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.
Immediate export in leaves of C3‐C4 intermediates were compared with their C3 and C4 relatives within the Panicum and Flaveria genera. At 35 Pa CO2, photosynthesis and export were highest in C4 species in each genera. Within the Panicum, photosynthesis and export in ‘type I’ C3‐C4 intermediates were greater than those in C3 species. However, ‘type I’ C3‐C4 intermediates exported a similar proportion of newly fixed 14C as did C4 species. Within the Flaveria, ‘type II’ C3‐C4 intermediate species had the lowest export rather than the C3 species. At ambient CO2, immediate export was strongly correlated with photosynthesis. However, at 90 Pa CO2, when photosynthesis and immediate export increased in all C3 and C3‐C4 intermediate species, proportionally less C was exported in all photosynthetic types than that at ambient CO2. All species accumulated starch and sugars at both CO2 levels. There was no correlation between immediate export and the pattern of 14C‐labelling into sugars and starch among the photosynthetic types within each genus. However, during CO2 enrichment, C4Panicum species accumulated sugars above the level of sugars and starch normally made at ambient CO2, whereas the C4Flaveria species accumulated only additional starch.  相似文献   

2.
Wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) was grown under CO2 partial pressures of 36 and 70 Pa with two N-application regimes. Responses of photosynthesis to varying CO2 partial pressure were fitted to estimate the maximal carboxylation rate and the nonphotorespiratory respiration rate in flag and preceding leaves. The maximal carboxylation rate was proportional to ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) content, and the light-saturated photosynthetic rate at 70 Pa CO2 was proportional to the thylakoid ATP-synthase content. Potential photosynthetic rates at 70 Pa CO2 were calculated and compared with the observed values to estimate excess investment in Rubisco. The excess was greater in leaves grown with high N application than in those grown with low N application and declined as the leaves senesced. The fraction of Rubisco that was estimated to be in excess was strongly dependent on leaf N content, increasing from approximately 5% in leaves with 1 g N m−2 to approximately 40% in leaves with 2 g N m−2. Growth at elevated CO2 usually decreased the excess somewhat but only as a consequence of a general reduction in leaf N, since relationships between the amount of components and N content were unaffected by CO2. We conclude that there is scope for improving the N-use efficiency of C3 crop species under elevated CO2 conditions.  相似文献   

3.
A Comparison of Dark Respiration between C(3) and C(4) Plants   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Byrd GT  Sage RF  Brown RH 《Plant physiology》1992,100(1):191-198
Lower respiratory costs were hypothesized as providing an additional benefit in C4 plants compared to C3 plants due to less investment in proteins in C4 leaves. Therefore, photosynthesis and dark respiration of mature leaves were compared between a number of C4 and C3 species. Although photosynthetic rates were generally greater in C4 when compared to C3 species, no differences were found in dark respiration rates of individual leaves at either the beginning or after 16 h of the dark period. The effects of nitrogen on photosynthesis and respiration of individual leaves and whole plants were also investigated in two species that occupy similar habitats, Amaranthus retroflexus (C4) and Chenopodium album (C3). For mature leaves of both species, there was no relationship between leaf nitrogen and leaf respiration, with leaves of both species exhibiting a similar rate of decline after 16 h of darkness. In contrast, leaf photosynthesis increased with increasing leaf nitrogen in both species, with the C4 species displaying a greater photosynthetic response to leaf nitrogen. For whole plants of both species grown at different nitrogen levels, there was a clear linear relationship between net CO2 uptake and CO2 efflux in the dark. The dependence of nightly CO2 efflux on CO2 uptake was similar for both species, although the response of CO2 uptake to leaf nitrogen was much steeper in the C4 species, Amaranthus retroflexus. Rates of growth and maintenance respiration by whole plants of both species were similar, with both species displaying higher rates at higher leaf nitrogen. There were no significant differences in leaf or whole plant maintenance respiration between species at any temperature between 18 and 42°C. The data suggest no obvious differences in respiratory costs in C4 and C3 plants.  相似文献   

