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1.
Ultraviolet (UV) light causes a specific leakage of K+ from cultured rose cells (Rosa damascena). During K+ efflux, there is also an increase in extracellular HCO3 and acidification of the cell interior. We hypothesized that the HCO3 originated from intracellular hydration of respiratory CO2 and served as a charge balancing mechanism during K+ efflux, the K+ and HCO3 being cotransported out of the cell through specific channels. An alternative hypothesis which would yield similar results would be the countertransport of K+ and H+. To test these hypotheses, we studied the effect of a range of external pH values (pH 5-9), regulated by various methods (pH-stat, 100 millimolar Tris-Mes buffer, or CO2 partial pressure), on the UV-induced K+ efflux. Both UV-C (<290 nanometers) and UV-B (290-310 nanometers) induced K+ efflux with a minimum at about pH 6 to 7, and greater efflux at pH values of 5, 8, and 9. Since pH values of 8 and 9 increased instead of reduced the efflux of K+, these data are not consistent with the notion that the efflux of K+ is dependent on an influx of H+, a process that would be sensitive to external H+ concentration. We suggest that the effect of pH on K+ efflux may be mediated through the titration of specific K+-transporting proteins or channels in the plasma membrane. Since we could not detect the presence of carbonic anhydrase activity in cell extracts, we could not use the location of this enzyme to aid in our interpretation regarding the site of hydration of CO2.  相似文献   

2.
In the preceding paper (Bevensee, M.O., R.A. Weed, and W.F. Boron. 1997. J. Gen. Physiol. 110: 453–465.), we showed that a Na+-driven influx of HCO3 causes the increase in intracellular pH (pHi) observed when astrocytes cultured from rat hippocampus are exposed to 5% CO2/17 mM HCO3 . In the present study, we used the pH-sensitive fluorescent indicator 2′,7′-biscarboxyethyl-5,6-carboxyfluorescein (BCECF) and the perforated patch-clamp technique to determine whether this transporter is a Na+-driven Cl-HCO3 exchanger, an electrogenic Na/HCO3 cotransporter, or an electroneutral Na/HCO3 cotransporter. To determine if the transporter is a Na+-driven Cl-HCO3 exchanger, we depleted the cells of intracellular Cl by incubating them in a Cl-free solution for an average of ∼11 min. We verified the depletion with the Cl-sensitive dye N-(6-methoxyquinolyl)acetoethyl ester (MQAE). In Cl-depleted cells, the pHi still increases after one or more exposures to CO2/HCO3 . Furthermore, the pHi decrease elicited by external Na+ removal does not require external Cl. Therefore, the transporter cannot be a Na+-driven Cl-HCO3 exchanger. To determine if the transporter is an electrogenic Na/ HCO3 cotransporter, we measured pHi and plasma membrane voltage (Vm) while removing external Na+, in the presence/absence of CO2/HCO3 and in the presence/absence of 400 μM 4,4′-diisothiocyanatostilbene-2,2′-disulphonic acid (DIDS). The CO2/HCO3 solutions contained 20% CO2 and 68 mM HCO3 , pH 7.3, to maximize the HCO3 flux. In pHi experiments, removing external Na+ in the presence of CO2/HCO3 elicited an equivalent HCO3 efflux of 281 μM s−1. The HCO3 influx elicited by returning external Na+ was inhibited 63% by DIDS, so that the predicted DIDS-sensitive Vm change was 3.3 mV. Indeed, we found that removing external Na+ elicited a DIDS-sensitive depolarization that was 2.6 mV larger in the presence than in the absence of CO2/ HCO3 . Thus, the Na/HCO3 cotransporter is electrogenic. Because a cotransporter with a Na+:HCO3 stoichiometry of 1:3 or higher would predict a net HCO3 efflux, rather than the required influx, we conclude that rat hippocampal astrocytes have an electrogenic Na/HCO3 cotransporter with a stoichiometry of 1:2.  相似文献   

