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1.
Summary An albino seedling of Zea mays L. was investigated for its potential for CO2-assimilation. In the mesophyll the number, dimensions and fine structure of chloroplasts are drastically reduced but to a lesser extent in the bundle sheath. Chlorophyll concentration is zero and carotenoid concentration almost zero. Albinism also exerts a strong influence on the stroma of bundle sheath chloroplasts; ribulose-1.5-biphosphate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.39) activity and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (NADP) (EC 1.2.1.13) activity is not detectable. The C4-enzymes phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.31) and malate dehydrogenase (decarboxylating) (EC 1.1.1.40) and the non-photosynthetic linked enzymes malate dehydrogenase (NAD) (EC 1.1.1.37), aspartate-2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase (EC 1.1.1.37), aspartate-2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.1.) and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (NAD) (EC 1.2.1.1.) are present in the albino seedling with activities comparable to those in etiolated maize seedlings. The potential for CO2 fixation of the albino seedlings exceeds that of comparable dark seedlings considerably. The results are discussed with regard to enzyme localization of the C4 pathway of photosynthesis.Abbreviations Aspartate aminotransferase L-aspartate-2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase-EC 2.6.1.1. - GAPDH (NAD) glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (NAD dep.)-EC 1.2.1.12 - GAPDH (NADP) glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (NADP dep.)-EC 1.2.1.13 - malic enzyme malate dehydrogenase (NADP dep., decarboxylating)-EC 1.1.1.40 - MDH malate dehydrogenase (NAD dep.)-1.1.1.37 - PEP carboxylase phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase-EC 4.1.1.31 - RuDP carboxylase ribulose-1.5-biphosphate carboxylase-EC 4.1.1.39  相似文献   

2.
A method has been developed for rapidly preparing bundle sheath cell strands from Urochloa panicoides, a phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxykinase-type C4 plant. These cells catalyzed both HCO3(-)- and oxaloacetate-dependent oxygen evolution; oxaloacetate-dependent oxygen evolution was stimulated by ATP. For this activity oxaloacetate could be replaced by aspartate plus 2-oxoglutarate. Both oxaloacetate- and aspartate plus 2-oxoglutarate-dependent oxygen evolution were accompanied by PEP production and both were inhibited by 3-mercaptopicolinic acid, an inhibitor of PEP carboxykinase. The ATP requirement for oxaloacetate- and aspartate plus 2-oxoglutarate-dependent oxygen evolution could be replaced by ADP plus malate. The increased oxygen evolution observed when malate plus ADP was added with oxaloacetate was accompanied by pyruvate production. These results are consistent with oxaloacetate being decarboxylated via PEP carboxykinase. We suggest that the ATP required for oxaloacetate decarboxylation via PEP carboxykinase may be derived by phosphorylation coupled to malate oxidation in mitochondria. These bundle sheath cells apparently contain diffusion paths for the rapid transfer of compounds as large as adenine nucleotides.  相似文献   

3.
The mechanism of C4 acid decarboxylation was studied in bundle sheath cell strands from Urochloa panicoides, a phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PCK)-type C4 plant. Added malate was decarboxylated to give pyruvate and this activity was often increased by adding ADP. Added oxaloacetate or aspartate plus 2-oxoglutarate (which produce oxaloacetate via aspartate aminotransferase) gave little metabolic decarboxylation alone but with added ATP there was a rapid production of PEP. For this activity ADP could replace ATP but only when added in combination with malate. In addition, the inclusion of aspartate plus 2-oxoglutarate with malate plus ADP often increased the rate of pyruvate production from malate by more than twofold. Experiments with respiratory chain inhibitors showed that the malate-dependent stimulation of oxaloacetate decarboxylation (PEP production) was probably due to ATP generated during the oxidation of malate in mitochondria. We could provide no evidence that photophosphorylation could serve as an alternative source of ATP for the PEP carboxykinase reaction. We concluded that both PEP carboxykinase and mitochondrial NAD-malic enzyme contribute to C4 acid decarboxylation in these cells, with the required ATP being derived from oxidation-linked phosphorylation in mitochondria.  相似文献   

