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1.
In the succulent leaves of Aloe arborescens Mill diurnal oscillations of the malic acid content, being indicative of Crassulacean Acid Metabolism (CAM), were exhibited only by the green mesophyll. In contrast, the malic acid level of the central chloroplast-free water-storing tissue remained constant throughout the day-night cycle. Apart from malate, the green tissue contained high amounts of isocitrat which was lacking in the water tissue. There was no significant transfer from the green mesophyll to the water tissue of 14C fixed originally via dark 14CO2 fixation in the mesophyll. Both isolated mesophyll and water tissue were capable of dark CO2 fixation yielding mainly malate as the first stable product. Both tissues have phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase. However, the enzymes derived from the both sources could be distinguished by their molecular weights and by their kinetic properties, suggesting different phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase proteins. The conclusion drawn from the experiments is that in a. arborescens the CAM cycle proceeds exclusively in the green mesophyll and that the water tissue, though capable of malate synthesis via -carboxylation of phosphoenolpyruvate, behaves as an independent metabolic system where CAM is lacking. This view is supported by the finding that the cell walls bordering the green mesophyll from the water tissue lack plasmodesmata, hence conveniant pathways of metabolite transport.Abbreviations CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - PEP-C phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase  相似文献   

2.
Gas exchange in K. blossfeldiana shows a circadian rhythm in net CO2 uptake and transpiration when measured under low and medium irradiances. The period length varies between 21.4 h at 60 W m-2 and 24.0 h at 10 W m-2. In bright light (80 W m-2) or darkness there are no rhythms. High leaf temperatures result in a fast dampening of the CO2-uptake rhythm at moderate irradiances, but low leaf temperatures can not overcome the dampening in bright light. The rhythm in CO2 uptake is accompanied by a less pronounced and more rapidly damped rhythm in transpiration and by oscillations in malate levels with the amplitude being highly reduced. The oscillations in starch content, usually observed to oscillate inversely to the acidification in light-dark cycles, disappear after the first cycle in continuous light. The balance between starch and malate levels depends in continuous light on the irradiance applied. Leaves show high malate and low starch content at low irradiance and high starch and low malate in bright light. During the first 12 h in continuous light replacing the usual dark period, malate synthesis decreases with the increasing irradiance. Up to 50 W m-2 starch content decreases; at higher irradiances it increases above the values usually measured at the end of the light period of the 12:12 h light-dark cycle.Abbreviations CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism - FW fresh weight - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate  相似文献   

3.
The activities of several enzymes, including ribulose-1,5-diphosphate (RuDP) carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.39) and phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.31) were measured as a function of leaf age in Z. mays. Mature leaf tissue had a RuDP-carboxylase activity of 296.7 mol CO2 g-1 fresh weight h-1 and a PEP-carboxylase activity of 660.6 mol CO2 g-1 fresh weight h-1. In young corn leaves the activity of the two enzymes was 11 and 29%, respectively, of the mature leaves. In senescent leaf tissue, RuDP carboxylase activity declined more rapidly than that of any of the other enzymes assayed. On a relative basis the activities of NADP malic enzyme (EC 1.1.1.40), aspartate (EC 2.6.1.1) and alanine aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.2), and NAD malate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.37) exceeded those of both PEP and RuDP carboxylase in young and senescent leaf tissue. Pulse-chase labeling experiments with mature and senescent leaf tissue show that the predominant C4 acid differs between the two leaf ages. Labeling of alanine in senescent tissue never exceeded 4% of the total 14C remaining during the chase period, while in mature leaf tissue alanine accounted for 20% of the total after 60 s in 12CO2. The activity of RuDP carboxylase during leaf ontogeny in Z. mays parallels the development of the activity of this enzyme in C3 plants.Abbreviations RuDP ribulose-1,5-diphosphate - PEP phosphoenol pyruvate - PGA 3-phosphoglycerate  相似文献   