3.
In high inorganic carbon grown (1% CO2 [volume/volume]) cells of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus PCC7942, the carbonic anhydrase (CA) inhibitor, ethoxyzolamide (EZ), was found to inhibit the rate of CO2 uptake and to reduce the final internal inorganic carbon (Ci) pool size reached. The relationship between CO2 fixation rate and internal Ci concentration in high Ci grown cells was little affected by EZ. This suggests that in intact cells internal CA activity was unaffected by EZ. High Ci grown cells readily took up CO2 but had little or no capacity for HCO3 uptake. These cells appear to possess a CO2 utilizing Ci pump that has a CA-like function associated with the transport step such that HCO3 is the species delivered to the cell interior. This CA-like step may be the site of inhibition by EZ. Low Ci grown cells possess both CO2 uptake and HCO3 uptake activities and EZ inhibited both activities to a similar degree, suggesting that a common step in CO2 and HCO3 uptake (such as the Ci pump) may have been affected. The inhibitor had no apparent effect on internal CO2/HCO3 equilibria (internal CA function) in low Ci grown cells.  相似文献   

4.
Carbonic anhydrase (CA) enzymes catalyze the chemical equilibration among CO2, HCO3 and H+. Intracellular CA (CAi) isoforms are present in certain types of cancer, and growing evidence suggests that low levels correlate with disease severity. However, their physiological role remains unclear. Cancer cell CAi activity, measured as cytoplasmic CO2 hydration rate (kf), ranged from high in colorectal HCT116 (∼2 s−1), bladder RT112 and colorectal HT29, moderate in fibrosarcoma HT1080 to negligible (i.e. spontaneous kf = 0.18 s−1) in cervical HeLa and breast MDA-MB-468 cells. CAi activity in cells correlated with CAII immunoreactivity and enzymatic activity in membrane-free lysates, suggesting that soluble CAII is an important intracellular isoform. CAi catalysis was not obligatory for supporting acid extrusion by H+ efflux or HCO3 influx, nor for maintaining intracellular pH (pHi) uniformity. However, in the absence of CAi activity, acid loading from a highly alkaline pHi was rate-limited by HCO3 supply from spontaneous CO2 hydration. In solid tumors, time-dependence of blood flow can result in fluctuations of CO2 partial pressure (pCO2) that disturb cytoplasmic CO2-HCO3-H+ equilibrium. In cancer cells with high CAi activity, extracellular pCO2 fluctuations evoked faster and larger pHi oscillations. Functionally, these resulted in larger pH-dependent intracellular [Ca2+] oscillations and stronger inhibition of the mTORC1 pathway reported by S6 kinase phosphorylation. In contrast, the pHi of cells with low CAi activity was less responsive to pCO2 fluctuations. Such low pass filtering would “buffer” cancer cell pHi from non-steady-state extracellular pCO2. Thus, CAi activity determines the coupling between pCO2 (a function of tumor perfusion) and pHi (a potent modulator of cancer cell physiology).  相似文献   

5.
The nature of the inorganic carbon (Ci) species actively taken up by cyanobacteria CO2 or HCO3 has been investigated. The kinetics of CO2 uptake, as well as that of HCO3 uptake, indicated the involvement of a saturable process. The apparent affinity of the uptake mechanism for CO2 was higher than that for HCO3. Though the calculated Vmax was the same in both cases, the maximum rate of uptake actually observed was higher when HCO3 was supplied. Ci uptake was far more sensitive to the carbonic anhydrase inhibitor ethoxyzolamide when CO2 was the species supplied. Observations of photosynthetic rate as a function of intracellular Ci level (following supply of CO2 or HCO3 for 5 seconds) led to the inference that HCO3 is the species which arrives at the inner membrane surface, regardless of the species supplied. When the two species were supplied simultaneously, mutual inhibition of uptake was observed.

On the basis of these and other results, a model is proposed postulating that a carboic anhydrase-like subunit of the Ci transport apparatus binds CO2 and releases HCO3 at or near a membrane porter. The latter transports HCO3 ions to the cell interior.