4.
Photosynthesis rates of detached Panicum miliaceum leaves were measured, by either CO2 assimilation or oxygen evolution, over a wide range of CO2 concentrations before and after supplying the phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxylase inhibitor, 3,3-dichloro-2-(dihydroxyphosphinoyl-methyl)-propenoate (DCDP). At a concentration of CO2 near ambient, net photosynthesis was completely inhibited by DCDP, but could be largely restored by elevating the CO2 concentration to about 0.8% (v/v) and above. Inhibition of isolated PEP carboxylase by DCDP was not competitive with respect to HCO3, indicating that the recovery was not due to reversal of enzyme inhibition. The kinetics of 14C-incorporation from 14CO2 into early labeled products indicated that photosynthesis in DCDP-treated P. miliaceum leaves at 1% (v/v) CO2 occurs predominantly by direct CO2 fixation by ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase. From the photosynthesis rates of DCDP-treated leaves at elevated CO2 concentrations, permeability coefficients for CO2 flux into bundle sheath cells were determined for a range of C4 species. These values (6-21 micromoles per minute per milligram chlorophyll per millimolar, or 0.0016-0.0056 centimeter per second) were found to be about 100-fold lower than published values for mesophyll cells of C3 plants. These results support the concept that a CO2 permeability barrier exists to allow the development of high CO2 concentrations in bundle sheath cells during C4 photosynthesis.  相似文献   

5.
Brown RH  Byrd GT  Black CC 《Plant physiology》1992,100(2):947-950
Hybrids have been made between species of Flaveria exhibiting varying levels of C4 photosynthesis. The degree of C4 photosynthesis expressed in four interspecific hybrids (Flaveria trinervia [C4] × F. linearis [C3-C4], F. brownii [C4-like] × F. linearis, and two three-species hybrids from F. trinervia × [F. brownii × F. linearis]) was estimated by inhibiting phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase in vivo with 3,3-dichloro-2-dihydroxyphosphinoylmethyl-2-propenoate (DCDP). The inhibitor was fed to detached leaves at a concentration of 4 mm, and apparent photosynthesis was measured at atmospheric levels of CO2 and at 20 and 210 mL L−1 of O2. Photosynthesis at 210 mL L−1 of O2 was inhibited 32% by DCDP in F. linearis, by 60% in F. brownii, and by 87% in F. trinervia. Inhibition in the hybrids ranged from 38 to 52%. The inhibition of photosynthesis by 210 mL L−1 of O2 was increased when DCDP was used, except in the C4 species, F. trinervia, in which photosynthesis was insensitive to O2. Except for F. trinervia, control plants with less O2 sensitivity (more C4-like) exhibited a progressively greater change in O2 inhibition of photosynthesis when treated with DCDP. This increased O2 inhibition probably resulted from decreased CO2 concentrations in bundle sheath cells due to inhibition of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase. The inhibition of photosynthesis by DCDP is concluded to underestimate the degree of C4 photosynthesis in the interspecific hybrids because increased direct assimilation of atmospheric CO2 by ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase may compensate for inhibition of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase.  相似文献   

6.
Ogawa T  Kaplan A 《Plant physiology》1987,83(4):888-891
The pH of the medium during CO2 uptake into the intracellular inorganic carbon (Ci) pool of a high CO2-requiring mutant (E1) and wild type of Anacystis nidulans R2 was measured. Experiments were performed under conditions where photosynthetic CO2 fixation is inhibited. There was an acidification of the medium during CO2 uptake in the light and an alkalization during CO2 efflux after darkening. A one to one stoichiometry existed between the amounts of H+ appearing in the medium and CO2 taken up into the intracellular Ci pool, regardless of the carbon species transported. The results indicate that (a) CO2 is taken up simultaneously with an efflux of equimolar H+, probably produced as a result of CO2 hydration during transport and (b) HCO3 produced by hydration of CO2 in the medium was transported into the cells without accompanying net flux of H+ or OH. The influx and efflux of Ci during Ci transport produced nonequilibrium between CO2 and HCO3 in the medium, with the concentration of HCO3 being higher than that expected under equilibrium conditions. The nonequilibrium was present even under the conditions where the influx of Ci is compensated by its efflux. The direction of this nonequilibrium suggested that efflux of HCO3 occurs during uptake of Ci.  相似文献   