4.
Light activation of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase from the leaves of the C4 plant Setaria verticillata (L.) is more pronounced at low CO2 levels. The 2-fold activation observed at physiological ambient CO2 becomes 3.64-fold at 5 L/L and completely abolished above 700 L/L. When the stomata close under the influence of abscisic acid at 330 L/L CO2, the extent of light activation is high (3.59-fold), probably because the increased diffusive resistance keeps the internal CO2 at much lower levels. Under darkness. CO2 and absicisic acid do not affect the extractable phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase activity. Internal CO2 levels may determine phosphoenolpyruvate concentratio in the cytoplasm through the control of its utilization by phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase. We have recently proposed (Samaras et al. 1988) that photosynthetically produced phosphoenolpyruvate could be an activator of the enzyme. It is therefore suggested that CO2 indirectly affects the activation state of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase by controlling the levels of phosphoenolpyruvate which may act as an activator.Abbreviations PEPCase phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - PAR photosynthetically active radiation - G6P glucose-6-phosphate - ABA abscisic acid - MDH malate dehydrogenase - PPDK pyruvate, Pi, dikinase - CAM Crassulacean Acid Metabolism  相似文献   

5.
Comparative 14CO2 pulse-12CO2 chase studies performed at CO2 compensation ()-versus air-concentrations of CO2 demonstrated a four-to eightfold increase in assimilation of 14CO2 into the C4 acids malate and aspartate by leaves of the C3-C4 intermediate species Panicum milioides Nees ex Trin., P. decipiens Nees ex Trin., Moricandia arvensis (L.) DC., and M. spinosa Pomel at . Specifically, the distribution of 14C in malate and aspartate following a 10-s pulse with 14CO2 increases from 2% to 17% (P. milioides) and 4% to 16% (M. arvensis) when leaves are illuminated at the CO2 compensation concentration (20 l CO2/l, 21% O2) versus air (340 l CO2/l, 21% O2). Chasing recently incorporated 14C for up to 5 min with 12CO2 failed to show any substantial turnover of label in the C4 acids or in carbon-4 of malate. The C4-acid labeling patterns of leaves of the closely related C3 species, P. laxum Sw. and M. moricandioides (Boiss.) Heywood, were found to be relatively unresponsive to changes in pCO2 from air to . These data demonstrate that the C3-C4 intermediate species of Panicum and Moricandia possess an inherently greater capacity for CO2 assimilation via phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.31) at the CO2 compensation concentration than closely related C3 species. However, even at , CO2 fixation by PEP carboxylase is minor compared to that via ribulosebisphosphate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.39) and the C3 cycle, and it is, therefore, unlikely to contribute in a major way to the mechanism(s) facilitating reduced photorespiration in the C3-C4 intermediate species of Panicum and Moricandia.Abbreviations Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - CO2 compensation concentration - 3PGA 3-phosphoglycerate - SuP sugar monophosphates - SuP2 sugar bisphosphates Published as Paper No. 8249, Journal Series, Nebraska Agricultural Research Division  相似文献   

6.
Mesophyll cells were isolated from sunflower leaves by an enzymic procedure. The cell suspensions possessed high photosynthesis rates. The products of cell photosynthesis were similar to the products of leaf disc photosynthesis. The relatively high radioactivity incorporated into malate after 14CO2 feeding suggests that PEP carboxylase might participate in CO2 fixation. Sunflower leaf extracts possessed a PEP carboxylase activity slightly higher than that of other C3 species. Inhibition of PEP carboxylase by maleate decreased cell photosynthesis by only 15% and the first products of cell photosynthesis were phosphorylated compounds. It is concluded that the high photosynthesis rates displayed by sunflower are not due to a parallel C4 pathway of photosynthesis but are rather dependent, at least in part, on the activity, or the amount, of RuBP carboxylase.Abbreviations PVP polyvinylpyrrolidone - PDS potassium dextran sulfate - DTT dithiothreitol - PEG polyethyleneglycol - RuBP ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - Mes 2-(N-morpholino) ethanesulfonic acid - Hepes N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N-2-ethanesulfonic acid  相似文献   