  相似文献   

6.
The aim of this study was to determine how Chondrus crispus, a marine red macroalga, acquires the inorganic carbon (Ci) it utilizes for photosynthetic carbon fixation. Analyses of Ci uptake were done using silicone oil centrifugation (using multicellular fragments of thallus), infrared gas analysis, and gas chromatography. Inhibitors of carbonic anhydrase (CA), the band 3 anion exchange protein and Na+/K+ exchange were used in the study. It was found that: (a) C. crispus does not accumulate Ci internally above the concentration attainable by diffusion; (b) the initial Ci fixtion rate of C. crispus fragments saturates at approximately 3 to 4 millimolar Ci; (c) CA is involved in carbon uptake; its involvement is greatest at high HCO3 and low CO2 concentration, suggesting its participation in the dehydration of HCO3 to CO2; (d) C. crispus has an intermediate Ci compensation point; and (e) no evidence of any active or facilitated mechanism for the transport of HCO3 was detected. These data support the view that photosynthetic Ci uptake does not involve active transport. Rather, CO2, derived from HCO3 catalyzed by external CA, passively diffuses across the plasma membrane of C. crispus. Intracellular CA also enhances the fixation of carbon in C. crispus.  相似文献   

7.
Ogawa T 《Plant physiology》1990,94(2):760-765
Eighty mutants of Synechocystis PCC6803 that require high CO2 for growth were examined with a mass spectrometer for their ability to take up CO2 in the light. Two of these mutants (type A) did not show any CO2 uptake while the rest of the mutants (type B) took up CO2 actively. Type A mutants (RKa and RKb) and one type B mutant (RK11) were partially characterized. At 3% CO2, growth rates of the mutants and the wild type (WT) were similar. Under air levels of CO2, growth of RKa and RKb was very slow, and RK11 did not grow at all. The photosynthetic affinities for inorganic carbon (Ci) in these three mutants were about 100 times lower than the affinity in WT. The following characteristics of type A mutants indicated that the mutants have a defect in their CO2-transport system: (a) the activity of 13C18O2 uptake in RKa and RKb in the light was less than 5% the activity in WT, and (b) each mutant had only a low level of activity of 14CO2 uptake as measured by the method of silicone oil-filtering centrifugation. The HCO3-transport system was also impaired in these mutants. The activity of H14CO3 uptake was negligibly low in RKb and was one-third the activity of WT in RKa. On the other hand, the type B mutant, RK11, transported CO2 and HCO3 into the intracellular Ci pool as actively as WT but was unable to utilize it for photosynthesis. Complementation analysis of type A mutants indicated that RKa and RKb have mutations in different regions of the genome. These results suggested that at least two kinds of proteins are involved in the Ci-transport system.  相似文献   

8.
Light-dependent inorganic C (Ci) transport and accumulation in air-grown cells of Synechococcus UTEX 625 were examined with a mass spectrometer in the presence of inhibitors or artificial electron acceptors of photosynthesis in an attempt to drive CO2 or HCO3 uptake separately by the cyclic or linear electron transport chains. In the presence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea, the cells were able to accumulate an intracellular Ci pool of 20 mm, even though CO2 fixation was completely inhibited, indicating that cyclic electron flow was involved in the Ci-concentrating mechanism. When 200 μm N,N-dimethyl-p-nitrosoaniline was used to drain electrons from ferredoxin, a similar Ci accumulation was observed, suggesting that linear electron flow could support the transport of Ci. When carbonic anhydrase was not present, initial CO2 uptake was greatly reduced and the extracellular [CO2] eventually increased to a level higher than equilibrium, strongly suggesting that CO2 transport was inhibited and that Ci accumulation was the result of active HCO3 transport. With 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea-treated cells, Ci transport and accumulation were inhibited by inhibitors of CO2 transport, such as COS and Na2S, whereas Li+, an HCO3-transport inhibitor, had little effect. In the presence of N,N-dimethyl-p-nitrosoaniline, Ci transport and accumulation were not inhibited by COS and Na2S but were inhibited by Li+. These results suggest that CO2 transport is supported by cyclic electron transport and that HCO3 transport is supported by linear electron transport.  相似文献   