7.
The basis for O2 sensitivity of C4 photosynthesis was evaluated using a C4-cycle-limited mutant of Amaranthus edulis (a phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase-deficient mutant), and a C3-cycle-limited transformant of Flaveria bidentis (an antisense ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase [Rubisco] small subunit transformant). Data obtained with the C4-cycle-limited mutant showed that atmospheric levels of O2 (20 kPa) caused increased inhibition of photosynthesis as a result of higher levels of photorespiration. The optimal O2 partial pressure for photosynthesis was reduced from approximately 5 kPa O2 to 1 to 2 kPa O2, becoming similar to that of C3 plants. Therefore, the higher O2 requirement for optimal C4 photosynthesis is specifically associated with the C4 function. With the Rubisco-limited F. bidentis, there was less inhibition of photosynthesis by supraoptimal levels of O2 than in the wild type. When CO2 fixation by Rubisco is limited, an increase in the CO2 concentration in bundle-sheath cells via the C4 cycle may further reduce the oxygenase activity of Rubisco and decrease the inhibition of photosynthesis by high partial pressures of O2 while increasing CO2 leakage and overcycling of the C4 pathway. These results indicate that in C4 plants the investment in the C3 and C4 cycles must be balanced for maximum efficiency.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Mono-specific communities of the C3 sedge, Scirpus olneyi and the C4 grass, Spartina patens, were exposed to normal ambient or elevated CO2, (ca. 680 l l–1) throughout the 1987 and 1988 growing seasons in open-top field chambers located on a tidal marsh. Single stems of C3 plants grown in ambient or elevated CO2 showed an increased photosynthetic rate when tested at elevated CO2 for both seasons. This increase in photosynthetic response in the C3 species was maintained throughout the 1987 and 1988 growing season. The stimulation of photosynthesis with elevated CO2 appeared to increase as temperature increased and decreased as photosynthetic photon flux (PPF) increased. Analysis of the photosynthetic response of the C3 species during the 1988 season indicated that significant differences in light-saturated photosynthetic rate between ambient and elevated CO2 conditions continued until October. In contrast to the C3 sedge, the C4 grass showed no significant photosynthetic increase to elevated CO2 except at the beginning of the 1988 season.  相似文献   

9.
Whole-plant diurnal C exchange analysis provided a noninvasive estimation of daily net C gain in transgenic tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) plants deficient in leaf cytosolic pyruvate kinase (PKc−). PKc− plants cultivated under a low light intensity (100 μmol m−2 s−1) were previously shown to exhibit markedly reduced root growth, as well as delayed shoot and flower development when compared with plants having wild-type levels of PKc (PKc+). PKc− and PKc+ source leaves showed a similar net C gain, photosynthesis over a range of light intensities, and a capacity to export newly fixed 14CO2 during photosynthesis. However, during growth under low light the nighttime, export of previously fixed 14CO2 by fully expanded PKc− leaves was 40% lower, whereas concurrent respiratory 14CO2 evolution was 40% higher than that of PKc+ leaves. This provides a rationale for the reduced root growth of the PKc− plants grown at low irradiance. Leaf photosynthetic and export characteristics in PKc− and PKc+ plants raised in a greenhouse during winter months resembled those of plants grown in chambers at low irradiance. The data suggest that PKc in source leaves has a critical role in regulating nighttime respiration particularly when the available pool of photoassimilates for export and leaf respiratory processes are low.  相似文献   

10.
The role of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase in photosynthesis in the C3 plant Nicotiana tabacum has been probed by measurement of the 13C content of various materials. Whole leaf and purified ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase are within the range expected for C3 plants. Aspartic acid purified following acid hydrolysis of this ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase is enriched in 13C compared to whole protein. Carbons 1-3 of this aspartic acid are in the normal C3 range, but carbon-4 (obtained by treatment of the aspartic acid with aspartate β-decarboxylase) has an isotopic composition in the range expected for products of C4 photosynthesis (−5‰), and it appears that more than half of the aspartic acid is synthesized by phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase using atmospheric CO2/HCO3. Thus, a primary role of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase in C3 plants appears to be the anapleurotic synthesis of four-carbon acids.  相似文献   