7.
The assimilation of 14CO2 into the C4 acids malate and aspartate by leaves of C3, C4 and C3–C4 intermediate Flaveria species was investigated near the CO2 compensation concentration * in order to determine the potential role of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.31) in reducing photorespiration in the intermediates. Relative to air concentrations of CO2, the proportion of CO2 fixed by PEP carboxylase at * increased in all six C3–C4 intermediate species examined. However, F. floridana J.R. Johnston and F. ramosissima Klatt were shown to be markedly less responsive to reduced external CO2, with only about a 1.6-fold enhancement of CO2 assimilation by PEP carboxylase, as compared to a 3.0- to 3.7-fold increase for the other C3–C4 species examined, namely, F. linearis Lag., F. anomala B.L. Robinson, F. chloraefolia A. Gray and F. pubescens Rydb. The C3 species F. pringlei Gandoger and F. cronquistii A.M. Powell exhibited a 1.5- and 2.9-fold increase in labeled malate and aspartate, respectively, at *. Assimilation of CO2 by PEP carboxylase in the C4 species F. trinervia (Spreng.) C. Mohr, F. australasica Hook., and the C4-like species F. brownii A.M. Powell was relatively insensitive to subatmospheric levels of CO2. The interspecific variation among the intermediate Flaverias may signify that F. floridana and F. ramosissima possess a more C4-like compartmentation of PEP carboxylase and ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (EC 4.1.1.39) between the mesophyll and bundle-sheath cells. Chasing recently labeled malate and aspartate with 12CO2 for 5 min at * resulted in an apparent turnover of 25% and 30% of the radiocarbon in these C4 acids for F. ramosissima and F. floridana, respectively. No substantial turnover was detected for F. linearis, F. anomala, F. chloraefolia or F. pubescens. With the exception of F. floridana and F. ramosissima, it is unlikely that enhanced CO2 fixation by PEP carboxylase at the CO2 compensation concentration is a major mechanism for reducing photorespiration in the intermediate Flaveria species. Moreover, these findings support previous related 14CO2-labeling studies at air-levels of CO2 which indicated that F. floridana and F. ramosissima were more C4-like intermediate species. This is further substantiated by the demonstration that F. floridana PEP carboxylase, like the enzyme in C4 plants, undergoes a substantial activation (2.2-fold) upon illuminating dark-adapted green leaves. In contrast, light activation was not observed for the enzyme in F. linearis or F. chloraefolia.Abbreviations and symbols PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - CO2 compensation concentration - * a subatmospheric level of CO2 approximating Published as Paper No. 8832, Journal Series, Nebraska Agricultural Research Division  相似文献   

8.
U. Lüttge  K. Fischer 《Planta》1980,149(1):59-63
Light-dependent CO-evolution by the green leaves of C3 and C4 plants depends on the CO2/O2 ratio in the ambient atmosphere. This and other physiological responses suggest that CO-evolution is a byproduct of photorespiration. At CO2/O2 ratios up to 10-3, the ratio of CO evolved: CO2 fixed in photosynthesis is significantly higher in C3 than in C4 plants. This discrepancy disappears when a correction is made for the CO2-concentrating mechanism in C4 photosynthesis, by which CO2-concentration at the site of ribulose-bis-phosphate carboxylase/oxygenase in the bundle sheaths is raised significantly as compared to the ambient atmosphere. Since the oxygenase function of this enzyme is responsible for glycolate synthesis, i.e., the substrate of photorespiration, this result seems to support the conclusion that CO-evolution is a consequence of photorespiration. CO-evolution may turn out to be a useful and rather straightforward indicator for photorespiration in ecophysiological studies.Abbreviations CAM crassulacean acid metabolism - CO net CO-evolution - CO2 net CO2-fixation - PEP-C phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase - RubP-C ribulose-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase Dedicated to Professor André Pirson on the occasion of his 70th birthday  相似文献   