9.
The active transport of CO2 in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus UTEX 625 was inhibited by H2S. Treatment of the cells with up to 150 micromolar H2S + HS at pH 8.0 had little effect on Na+-dependent HCO3 transport or photosynthetic O2 evolution, but CO2 transport was inhibited by more than 90%. CO2 transport was restored when H2S was removed by flushing with N2. At constant total H2S + HS concentrations, inhibition of CO2 transport increased as the ratio of H2S to HS increased, suggesting a direct role for H2S in the inhibitory process. Hydrogen sulfide does not appear to serve as a substrate for transport. In the presence of H2S and Na+ -dependent HCO3 transport, the extracellular CO2 concentration rose considerably above its equilibrium level, but was maintained far below its equilibrium level in the absence of H2S. The inhibition of CO2 transport, therefore, revealed an ongoing leakage from the cells of CO2 which was derived from the intracellular dehydration of HCO3 which itself had been recently transported into the cells. Normally, leaked CO2 is efficiently transported back into the cell by the CO2 transport system, thus maintaining the extracellular CO2 concentration near zero. It is suggested that CO2 transport not only serves as a primary means of inorganic carbon acquisition for photosynthesis but also serves as a means of recovering CO2 lost from the cell. A schematic model describing the relationship between the CO2 and HCO3 transport systems is presented.  相似文献   

10.
A mass spectrometer was used to simultaneously follow the time course of photosynthetic O2 evolution and CO2 depletion of the medium by cells of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus leopoliensis UTEX 625. Analysis of the data indicated that both CO2 and HCO3 were simultaneously and continuously transported by the cells as a source of substrate for photosynthesis. Initiation of HCO3 transport by Na+ addition had no effect on ongoing CO2 transport. This result is interpreted to indicate that the CO2 and HCO3 transport systems are separate and distinctly different transport systems. Measurement of CO2-dependent photosynthesis indicated that CO2 uptake involved active transport and that diffusion played only a minor role in CO2 acquisition in cyanobacteria.  相似文献   

11.
Carbon oxysulfide (carbonyl sulfide, COS) is a close structural analog of CO2. Although hydrolysis of COS (to CO2 and H2S) does occur at alkaline pH (>9), at pH 8.0 the rate of hydrolysis is slow enough to allow investigation of COS as a possible substrate and inhibitor of the active CO2 transport system of Synechococcus UTEX 625. A light-dependent uptake of COS was observed that was inhibited by CO2 and the ATPase inhibitor diethylstilbestrol. The COS taken up by the cells could not be recovered when the lights were turned off or when acid was added. It was concluded that most of the COS taken up was hydrolyzed by intracellular carbonic anhydrase. The production of H2S was observed and COS removal from the medium was inhibited by ethoxyzolamide. Bovine erythrocyte carbonic anhydrase catalysed the stoichiometric hydrolysis of COS to H2S. The active transport of CO2 was inhibited by COS in an apparently competitive manner. When Na+-dependent HCO3 transport was allowed in the presence of COS, the extracellular [CO2] rose considerably above the equilibrium level. This CO2 appearing in the medium was derived from the dehydration of transported HCO3 and was leaked from the cells. In the presence of COS the return to the cells of this leaked CO2 was inhibited. These results showed that the Na+-dependent HCO3 transport was not inhibited by COS, whereas active CO2 transport was inhibited. When COS was removed by gassing with N2, a normal pattern of CO2 uptake was observed. The silicone fluid centrifugation method showed that COS (100 micromolar) had little effect upon the initial rate of HCO3 transport or CO2 fixation. The steady state rate of CO2 fixation was, however, inhibited about 50% in the presence of COS. This inhibition can be at least partially explained by the significant leakage of CO2 from the cells that occurred when CO2 uptake was inhibited by COS. Neither CS2 nor N2O acted like COS. It is concluded that COS is an effective and selective inhibitor of active CO2 transport.  相似文献   

12.
Light-induced acidification by the cyanobacterium Anabaena variabilis is biphasic (a fast phase I and slow phase II) and shown to be sodium-dependent with an optimum concentration of 40 to 60 millimolar Na+. Cells grown under low CO2 concentrations at pH 9 (i.e. mainly HCO3 present in the medium) exhibited the slow phase II of proton efflux only, while cells grown under low CO2 concentrations at pH 6.3 (i.e. CO2 and HCO3 present) exhibited both phases. Light-induced proton release of phase I was dependent on inorganic carbon available in the bathing medium with an apparent Km for CO2 of 20 to 70 micromolar. As was concluded from the CO2 dependence of acidification measured at different pH of the bathing medium, bicarbonate inhibited phase-I acidification noncompetetively. Acidification was inhibited by acetazolamide, an inhibitor of carbonic anhydrase. Apparently, acidification of phase I is due to a light-dependent uptake of CO2 being converted to HCO3 by a carbonic anhydrase-like function of the HCO3-transport system (M Volokita, D Zenvirth, A Kaplan, L Reinhold 1984 Plant Physiol 76: 599-602) before or during entering the cell, thus releasing one proton per CO2 converted to HCO3.  相似文献   