11.
These studies demonstrated that CO2 rather than HCO3 is the inorganic carbon metabolite produced by the C4 acid decarboxylases involved in C4 photosynthesis (chloroplast located NADP malic enzyme, mitochondrial NAD malic enzyme, and cytosolic phosphoenolpyruvate [PEP] carboxykinase). The effect of varying CO2 or HCO3 as a substrate for the carboxylation reaction catalyzed by these enzymes or as inhibitors of the decarboxylation reaction was also determined. The KmCO2 was 1.1 millimolar for NADP malic enzyme and 2.5 millimolar for PEP carboxykinase. For these two enzymes the velocity in the carboxylating direction was substantially less than for the decarboxylating direction even with CO2 concentrations at the upper end of the range of expected cellular levels. Activity of NAD malic enzyme in the carboxylating direction was undetectable. The decarboxylation reaction of all three enzymes was inhibited by added HCO3. For NADP malic enzyme CO2 was shown to be the inhibitory species but PEP carboxykinase and NAD malic enzyme were apparently inhibited about equally by CO2 and HCO3.  相似文献   

12.
The potential for C4 photosynthesis was investigated in five C3-C4 intermediate species, one C3 species, and one C4 species in the genus Flaveria, using 14CO2 pulse-12CO2 chase techniques and quantum-yield measurements. All five intermediate species were capable of incorporating 14CO2 into the C4 acids malate and aspartate, following an 8-s pulse. The proportion of 14C label in these C4 products ranged from 50–55% to 20–26% in the C3-C4 intermediates F. floridana Johnston and F. linearis Lag. respectively. All of the intermediate species incorporated as much, or more, 14CO2 into aspartate as into malate. Generally, about 5–15% of the initial label in these species appeared as other organic acids. There was variation in the capacity for C4 photosynthesis among the intermediate species based on the apparent rate of conversion of 14C label from the C4 cycle to the C3 cycle. In intermediate species such as F. pubescens Rydb., F. ramosissima Klatt., and F. floridana we observed a substantial decrease in label of C4-cycle products and an increase in percentage label in C3-cycle products during chase periods with 12CO2, although the rate of change was slower than in the C4 species, F. palmeri. In these C3-C4 intermediates both sucrose and fumarate were predominant products after a 20-min chase period. In the C3-C4 intermediates, F. anomala Robinson and f. linearis we observed no significant decrease in the label of C4-cycle products during a 3-min chase period and a slow turnover during a 20-min chase, indicating a lower level of functional integration between the C4 and C3 cycles in these species, relative to the other intermediates. Although F. cronquistii Powell was previously identified as a C3 species, 7–18% of the initial label was in malate+aspartate. However, only 40–50% of this label was in the C-4 position, indicating C4-acid formation as secondary products of photosynthesis in F. cronquistii. In 21% O2, the absorbed quantum yields for CO2 uptake (in mol CO2·[mol quanta]-1) averaged 0.053 in F. cronquistii (C3), 0.051 in F. trinervia (Spreng.) Mohr (C4), 0.052 in F. ramosissima (C3-C4), 0.051 in F. anomala (C3-C4), 0.050 in F. linearis (C3-C4), 0.046 in F. floridana (C3-C4), and 0.044 in F. pubescens (C3-C4). In 2% O2 an enhancement of the quantum yield was observed in all of the C3-C4 intermediate species, ranging from 21% in F. ramosissima to 43% in F. pubescens. In all intermediates the quantum yields in 2% O2 were intermediate in value to the C3 and C4 species, indicating a co-function of the C3 and C4 cycles in CO2 assimilation. The low quantum-yield values for F. pubescens and F. floridana in 21% O2 presumably reflect an ineffcient transfer of carbon from the C4 to the C3 cycle. The response of the quantum yield to four increasing O2 concentrations (2–35%) showed lower levels of O2 inhibition in the C3-C4 intermediate F. ramosissima, relative to the C3 species. This indicates that the co-function of the C3 and C4 cycles in this intermediate species leads to an increased CO2 concentration at the site of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase and a concomitant decrease in the competitive inhibition by O2.Abbreviations PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - PGA 3-phosphoglycerate - RuBP ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate  相似文献   