4.
Bundle sheath cells were enzymatically isolated from representatives of three groups of C4 plants: Zea mays (NADP malic enzyme type), Panicum miliaceum (NAD malic enzyme type), and Panicum maximum (phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) carboxykinase type). Cellular organelles from bundle sheath homogenates were partially resolved by differential centrifugation and on isopycnic sucrose density gradients in order to study compartmentation of photosynthetic enzymes. A 48-h-dark pretreatment of the leaves allowed the isolation of relatively intact chloroplasts. Enzymes that decarboxylate C4 acids and furnish CO2 to the Calvin cycle are localized as follows: NADP malic enzyme, chloroplastic in Z. mays; NAD malic enzyme, mitochondrial in all three species; PEP carboxykinase, chloroplastic in P. maximum. The activity of NAD malic enzyme in the three species was in the order of P. miliaceum > P. maximum > Z. mays. There were high levels of aspartate and alanine aminotransferases in bundle sheath extracts of P. miliaceum and P. maximum and substantial activity in Z. mays. In all three species, aspartate aminotransferase was mitochondrial whereas alanine aminotransferase was cytoplasmic. Based on the activity and localization of certain enzymes, the concept for aspartate and malate as transport metabolites from mesophyll to bundle sheath cells in C4 species of the three C4 groups is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Oxygen inhibition of leaf slice photosynthesis in Panicum milioides increased from 20% to 30% at 21% O2 in the presence of maleate, a phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase inhibitor. The increased O2 sensitivity was completely reversed by the addition of malate and aspartate, the stable products of the phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase reaction. The C4 acids, malate and aspartate, also reduced O2 inhibition of photosynthesis by isolated bundle sheath strands, but not mesophyll protoplasts. Similarly, only bundle sheath strands exhibited an active C4 acid-dependent O2 evolution. Compartmentation of C4 cycle enzymes, with pyruvate, Pi dikinase in the mesophyll and NAD-malic enzyme in the bundle sheath, was demonstrated. It is concluded that reduced photorespiration in P. milioides is due to a limited potential for C4 photosynthesis permitting an increase in pCO2 at the site of bundle sheath ribulosebisphosphate carboxylase.  相似文献   

6.
Panicum milioides, a naturally occurring species with C4-like Kranz leaf anatomy, is intermediate between C3 and C4 plants with respect to photo-respiration and the associated oxygen inhibition of photosynthesis. This paper presents direct evidence for a limited degree of C4 photosynthesis in this C3-C4 intermediate species based on: (a) the appearance of 24% of the total 14C fixed following 4 s photosynthesis in 14CO2-air by excised leaves in malate and aspartate and the complete transfer of label from the C4 acids to Calvin cycle intermediates within a 15 s chase in 12CO2-air; (b) pyruvate- or alanine-enhanced light-dependent CO2 fixation and pyruvate stimulation ote- or alanine-enhanced light-dependent CO2 fixation and pyruvate stimulation of oxaloacetate- or 3-phosphoglycerate-dependent O2 evolution by illuminated mesophyll protoplasts, but not bundle sheath strands; and (c) NAD-malic enzyme-dependent decarboxylation of C4 acids at the C-4 carboxyl position, C4 acid-dependent O2 evolution, and 14CO2 donation from (4-14C)C4 acids to Calvin cycle intermediates during photosynthesis by bundle sheath strands, but not mesophyll protoplasts. However, P. milloides differs from C4 plants in that the activity of the C4 cycle enzymes is only 15 to 30% of a C4 Panicum species and the Calvin cycle and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase are present in both cell types. From these and related studies (Rathnam, C.K.M. and Chollet, R. (1979) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 193, 346-354; (1978) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 85, 801-808) we conclude that reduced photorespiration in P. milioides is due to a limited degree of NAD-malic enzyme-type C4 photosynthesis permitting an increase in pCO2 at the site of bundle sheath, but not mesophyll, ribulose-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase.  相似文献   