13.
Cyanobacterial cells accumulate substantial amounts of a membrane-associated 42 kilodalton polypeptide during adaptation to low CO2 conditions. The role of this polypeptide in the process of adaptation and in particular in the large increase in the ability to accumulate inorganic carbon (Ci), which accompanies this process, is not yet understood. We have isolated a mutant Synechococcus PCC7942 that does not accumulate the 42 kilodalton polypeptide. The mutant requires a high-CO2 concentration for growth and exhibits a very low apparent photosynthetic affinity for extracellular Ci. The latter might be attributable to the observed defective ability of the mutant to utilize the intracellular Ci pool for photosynthesis. The 42 kilodalton polypeptide does not appear to participate directly in the active transport of Ci, since the difference between the observed capabilities for CO2 and HCO3 uptake of the mutant and the wild type is not sufficient to account for their different growth and photosynthetic performance. Furthermore, high CO2-grown wild-type cells, where we could not detect the 42 kilodalton polypeptide, transported CO2 faster than the mutant. An analysis of the curves relating the rate of accumulation of Ci to the concentration of CO2 or HCO3 supplied, in the presence or absence of carbonic anhydrase, indicated that under the experimental conditions used here, CO2 was the preferred Ci species taken up by Synechococcus.  相似文献   

14.
Mass spectrometry has been used to confirm the presence of an active transport system for CO2 in Synechococcus UTEX 625. Cells were incubated at pH 8.0 in 100 micromolar KHCO3 in the absence of Na+ (to prevent HCO3 transport). Upon illumination the cells rapidly removed almost all the free CO2 from the medium. Addition of carbonic anhydrase revealed that the CO2 depletion resulted from a selective uptake of CO2, rather than a total uptake of all inorganic carbon species. CO2 transport stopped rapidly (<3 seconds) when the light was turned off. Iodoacetamide (3.3 millimolar) completely inhibited CO2 fixation but had little effect on CO2 transport. In iodoacetamide poisoned cells, transport of CO2 occurred against a concentration gradient of about 18,000 to 1. Transport of CO2 was completely inhibited by 10 micromolar diethylstilbestrol, a membrane-bound ATPase inhibitor. Studies with DCMU and PSI light indicated that CO2 transport was driven by ATP produced by cyclic or pseudocyclic photophosphorylation. Low concentrations of Na+ (<100 microequivalents per liter), but not of K+, stimulated CO2 transport as much as 2.4-fold. Unlike Na+-dependent HCO3 transport, the transport of CO2 was not inhibited by high concentrations (30 milliequivalents per liter) of Li+. During illumination, the CO2 concentration in the medium remained far below its equilibrium value for periods up to 15 minutes. This could only happen if CO2 transport was continuously occurring at a rapid rate, since the continuing dehydration of HCO3 to CO2 would rapidly raise the CO2 concentration to its equilibrium value if transport ceased. Measurement of the rate of dissolved inorganic carbon accumulation under these conditions indicated that at least part of the continuing CO2 transport was balanced by HCO3 efflux.  相似文献   