9.
The circadian rhythm of CO2 assimilation in detached leaves of Bryophyllum fedtschenkoi at 15° C in normal air and continuous illumination is inhibited both by exposure to darkness, and to an atmosphere enriched with 5% CO2. During such exposures substantial fixation of CO2 takes place, and the malate concentration in the cell sap increases from about 20 mM to a constant value of 40–50 mM after 16 h. On transferring the darkened leaves to light, and those exposed to 5% CO2 to normal air, a circadian rhythm of CO2 assimilation begins again. The phase of this rhythm is determined by the time the transfer is made since the first peak occurs about 24 h afterwards. This finding indicates that the circadian oscillator is driven to, and held at, an identical, fixed phase point in its cycle after 16 h exposure to darkness or to 5% CO2, and it is from this phase point that oscillation begins after the inhibiting condition is removed. This fixed phase point is characterised by the leaves having acquired a high malate content. The rhythm therefore begins with a period of malate decarboxylation which lasts for about 8 h, during which time the malate content of the leaf cells must be reduced to a value that allows phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase to become active. Inhibition of the rhythm in darkness, and on exposure to 5% CO2 in continuous illumination, appears to be due to the presence of a high concentration of CO2 within the leaf inhibiting malic enzyme which leads to the accumulation of high concentrations of malate in the leaf cells. The malate then allosterically inhibits phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase upon which the rhythm depends. The results give support to the view that malate synthesis and breakdown form an integral part of the circadian oscillator in this tissue.Abbreviations B. Bryophyllum - PEPCase phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase  相似文献   

10.
W. Hüsemann  A. Plohr  W. Barz 《Protoplasma》1979,100(1):101-112
Summary Cell suspension cultures ofChenopodium rubrum have been grown for more than 2 years photoautotrophically with CO2 as sole carbon source. Average increase in fresh weight is appr. 600% within 14 days. The chlorophyll content of photoautotrophic cells (200 g/g fresh weight) is much higher than of photomixotrophic cells (50 g/g fresh weight). The photosynthetic activity of the cells (190 moles CO2×mg–1 chlorophyllXh–1) is comparable to the values found with intact leaves. As shown by short-term14CO2 photosynthesis, both, the photomixotrophic and the photoautotrophic cell suspension cultures assimilate CO2 predominantly via the Calvin pathway.Major differences were found with cells from either exponential or stationary phase of growth with regard to differential labelling of 3-phosphoglyceric acid, malate, sucrose and glucose/fructose.In vitro measurements of carboxylation reactions only partially corroborate our findings with14CO2 incorporation. The ratio of ribulosebisphosphate to phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase activity is 4.7 for leaves of C.rubrum, 1.2 for photoautotrophic cells during stationary growth and 0.5 for cells during exponential growth phase, however, 0.18 was found for photomixotrophic cells. Though the14CO2 incorporation into 3-phosphoglyceric acid is clearly higher than into malate, thein vitro activity of phosphoenolpyruvatecarboxylase is 2–6 fold higher than that of ribulosebisphosphate carboxylase. We postulate that anaplerotic reactions of the tricarboxylic acid cycle are involved in the regulation of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase.Abbreviations 2,4-D didilorophenoxyacetic acid - EDTA ethylene-diamine-tetraacetic acid - fr. w. fresh weight - HEPES N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N-2-ethanesulfonic acid - PGA 3-phosphoglyceric acid - PPO 2,5-diphenyloxazole - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - RuBP nbulosebisphosphate  相似文献   