7.
Lipid peroxidation and the degradation of cytochrome P-450 heme   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
The enzyme content and functional capacities of mesophyll chloroplasts from Atriplex spongiosa and maize have been investigated. Accompanying evidence from graded sequential blending of leaves confirmed that mesophyll cells contain all of the leaf pyruvate, Pi dikinase, and PEP carboxylase activities and a major part of the adenylate kinase and pyrophosphatase. 3-Phosphoglycerate kinase, NADP glyceraldehyde-3-P-dehydrogenase, and triose-P isomerase activities were about equally distributed between mesophyll and bundle sheath cells but other Calvin cycle enzymes were very largely or solely located in bundle sheath cells. In A. spongiosa extracts of predominantly mesophyll origin the proportion of the released pyruvate, Pi dikinase, adenylate kinase, pyrophosphatase, 3-phosphoglycerate kinase, and NADP glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase retained in pelleted chloroplasts was similar but varied between 30 and 80% in different preparations. The proportion of these enzymes and NADP malate dehydrogenase recovered in maize chloroplast preparations varied between 15 and 35%. Washed chloroplasts retained most of the activity of these enzymes but ribulose diphosphate carboxylase and other Calvin cycle enzyme activities were undetectable. Among the evidence for the integrity of these chloroplasts was their capacity for light-dependent conversion of pyruvate to phosphoenolpyruvate and O2 evolution when 3-phosphoglycerate or oxaloacetate were added. These results support our previous conclusions about the function of mesophyll chloroplasts in C4-pathway photosynthesis and clearly demonstrate that they lack Calvin cycle activity.  相似文献   

8.
Mesophyll cells and bundle sheath strands were isolated from Cyperus rotundus L. leaf sections infiltrated with a mixture of cellulase and pectinase followed by a gentle mortar and pestle grind. The leaf suspension was filtered through a filter assembly and mesophyll cells and bundle sheath strands were collected on 20-μm and 80-μm nylon nets, respectively. For the isolation of leaf epidermal strips longer leaf cross sections were incubated with the enzymes and gently ground as above. Loosely attached epidermal strips were peeled off with forceps. The upper epidermis, which lacks stomata, could be clearly distinguished from the lower epidermis which contains stomata. Microscopic evidence for identification and assessment of purity is provided for each isolated tissue.Enzymes related to the C4-dicarboxylic acid cycle such as phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase, malate dehydrogenase (NADP+), pyruvate, Pi dikinase were found to be localized, ≥98%, in mesophyll cells. Enzymes related to operating the reductive pentose phosphate cycle such as RuDP carboxylase, phosphoribulose kinase, and malic enzyme are distributed, ≥99%, in bundle sheath strands. Other photosynthetic enzymes such as aspartate aminotransferase, pyrophosphatase, adenylate kinase, and glyceraldehyde 3-P dehydrogenase (NADP+) are quite active in both mesophyll and bundle sheath tissues.Enzymes involved in photorespiration such as RuDP oxygenase, catalase, glycolate oxidase, hydroxypyruvate reductase (NAD+), and phosphoglycolate phosphatase are preferentially localized, ≥84%, in bundle sheath strands.Nitrate and nitrite reductase can be found only in mesophyll cells, while glutamate dehydrogenase is present, ≥96%, in bundle sheath strands.Starch- and sucrose-synthesizing enzymes are about equally distributed between the mesophyll and bundle sheath tissues, except that the less active phosphorylase was found mainly in bundle sheath strands. Fructose-1,6-diP aldolase, which is a key enzyme in photosynthesis and glycolysis leading to sucrose and starch synthesis, is localized, ≥90%, in bundle sheath strands. The glycolytic enzymes, phosphoglyceromutase and enolase, have the highest activity in mesophyll cells, while the mitochondrial enzyme, cytochrome c oxidase, is more active in bundle sheath strands.The distribution of total nutsedge leaf chlorophyll, protein, and PEP carboxylase activity, using the resolved leaf components, is presented. 14CO2 Fixation experiments with the intact nutsedge leaves and isolated mesophyll and bundle sheath tissues show that complete C4 photosynthesis is compartmentalized into mesophyll CO2 fixation via PEP carboxylase and bundle sheath CO2 fixation via RuDP carboxylase. These results were used to support the proposed pathway of carbon assimilation in C4-dicarboxylic acid photosynthesis and to discuss the individual metabolic characteristics of intact mesophyll cells, bundle sheath cells, and epidermal tissues.  相似文献   