15.
We studied the regulation of intracellular pH (pHi) in single cultured astrocytes passaged once from the hippocampus of the rat, using the dye 2′,7′-biscarboxyethyl-5,6-carboxyfluorescein (BCECF) to monitor pHi. Intrinsic buffering power (βI) was 10.5 mM (pH unit)−1 at pHi 7.0, and decreased linearly with pHi; the best-fit line to the data had a slope of −10.0 mM (pH unit)−2. In the absence of HCO3 , pHi recovery from an acid load was mediated predominantly by a Na-H exchanger because the recovery was inhibited 88% by amiloride and 79% by ethylisopropylamiloride (EIPA) at pHi 6.05. The ethylisopropylamiloride-sensitive component of acid extrusion fell linearly with pHi. Acid extrusion was inhibited 68% (pHi 6.23) by substituting Li+ for Na+ in the bath solution. Switching from a CO2/HCO3 -free to a CO2/HCO3 -containing bath solution caused mean steady state pHi to increase from 6.82 to 6.90, due to a Na+-driven HCO3 transporter. The HCO3 -induced pHi increase was unaffected by amiloride, but was inhibited 75% (pHi 6.85) by 400 μM 4,4′-diisothiocyanatostilbene-2,2′-disulfonic acid (DIDS), and 65% (pHi 6.55–6.75) by pretreating astrocytes for up to ∼6.3 h with 400 μM 4-acetamide-4′-isothiocyanatostilbene-2,2′-disulfonic acid (SITS). The CO2/HCO3 -induced pHi increase was blocked when external Na+ was replaced with N-methyl-d-glucammonium (NMDG+). In the presence of HCO3 , the Na+-driven HCO3 transporter contributed to the pHi recovery from an acid load. For example, HCO3 shifted the plot of acid-extrusion rate vs. pHi by 0.15–0.3 pH units in the alkaline direction. Also, with Na-H exchange inhibited by amiloride, HCO3 increased acid extrusion 3.8-fold (pHi 6.20). When astrocytes were acid loaded in amiloride, with Li+ as the major cation, HCO3 failed to elicit a substantial increase in pHi. Thus, Li+ does not appear to substitute well for Na+ on the HCO3 transporter. We conclude that an amiloride-sensitive Na-H exchanger and a Na+-driven HCO3 transporter are the predominant acid extruders in astrocytes.  相似文献   

16.
Influx and efflux of inorganic carbon in Synechococcus UTEX625   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The CO2 and HCO3? fluxes in air-grown cells of Synechococcus UTEX 625 al pH 8-0 were measured during dark to light and light to dark transitions using a mass spectrometer and sampling of the reaction medium. The kinetic parameters for initial uptake of CO2 and HCO3? were determined during the initial period of illumination. The development of the internal Ci pool was followed up to steady-state photosynthesis, which occurred when the size of the internal inorganic carbon pool remained apparently constant for a limited period. The experimental procedure confirmed that only CO2 transport occurred with 100mmolm?3 Na+ and that both CO2 and HCO?3 transport occurred with 25molm?3 Na+. The K1/2 values of initial CO2 and HCO3 uptake were 0.7 and 17.2 mmolm?3respectively and agreed closely with the K1/2 values of net CO2 and HCO3? transport during steady-state photosynthesis, which were 0.66 and 17.1 mmolm?3 respectively. Maximum rates of CO2and HCO3? transport were 423 and 219mmolh?1 g?1 Chl. Maximum CO2 efflux observed upon darkening was 118mmolh?1 g?1 Chl. A permeability coefficient of the cell for CO2 of 3 × 10?8 m s?1 was determined from the dark CO2 efflux assuming an internal pH of 7.2 in the dark. Following the initial CO2 uptake in the light, the extracellular [CO2] steadily declined when only CO2 transport was allowed, but an increase in the extracellular [CO2] when HCO3? transport was allowed to proceed suggested that an enhanced CO2 efflux occurred as a result of the larger size of the intracellular Ci pool.  相似文献   