13.
Summary Analyses of carbon-assimilation patterns in response to intercellular CO2 concentrations, and the photosynthetic water-and nitrogen-use efficiencies, were conducted for a C3, a C4, and three C3–C4 species in the genus Flaveria in order to determine some of the advantages and disadvantages of C3–C4 intermediate photosynthesis. Operational intercellular CO2 partial pressures (pi), determined when the atmospheric CO2 partial pressure (pa) was approximately 330 bar, in the C3–C4 species were generally equal to, or greater than, those observed in the C3 species under well-watered or water-stressed conditions. This reflects equal, or lower, water-use efficiencies (WUEs) in the C3–C4 species. The only case in which higher WUEs were observed in the C3–C4 species, compared to the C3 species, was when photosynthesis rates were limited by available nitrogen and were less than 12.5 mol CO2 m-2s-1. At higher photosynthesis rates, the C3–C4 species exhibited lower values of photosynthesis rate for equal values of stomatal conductance (lower WUE), compared to the C3 species. Comparing slopes for the linear regions of the relationship between leaf nitrogen content and net photosynthesis rate (taken as an index of photosynthetic nitrogen-use efficiency, NUE), the C4 species exhibited the highest NUE, followed by the C3–C4 species, F. ramosissima, with the other two C3–C4 species and the C3 species being equal and exhibiting the lowest NUEs. The lack of consistent advantages in NUE and WUE in the C3–C4 species F. pubescens and F. floridana suggest that in some C3–C4 Flaveria species C4-like anatomy and biochemistry do not provide the same gas exchange advantages that we typically attribute to the CO2-concentrating mechanism of fully-expressed C4 plants.  相似文献   

14.
Jenkins CL 《Plant physiology》1989,89(4):1231-1237
The effect of 3,3-dichloro-2-(dihydroxyphosphinoylmethyl)-propenoate (DCDP), an analog of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP), on PEP carboxylase activity in crude leaf extracts and on photosynthesis of excised leaves was examined. DCDP is an effective inhibitor of PEP carboxylase from Zea mays or Panicum miliaceum; 50% inhibition was obtained at 70 or 350 micromolar, respectively, in the presence of 1 millimolar PEP and 1 millimolar HCO3. When fed to leaf sections via the transpiration stream, DCDP at 1 millimolar strongly inhibited photosynthesis in C4 species (79-98% inhibition for a range of seven C4 species), but only moderately in C3 species (12-46% for four C3 species), suggesting different mechanisms of inhibition for each photosynthetic type. The response of P. miliaceum (C4) net photosynthesis to intercellular pCO2 showed that carboxylation efficiency, as well as the CO2 saturated rate, are lowered in the presence of DCDP and supported the view that carboxylation efficiency in C4 species is directly related to PEP carboxylase activity. A fivefold increase in intercellular pCO2 over that occurring in P. miliaceum under normal photosynthesis conditions only increased net photosynthesis rate in the presence of 1 millimolar DCDP from zero to about 5% of the maximal uninhibited rate. Therefore, it seems unlikely that direct fixation of atmospheric CO2 by the bundle sheath cells makes any significant contribution to photosynthetic CO2 assimilation in C4 species. The results support the concept that C4-selective herbicides may be developed based on inhibitors of C4 pathway reactions.  相似文献   

15.
In C4 plants carbonic anhydrase catalyzes the critical first step of C4 photosynthesis, the hydration of CO2 to bicarbonate. The maximum activity of this enzyme in C4 leaf extracts, measured by H+ production with saturating CO2 and extrapolated to 25°C, was found to be 3,000 to 10,000 times the maximum photosynthesis rate for these leaves. Similar activities were found in C3 leaf extracts. However, the calculated effective activity of this enzyme at in vivo CO2 concentrations was apparently just sufficient to prevent the rate of conversion of CO2 to HCO3 from limiting C4 photosynthesis. This conclusion was supported by the mass spectrometric determination of leaf carbonic anhydrase activities.  相似文献   