11.
Stomatal opening on Vicia faba can be induced by high CO2 partial pressures (10.2%) in dark as well as in light. Stomatal aperture was measured in both cases with a hydrogen porometer. The distribution of 14C among early products of photosynthesis was studied. Comparisons are made with carboxylations occurring when stomata were open in the dark with CO2-free air and in light with 0.034% CO2. Results showed that in high CO2 partial pressure in light, less radioactivity was incorporated in Calvin cycle intermediates and more in sucrose. carboxylations and photorespiration seemed to be inhibited. In the dark in both CO2 conditions, 14C incorporation was found in malate and aspartate but also in serine and glycerate in high CO2 conditions. In light these changes in metabolic pathways may be related with the deleterious effects recorded on leaves after long-term expositions to high partial pressure of CO2.Abbreviations DHAP dihydroxyacetone phosphate - PEP phosphonenolpyruvate - PEPCK phosphonenolpyruvatecarboxykinase - PGA 3-phosphoglyceric acid - RUBPc ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase  相似文献   

12.
Experiments on short-term photosynthesis in H14CO3 - (2–5 s) using various species of different algal classes resulted in predominant 14C-labelling (>90% of total 14C-incorporation) of phosphorylated compounds. The percentage of malate and aspartate usually accounts for distinctly less than 10% of the total 14C-labelling. These findings are consistent with data from enzymatic analyses, since 97–100% of the carboxylation capacity is due to ribulose-1.5-biphosphate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.39) in Rhodophyceae and Chlorophyceae. Phaeophyceae are generally characterized by considerable activity of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (EC 4.1.1.32): at least 10% of carboxylation is confined to this enzyme. Similar ratios are obtained when rates of photosynthesis and of light-independent CO2-fixation are compared. Activity of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.31) could not be detected in the species investigated. The results are discussed with emphasis on the pathway of photosynthetic carbon assimilation in marine algae.Abbreviations PEP-CK phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (EC 4.1.1.32) - PEP-C phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.31) - RubP-C ribulose-1.5-biphosphate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.39) Dedicated to Professor H. Fischer, Bonn, on his 65th birthday  相似文献   

13.
The rhythm of CO2 assimilation exhibited by leaves of Bryophyllum fedtschenkoi maintained in light and normal air occurs only at constant ambient temperatures between 10°C and 30°C. Over this range the period increases linearly with increasing temperature from the extremely low value of 15.7 h to 23.3 h, but shows a considerable degree of temperature compensation. Outside the range 10°C–30°C the rhythm is inhibited but re-starts on changing the temperature to 15°C. Prolonged exposure of leaves to high (40°C) and low (2°C) temperature inhibits the rhythm by driving the basic oscillator to fixed phase points in the cycle which differ by 180°, and which have been characterised in terms of the malate status of the leaf cells. At both temperatures loss of the circadian rhythm of CO2 assimilation is due to the inhibition of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPCase) activity, but the inhibition is apparently achieved in different ways at 40°C and 2°C. High temperature appears to inhibit directly PEPCase activity, but not the activity of the enzymes responsible for the breakdown of malate, with the result that the leaf acquires a low malate status. In contrast, low temperature does not directly inhibit PEPCase activity, but does inhibit enzymes responsible for malate breakdown, so that the malate level in the leaf increases to a high value and PEPCase is eventually allosterically inhibited. The different malate status of leaves held at these two temperatures accounts for the phases of the rhythms being reversed on returning the leaves to 15°C. After exposure to high temperature, CO2 fixation by PEPCase activity can begin immediately, whereas after exposure to low temperature, the large amount of malate accumulated in the leaves has to be decarboxylated before CO2 fixation can begin.  相似文献   

