordinary air in the light increased external carbonicanhydrase (CA) activity as well as photosynthetic affinity forCO2 by several-fold within 2 h. Since no noticeable differencewas observed in CA activity between intact cells and cell homogenates,CA seemed to be mainly localized on the cell surface. Changesin CA activity and K?(CO2) of photosynthesis were not observedin the dark. CA induction was 50%-inhibited by incubation with10 µM DCMU during adaptation of high-CO2 cells to air,whereas it was considerably suppressed when high-CO2 cells preincubatedwith DCMU in the light for 6 h or without DCMU in the dark for24 h were used. The change in K?(CO2) of photosynthesis wasonly slightly affected by DCMU. Uncoupler like carbonylcyanide-m-chlorophenyl-hydrazone(CCCP) and inhibitors of mitochondrial respiration (KCN plussalicylhydroxamic acid) suppressed CA induction during adaptationof high-CO2 cells to low CO2 conditions. These results suggest that photosynthesis is not essential forCA induction in Chlorella regularis when some amounts of photosyntheticproducts are previously stored in the cells and respirationis active. A decrease in K?(CO2) of photosynthesis during adaptationfrom high to low CO2 was mostly independent on photosynthesis.However, light is essential for both phenomena. (Received July 16, 1990; Accepted January 21, 1991)  相似文献   

17.
Labeling patterns of light and dark 14CO2-fixation in photoautotrophicallyand photomixotrophically cultured tobacco cells were determined.During short term 14CO2 fixation under light, malate(C3–C3carboxylation) was heavily labeled as were phosphoglyceric acidand sugar phosphates(C1–C5 carboxylation). Dark fixationcould not account for this high 14CO2 incorporation into theC4 compounds linked to PEPCase. Two carboxylation pathways linkedto the RuBPCase and PEPCase were indicated in 14CO2-fixationin light in photoautotrophically and photomixotrophically culturedcells. (Received October 25, 1979; )  相似文献   

18.
The effect of phosphinothricin (PPT), an inhibitor of glutaminesynthetase, on several aspects of photosynthesis has been studiedin primary leaves of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.). When photorespirationwas suppressed, either by increasing CO2 concentration to 0.7%,or by decreasing O2 concentration to 1%, feeding the illuminatedleaves with 0·5 or 1·0 mM PPT did not affect photosynthesisto a noticeable extent. Conversely, when PPT-fed leaves wereilluminated in air, CO2 uptake decreased continuously. Modificationof the components of chlorophyll fluorescence quenching indicatedincreased reduction of QA, the primary acceptor of photosystemII, and increased chloroplast energization. Feeding of PPT toleaves illuminated in air increased the quantum requirementof photosynthesis and decreased photosynthetic rate of oxygenevolution in saturating [CO2] and high light intensity. It isconcluded that the effect of PPT on the photochemical processesis indirect, through the inhibition of CO2 assimilation probablycaused by the depletion of intermediates of the reductive pentosephosphate cycle. Key words: Feeding, Hordeumvulgare L., quenching coefficients  相似文献   

19.
Induction of photosynthesis in leaves was prolonged, and steadystate photosynthesis was inhibited by very high CO2 concentrationswhich cause cytoplasmic acidification. Prolonged exposure tohigh CO2 relieved initially observed inhibition of photosynthesisat least partially. The sensitivity of carbon assimilation tohigh CO2 was different in different plant species. Acidificationby CO2 (or subsequent alkalization) was detected by measuringrapid CO2-release from the tissue and by monitoring fluorescenceof pH-indicating dyes which had been fed to the leaves throughthe petiole. The results indicate that two different mechanismsoperate in leaves to achieve and maintain pH homeostasis. Rapidand efficient pH-adjustment is provided by proton/cation exchangeacross the tonoplast. Slower and less efficient regulation occursby formation or consumption of base. In the presence of highCO2 concentrations, protons are pumped from the cytosol intoalready acidic vacuoles. In turn, vacuolar cations replace exportedprotons in the cytosol permitting bicarbonate accumulation andincreasing the pH of the acidified cytosol. Similarly effectiveand fast proton/cation exchange relieves acid-stress in thechloroplast stroma and permits photosynthesis to proceed withhigh quantum efficiency or high light-saturated rates in thepresence of CO2 concentrations which would, in the absence offast cytoplasmic pH regulation, inhibit photosynthesis. By inference,proton/cation exchange must also occur across the mitochondrialboundary. After cytoplasmic pH adjustment in the presence ofhigh CO2, removal of CO2 results in transient cytoplasmic alkalizationand, subsequently, in the return of cytoplasmic pH values tolevels observed prior to acid-stress. In addition to fast pHregulation by rapid proton/cation exchange across biomembranes,slow base production (e.g. NH3-formation) also contributes torelieving acid stress. Base produced in the presence of highCO2 is rapidly consumed after removal of CO2. Implications of the findings in regard to forest damage by potentiallyacidic air pollutants such as SO2 are briefly discussed. (Received November 8, 1993; Accepted February 3, 1994)  相似文献   

20.
The increase in carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity and the decreasein apparent Km(CO2) for photosynthesis induced by reducing CO2concentration during the growth of Chlorella vulgaris 11h cellswere followed under different temperatures. Both changes wereaccelerated by raising the temperature and reached an optimumat 32–37?C. When the CO2 concentration was lowered from3 to 0.04%, the rate of photosynthetic O2 evolution at limitingCO2 concentrations increased and reached a stationary levelafter 3 h. Under such conditions, the concentration of CO2 dissolvedin the algal suspension decreased logarithmically (t1/2=10 min)and reached a concentration in equilibrium with 0.04% CO2 inair after ca. 2 h. When high-CO2 cells grown with 3% CO2 in air were transferredto various lower CO2 concentrations, CA activity and apparentKm(CO2) for photosynthesis changed depending on the CO2 concentration.The CO2 concentration which gives one-half the maximum valuefor Km(CO2) and one-half minimum value foi CA activities wasabout 0.5%. The inverse relationship observed for the changesin CA activity and the affinity for CO2 in photosynthesis supportsthe theory that CA loweres the apparent Km(CO2) for photosynthesisin Chlorella vulgaris 11h. (Received August 27, 1984; Accepted February 8, 1985)  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

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