16.
Photosynthetic characteristics were studied in several F1 hybrids between C4 and C3-C4 species of Flaveria. Stable carbon isotope ratios, O2 inhibition of apparent photosynthesis, and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase activities in the hybrids were similar to the means for the parents. Values of CO2 compensation concentrations were nearer to those of the C4 parent and apparent photosynthesis was below that of both parents, being only 60 and 74% of that of the lowest (C3-C4) parent in two experiments. Reductions of CO2 compensation concentration and O2 inhibition of apparent photosynthesis as well as increases in carbon isotope ratios and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase activities compared to values in C3-C4 species suggest transfer of a limited degree of C4 photosynthesis to the F1 hybrids. However, the lower apparent photosynthesis of the hybrids suggests that transfer of C4 characteristics to non-C4 species is detrimental unless characteristics associated with C4 photosynthesis are fully developed. There was a highly significant negative correlation (r = −0.90) between CO2 compensation concentration and the logarithm of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase activity in the parents and hybrids, suggesting involvement of this enzyme in controlling the CO2 compensation concentration. Although bundle-sheath cells were more developed in leaves of hybrids than in C3-C4 parents, they appeared to contain lower quantities of organelles than those of the C4 parent. Reduced quantities of organelles in bundle-sheath cells could indicate incomplete compartmentation of partial pathways of the C4 cycle in the hybrids. This may mean that the reduction of CO2 compensation and O2 inhibition of apparent photosynthesis relative to the C3-C4 parents is less dependent on fully developed Kranz anatomy than is increased apparent photosynthesis.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
Isolated mesophyll protoplasts, and protoplast extracts containing intact chloroplasts, from the C4 species Digitaria sanguinalis have been used to study Compartmentation and export of C4 acids, using different C3 precursors as substrate for 14CO2 fixation. Mg2+ was necessary for maximum 14CO2 fixation rates with both protoplasts and protoplast extracts, whereas Mg2+ was inhibitory for oxaloacetate and phosphoglycerate reduction. This inhibition could be overcome by preincubating the materials in the light with excess of EDTA before addition of Mg2+. Under these conditions pyruvate as substrate for 14CO2 fixation induced mainly malate formation, whereas phosphoglycerate as substrate induced oxaloacetate formation, indicating competition for available NADPH between oxaloacetate and phosphoglycerate reduction. Oxaloacetate could be exported from the protoplasts at rates comparable to the rates of 14CO2 fixation in intact leaves (200 μmol/mg Chl × h). This product probably passed the plasma membrane by simple diffusion, whereas the export of malate and aspartate seemed to be regulated, with the size of the intraprotoplast pool being relatively independent of the export rate. It is concluded that transport via the plasma membrane-cell wall path may play a role in metabolite flow during photosynthesis in C4 plants.  相似文献   