14.
Wyka TP  Bohn A  Duarte HM  Kaiser F  Lüttge UE 《Planta》2004,219(4):705-713
In continuous light, leaves of the Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) plant Kalanchoë daigremontiana Hamet et Perrier exhibit a circadian rhythm of CO2 uptake, stomatal conductance and leaf-internal CO2 pressure. According to a current quantitative model of CAM, the pacemaking mechanism involves periodic turgor-related tension and relaxation of the tonoplast, which determines the direction of the net flux of malate between the vacuole and the cytoplasm. Cytoplasmic malate, in turn, through its inhibitory effect on phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase, controls the rate of CO2 uptake. According to this mechanism, when the accumulation of malate is disrupted by removing CO2 from the ambient air, the induction of a phase delay with respect to an unperturbed control plant is expected. First, using the mathematical model, such phase delays were observed in numerical simulations of three scenarios of CO2 removal: (i) starting at a trough of CO2 uptake, lasting for about half a cycle (ca. 12 h in vivo); (ii) with the identical starting phase, but lasting for 1.5 cycles (ca. 36 h); and (iii) starting while CO2 increases, lasting for half a cycle again. Applying the same protocols to leaves of K. daigremontiana in vivo did not induce the predicted phase shifts, i.e. after the end of the CO2 removal the perturbed rhythm adopted nearly the same phase as that of the control plant. Second, when leaves were exposed to a nitrogen atmosphere for three nights prior to onset of continuous light to prevent malate accumulation, a small, 4-h phase advance was observed instead of a delay, again contrary to the model-based expectations. Hence, vacuolar malic acid accumulation is ruled out as the central pacemaking process. This observation is in line with our earlier suggestion [T.P. Wyka, U. Lüttge (2003) J Exp Bot 54:1471–1479] that in extended continuous light, CO2 uptake switches gradually from a CAM-like to a C3-like mechanism, with oscillations of the two CO2 uptake systems being tightly coordinated. It appears that the circadian rhythm of gas exchange in this CAM plant emerges from one or several devices that are capable of generating temporal information in a robust manner, i.e. they are protected from even severe metabolic perturbations.Abbreviations CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism - cia Ratio of mesophyll CO2 concentration to external CO2 concentration - JC Rate of carbon dioxide uptake - JW Transpiration rate - gW Stomatal conductance - LL Continuous light conditions - PEPC Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase - Rubisco d-Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphatecarboxylase/oxygenase - Effective quantum yield of photosystem II  相似文献   

15.
The cassava plant, Manihot esculenta, grows exceptionally well in low fertility and drought prone environments, but the mechanisms that allow this growth are unknown. Earlier, and sometimes contradictory, work speculated about the presence of a C4-type photosynthesis in cassava leaves. In the present work we found no evidence for a C4 metabolism in mature attached cassava leaves as indicated i) by the low, 2 to 8%, incorporation of 14CO2 into C4 organic acids in short time periods, 10 s, and the lack of 14C transfer from C4 acids to other compounds in 12CO2, ii) by the lack of C4 enzyme activity changes during leaf development and the inability to detect C4 acid decarboxylases, and iii) by leaf CO2 compensation values between 49 and 65 l of CO2 1–1 and by other infrared gas exchange photosynthetic measurements. It is concluded that the leaf biochemistry of cassava follows the C3 pathway of photosynthesis with no indication of a C3-C4 mechanism.However, cassava leaves exhibit several novel characteristics. Attached leaves have the ability to effectively partition carbon into sucrose with nearly 45% of the label in sucrose in about one min of 14CO2 photosynthesis, contrasting with 34% in soybean (C3) and 25% in pigweed (C4). Cassava leaves displayed a strong preference for the synthesis of sucrose versus starch. Field grown cassava leaves exhibited high rates of photosynthesis and curvilinear responses to increasing sunlight irradiances with a tendency to saturate only at high irradiances, above 1500 mol m–2 s–1. Morphologically, the cassava leaf has papillose epidermal cells on its lower mesophyll surface that form fence-like arrangements encircling guard cells. It is proposed that the active synthesis of sugars has osmotic functions in the cassava plant and that the papillose epidermal cells function to maintain a healthy leaf water status in various environments.Abbreviations ADP adenosine diphosphate - Asp aspartate - BSA bovine serum albumin - CoA coenzyme A - DTT dithiothreitol - EDTA ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid - FBP fructose-1,6-biphosphate - Gly glycine - HEPES N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N-2-ethansulfonic acid - Mal malate - NAD nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (oxidized form) - NADH nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (reduced form) - NADP nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (oxidized form) - PAR photosynthetic active radiation (400–700 nm) - PEP phosphenolpyruvate carboxylase - p-FBPase plastid fructose-1,6-biphosphatase - PGA 3-phosphoglyceric acid - PMSF phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride - PVP polyvinylpyrrolidone - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-biphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - RuBP ribulose-1,5-biphosphate - Ser serine - sugar-P sugar-phosphates  相似文献   