17.
The active transport and intracellular accumulation of HCO3 by air-grown cells of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus UTEX 625 (PCC 6301) was strongly promoted by 25 millimolar Na+.Na+-dependent HCO3 accumulation also resulted in a characteristic enhancement in the rate of photosynthetic O2 evolution and CO2 fixation. However, when Synechococcus was grown in standing culture, high rates of HCO3 transport and photosynthesis were observed in the absence of added Na+. The internal HCO3 pool reached levels up to 50 millimolar, and an accumulation ratio as high as 970 was observed. Sodium enhanced HCO3 transport and accumulation in standing culture cells by about 25 to 30% compared with the five- to eightfold enhancement observed with air-grown cells. The ability of standing culture cells to utilize HCO3 from the medium in the absence of Na+ was lost within 16 hours after transfer to air-grown culture and was reacquired during subsequent growth in standing culture. Studies using a mass spectrometer indicated that standing culture cells were also capable of active CO2 transport involving a high-affinity transport system which was reversibly inhibited by H2S, as in the case for air-grown cells. The data are interpreted to indicate that Synechococcus possesses a constitutive CO2 transport system, whereas Na+-dependent and Na+-independent HCO3 transport are inducible, depending upon the conditions of growth. Intracellular accumulation of HCO3 was always accompanied by a quenching of chlorophyll a fluorescence which was independent of CO2 fixation. The extent of fluorescence quenching was highly dependent upon the size of the internal pool of HCO3 + CO2. The pattern of fluorescence quenching observed in response to added HCO3 and Na+ in air-grown and standing culture cells was highly characteristic for Na+-dependent and Na+-independent HCO3 accumulation. It was concluded that measurements of fluorescence quenching provide an indirect means for following HCO3 transport and the dynamics of intracellular HCO3 accumulation and dissipation.  相似文献   

18.
The utilization of HCO3 as carbon source for photosynthesis by aquatic angiosperms results in the production of 1 mole OH for each mole CO2 assimilated. The OH ions are subsequently released to the medium. In several Potamogeton and Elodea species, the site of the HCO3 influx and OH efflux are spatially separated. Described here are light- and dark-induced pH changes at the lower and upper epidermis of the leaves of Potamogeton lucens, Elodea densa, and Elodea canadensis.  相似文献   

19.
At low levels of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and alkaline pH the rate of photosynthesis by air-grown cells of Synechococcus leopoliensis (UTEX 625) was enhanced 7- to 10-fold by 20 millimolar Na+. The rate of photosynthesis greatly exceeded the CO2 supply rate and indicated that HCO3 was taken up by a Na+-dependent mechanism. In contrast, photosynthesis by Synechococcus grown in standing culture proceeded rapidly in the absence of Na+ and exceeded the CO2 supply rate by 8 to 45 times. The apparent photosynthetic affinity (K½) for DIC was high (6-40 micromolar) and was not markedly affected by Na+ concentration, whereas with air-grown cells K½ (DIC) decreased by more than an order of magnitude in the presence of Na+. Lithium, which inhibited Na+-dependent HCO3 uptake in air-grown cells, had little effect on Na+-independent HCO3 uptake by standing culture cells. A component of total HCO3 uptake in standing culture cells was also Na+-dependent with a K½ (Na+) of 4.8 millimolar and was inhibited by lithium. Analysis of 14C-fixation during isotopic disequilibrium indicated that standing culture cells also possessed a Na+-independent CO2 transport system. The conversion from Na+-independent to Na+-dependent HCO3 uptake was readily accomplished by transferring cells grown in standing to growth in cultures bubbled with air. These results demonstrated that the conditions experienced during growth influenced the mode by which Ssynechococcus acquired HCO3 for subsequent photosynthetic fixation.  相似文献   

20.
Our aim was to determine whether fixation of inorganic carbon (Ci), due to phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase activity, is limited by the availability of Ci in the cytoplasm of maize (Zea mays L.) root tips. Rates of Ci uptake and metabolism were measured during K2SO4 treatment, which stimulates dark Ci fixation. 13Ci uptake was followed by 13C-nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR); 5 millimolar K2SO4 had no significant effect on 13Ci influx. The contribution of respiratory CO2 production to cytoplasmic HCO3 was measured using in vivo 13C-NMR and 1H-NMR of cell extracts; K2SO4 treatment had no effect on respiratory CO2 production. The concentration of cytoplasmic HCO3 was estimated to be approximately 11 millimolar, again with K2SO4 having no significant effect. These experiments allowed us to determine the extent to which extracellularly supplied 14Ci was diluted in the cytoplasm by respiratory CO2 and thereby measure phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase activity in vivo using 14Ci. PEP carboxylase activity in root tips was enhanced approximately 70% over controls within 12 minutes of the addition of 5 millimolar K2SO4. The activity of carbonic anhydrase, which provides PEP carboxylase with Ci, was determined by saturation transfer 13C-NMR to be more than 200 times that of PEP carboxylase in vivo. The regulation of PEP carboxylase in K2SO4-treated roots is discussed.  相似文献   

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