19.
The photosynthetic assimilation of CO2 in C4 plants is potentially limited by the enzymatic rates of Rubisco, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPc), and carbonic anhydrase (CA). Therefore, the activity and kinetic properties of these enzymes are needed to accurately parameterize C4 biochemical models of leaf CO2 exchange in response to changes in CO2 availability and temperature. There are currently no published temperature responses of both Rubisco carboxylation and oxygenation kinetics from a C4 plant, nor are there known measurements of the temperature dependency of the PEPc Michaelis-Menten constant for its substrate HCO3, and there is little information on the temperature response of plant CA activity. Here, we used membrane inlet mass spectrometry to measure the temperature responses of Rubisco carboxylation and oxygenation kinetics, PEPc carboxylation kinetics, and the activity and first-order rate constant for the CA hydration reaction from 10°C to 40°C using crude leaf extracts from the C4 plant Setaria viridis. The temperature dependencies of Rubisco, PEPc, and CA kinetic parameters are provided. These findings describe a new method for the investigation of PEPc kinetics, suggest an HCO3 limitation imposed by CA, and show similarities between the Rubisco temperature responses of previously measured C3 species and the C4 plant S. viridis.Biochemical models of photosynthesis are often used to predict the effect of environmental conditions on net rates of leaf CO2 assimilation (Farquhar et al., 1980; von Caemmerer, 2000, 2013; Walker et al., 2013). With climate change, there is increased interest in modeling and understanding the effects of changes in temperature and CO2 concentration on photosynthesis. The biochemical models of photosynthesis are primarily driven by the kinetic properties of the enzyme Rubisco, the primary carboxylating enzyme of the C3 photosynthetic pathway, catalyzing the reaction of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) with either CO2 or oxygen. However, the CO2-concentrating mechanism in C4 photosynthesis utilizes carbonic anhydrase (CA) to help maintain the chemical equilibrium of CO2 with HCO3 and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPc) to catalyze the carboxylation of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) with HCO3. These reactions ultimately provide the elevated levels of CO2 to the compartmentalized Rubisco (Edwards and Walker, 1983). In C4 plants, it has been demonstrated that PEPc, Rubisco, and CA can limit rates of CO2 assimilation and influence the efficiency of the CO2-concentrating mechanism (von Caemmerer, 2000; von Caemmerer et al., 2004; Studer et al., 2014). Therefore, accurate modeling of leaf photosynthesis in C4 plants in response to future climatic conditions will require temperature parameterizations of Rubisco, PEPc, and CA kinetics from C4 species.Modeling C4 photosynthesis relies on the parameterization of both PEPc and Rubisco kinetics, making it more complex than for C3 photosynthesis (Berry and Farquhar, 1978; von Caemmerer, 2000). However, the activity of CA is not included in these models, as it is assumed to be nonlimiting under most conditions (Berry and Farquhar, 1978; von Caemmerer, 2000). This assumption is implemented by modeling PEPc kinetics as a function of CO2 partial pressure (pCO2) and not HCO3 concentration, assuming CO2 and HCO3 are in chemical equilibrium. However, there are questions regarding the amount of CA activity needed to sustain rates of C4 photosynthesis and if CO2 and HCO3 are in equilibrium (von Caemmerer et al., 2004; Studer et al., 2014).The most common steady-state biochemical models of photosynthesis are derived from the Michaelis-Menten models of enzyme activity (von Caemmerer, 2000), which are driven by the Vmax and the Km. Both of these parameters need to be further described by their temperature responses to be used to model photosynthesis in response to temperature. However, the temperature response of plant CA activity has not been completed above 17°C, and there is no known measured temperature response of Km HCO3 for PEPc (KP). Alternatively, Rubisco has been well studied, and there are consistent differences in kinetic values between C3 and C4 species at 25°C (von Caemmerer and Quick, 2000; Kubien et al., 2008), but the temperature responses, including both carboxylation and oxygenation reactions, have only been performed in C3 species (Badger and Collatz, 1977; Jordan and Ogren, 1984; Bernacchi et al., 2001, 2002; Walker et al., 2013).Here, we present the temperature dependency of Rubisco carboxylation and oxygenation reactions, PEPc kinetics for HCO3, and CA hydration from 10°C to 40°C from the C4 species Setaria viridis (succession no., A-010) measured using membrane inlet mass spectrometry. Generally, the 25°C values of the Rubisco parameters were similar to previous measurements of C4 species. The temperature response of the maximum rate of Rubisco carboxylation (Vcmax) was high compared with most previous measurements from both C3 and C4 species, and the temperature response of the Km for oxygenation (KO) was low compared with most previously measured species. Taken together, the modeled temperature responses of Rubisco activity in S. viridis were similar to the previously reported temperature responses of some C3 species. Additionally, the temperature response of the maximum rate of PEPc carboxylation (Vpmax) was similar to previous measurements. However, the temperature response of KP was lower than what has been predicted (Chen et al., 1994). For CA, deactivation of the hydration activity was observed above 25°C. Additionally, models of CA and PEPc show that CA activity limits HCO3 availability to PEPc above 15°C, suggesting that CA limits PEP carboxylation rates in S. viridis when compared with the assumption that CO2 and HCO3 are in full chemical equilibrium.  相似文献   

20.
Ocean acidification (OA) due to atmospheric CO2 rise is expected to influence marine primary productivity. In order to investigate the interactive effects of OA and light changes on diatoms, we grew Phaeodactylum tricornutum, under ambient (390 ppmv; LC) and elevated CO2 (1000 ppmv; HC) conditions for 80 generations, and measured its physiological performance under different light levels (60 µmol m−2 s−1, LL; 200 µmol m−2 s−1, ML; 460 µmol m−2 s−1, HL) for another 25 generations. The specific growth rate of the HC-grown cells was higher (about 12–18%) than that of the LC-grown ones, with the highest under the ML level. With increasing light levels, the effective photochemical yield of PSII (Fv′/Fm′) decreased, but was enhanced by the elevated CO2, especially under the HL level. The cells acclimated to the HC condition showed a higher recovery rate of their photochemical yield of PSII compared to the LC-grown cells. For the HC-grown cells, dissolved inorganic carbon or CO2 levels for half saturation of photosynthesis (K1/2 DIC or K1/2 CO2) increased by 11, 55 and 32%, under the LL, ML and HL levels, reflecting a light dependent down-regulation of carbon concentrating mechanisms (CCMs). The linkage between higher level of the CCMs down-regulation and higher growth rate at ML under OA supports the theory that the saved energy from CCMs down-regulation adds on to enhance the growth of the diatom.  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