16.
A photoautotrophic soybean suspension culture (SB-P) was used to study CO2 assimilation while exposed to elevated or ambient CO2 levels. These studies showed that under elevated CO2 (5% v/v) malate is the dominant fixation product, strongly suggesting that phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPCase) is the primary enzyme involved in carbon fixation in these cells under their normal growth conditions. Citrate and [aspartate + glutamate] were also significant fixation products during fifteen minutes of exposure to 14CO2. During the ten minute unlabeled CO2 chase however, 14C-malate continued to increase while citrate and [aspartate + glutamate] declined. Fixation of 14CO2 under ambient CO2 levels (0.037%) showed a very different product pattern as 3-phosphoglycerate was very high in the first one to two minutes followed by increases in [serine + glycine] and [aspartate + glutamate]. Hexose phosphates were also quite high initially but then declined relatively rapidly. Thus, the carbon fixation pattern at ambient CO2 levels resembles somewhat that seen in C3 leaf cells while that seen at elevated CO2 levels more closely resembles that of a C4 plant. The initial fixation product of C3 plants, 3-PGA, was never detectable under high CO2 conditions. These data suggest that an in vitro photoautotrophic system would be suitable for studying carbon fixation physiology during photosynthetic and non-photosynthetic growth.Abbreviations SB-P photoautotrophic soybean cells - PEPCase phosphoenol-pyruvate carboxylase - RuBPCase ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - 3-PGA 3-phosphoglycerate  相似文献   

17.
Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase activity in extracts of a wide range of thermogenic tissues of the Araceae was shown to be in the range 10–100 mol g-1 fresh weight min-1 (0.5–3.7 mol mg-1 protein min-1). Such high activities were not found in non-thermogenic tissues of the Araceae or in thermogenic tissues of Aristolochia brasiliensis Mart. and Zucc., Victoria amazonica Schomb. and Encephalartos barteri Carruth. During development and thermogenesis in the club of Arum maculatum L. the high activities of the carboxylase did not lead to any marked accumulation of citrate, isocitrate, 2-oxoglutarate, fumarate, malate and oxaloacetate. Clubs of Arum maculatum and of Arum italicum Miller readily fixed 14CO2 in the dark, mostly into aspartate, malate, alanine and glutamate. Pulse and chase experiments showed that most of the fixed carbon was very rapidly metabolized to CO2. The detailed distribution suggest that this occurred largely by decarboxylation of C-4 acids. It is suggested that thermogenic tissues of the Araceae are characterized by very high activities of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase, and that in vivo this leads to synthesis of C-4 acids which are promptly decarboxylated.  相似文献   

18.
Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.31; PEPCase) from Bryophyllum fedtschenkoi leaves has previously been shown to exist in two forms in vivo. During the night the enzyme is phosphorylated and relatively insensitive to feedback inhibition by malate whereas during the day the enzyme is dephosphorylated and more sensitive to inhibition by malate. These properties of PEPCase have now been investigated in leaves maintained under constant conditions of temperature and lighting. When leaves were maintained in continuous darkness and CO2-free air at 15°C, PEPCase exhibited a persistent circadian rhythm of interconversion between the two forms. There was a good correlation between periods during which the leaves were fixing respiratory CO2 and periods during which PEPCase was in the form normally observed at night. When leaves were maintained in continuous light and normal air at 15°C, starting at the end of a night or the end of a day, a circadian rhythm of net uptake of CO2 was observed. Only when these constant conditions were applied at the end of a day was a circadian rhythm of interconversions between the two forms of PEPCase observed and the rhythms of enzyme interconversion and CO2 uptake did not correlate in phase or period.Abbreviations CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism - FW fresh weight - PEPCase phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase - RuBPCase ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase To whom correspondence should be addressed.  相似文献   

19.
Klaus Winter 《Planta》1982,154(4):298-308
Properties of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase, obtained from leaves of Mesembryanthemum crystallinum L. performing Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM), were determined at frequent time points during a 12-h light/12-h dark cycle. Leaf extracts were rapidly desalted and PEP carboxylase activity as a function of PEP concentration, malate concentration, and pH was measured within 2 min after homogenization of the tissue. Maximum velocity of PEP carboxylase was similar in the light and dark at pH 7.5 and pH 8.0. However, PEP carboxylase had as much as a 12-fold lower K m for PEP and as much as a 20-fold higher K i for malate during the dark than during the light periods, the magnitude of these differences being dependent on the assay pH. Assuming that enzyme properties immediately after isolation reflect the approximate state of the enzyme in vivo, these differences in enzyme properties reduce the potential for CO2 fixation via PEP carboxylase in the light. A small decrease in cytoplasmic pH in the light would greatly magnify the above differences in day/night properties of PEP carboxylase, because the sensitivity of PEP carboxylase to inhibition by malate increased with decreasing pH. Properties of PEP carboxylase were also studied in plants exposed to short-term perturbations of the normal 12-h light/12-h dark cycle (e.g., prolonged light period, prolonged dark period). Under all light/dark regimes, there was a close correlation between change in properties of PEP carboxylase and changes of the tissue from acidification to deacidification, and vice versa. Changes in properties of PEP carboxylase were not merely light/dark phenomena because they were also observed in plants exposed to continuous light or dark. the data indicate that, during CAM, PEP carboxylase exists in two stages which differ in their capacity for net malate synthesis. The physiologically-active state is distinguished by a low K m for PEP and a high K i for malate and favors malate synthesis. The physiologically-inactive state has a high K m for PEP and a low K i for malate and exists during periods of deacidification and other periods lacking synthesis of malic acid.Abbreviations CAM Crassulacean acid metabolism - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - PEPC PEP carboxylase - RuBP ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate - RH relative humidity  相似文献   

20.
Net CO2 dark fixation of Kalanchoë daigremontiana varies with night temperature. We found an optimum of fixation at about 15° C; with increasing night temperature fixation decreased. We studied the temperature dependence of the activity of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP)-carboxylase, the key enzyme for CO2 dark fixation. We varied the pH, the substrate concentration (PEP), and the L-malate and glucose-6-phosphate (G-6-P) concentration in the assay. Generally, lowering the pH and reducing the amount of substrate resulted in an increase in activation by G-6-P and in an increase in malate inhibition of the enzyme. Furthermore, malate inhibition and G-6-P activation increased with increasing temperature. Activity measurements between 10° C and 45°C at a given concentration of the effectors revealed that the temperature optimum and maximum activities at that optimum varied with the effector applied. Under the influence of 5 mol m-3 L-malate the temperature optimum and maximum activity dropped drastically, especially when the substrate level was low (at 0.5 mol m-3 PEP from 32° C to 20° C). G-6-P raised the temperature optimum and maximum activity when the substrate level was low. If both malate and G-6-P were present, intermediate values were measured. We suggest that changes in metabolite levels in K. daigremontiana leaves can alter the temperature features of PEP-carboxylase so that the observed in vivo CO2 dark fixation can be explained on the basis of PEP-carboxylase activity.Abbreviations PEP-c phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase - CAM crassulacean acid metabolism - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - G-6-P glucose-6-phosphate  相似文献   

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