9.
In C4 grasses belonging to the NADP-malic enzyme-type subgroup, malate is considered to be the predominant C4 acid metabolized during C4 photosynthesis, and the bundle sheath cell chloroplasts contain very little photosystem-II (PSII) activity. The present studies showed that Flaveria bidentis (L.), an NADP-malic enzyme-type C4 dicotyledon, had substantial PSII activity in bundle sheath cells and that malate and aspartate apparently contributed about equally to the transfer of CO2 to bundle sheath cells. Preparations of bundle sheath cells and chloroplasts isolated from these cells evolved O2 at rates between 1.5 and 2 mol · min–1 · mg–1 chlorophyll (Chl) in the light in response to adding either 3-phosphoglycerate plus HCO 3 or aspartate plus 2-oxoglutarate. Rates of more than 2 mol O2 · min–1 · mg–1 Chl were recorded for cells provided with both sets of these substrates. With bundle sheath cell preparations the maximum rates of light-dependent CO2 fixation and malate decarboxylation to pyruvate recorded were about 1.7 mol · min–1 · mg–1 Chl. Compared with NADP-malic enzyme-type grass species, F. bidentis bundle sheath cells contained much higher activities of NADP-malate dehydrogenase and of aspartate and alanine aminotransferases. Time-course and pulse-chase studies following the kinetics of radiolabelling of the C-4 carboxyl of C4 acids from 14CO2 indicated that the photosynthetically active pool of malate was about twice the size of the aspartate pool. However, there was strong evidence for a rapid flux of carbon through both these pools. Possible routes of aspartate metabolism and the relationship between this metabolism and PSII activity in bundle sheath cells are considered.Abbreviations DHAP dihydroxyacetone phosphate - NADP-ME(-type) NADP-malic enzyme (type) - NADP-MDH NADP-malate dehydrogenase - OAA oxaloacetic acid - 2-OG 2-oxoglutarate - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - PGA 3-phosphoglycerate - Pi orthophosphate - Ru5P ribulose 5-phosphate  相似文献   

10.
The rate of respiratory CO2 evolution from the leaves of Zea mays, Panicum miliaceum, and Panicum maximum, representing NADP-ME, NAD-ME, and PEP-CK types of C4 plants, respectively, was increased by approximately two to four times after a period of photosynthesis. This light-enhanced dark respiration (LEDR) was a function of net photosynthetic rate specific to plant species, and was depressed by 1% O2. When malate, aspartate, oxaloacetate or glycine solution at 50 mM concentration was introduced into the leaves instead of water, the rate of LEDR was enhanced, far less in Z. mays (by 10-25%) than in P. miliaceum (by 25-35%) or P. maximum (by 40-75%). The enhancement of LEDR under glycine was relatively stable over a period of 1 h, whereas the remaining metabolites caused its decrease following a transient increase. The metabolites reduced the net photosynthesis rate in the two Panicum species, but not in Z. mays, where this process was stimulated by glycine. The bundle sheath cells from P. miliaceum exhibited a higher rate of LEDR than those of Z. mays and P. maximum. Glycine had no effect on the respiration rate of the cells, but malate increased in cells of Z. mays and P. miliaceum by about 50% and 30%, respectively. With the exception of aspartate, which stimulated both the O2 evolution and O2 uptake in P. maximum, the remaining metabolites reduced photosynthetic O2 evolution from bundle sheath cells in Panicun species. The net O2 exchange in illuminated cells of Z. mays did not respond to CO2 or metabolites. Leaf mesophyll protoplasts of Z. mays and P. miliaceum, and bundle sheath protoplasts of Z. mays, which are unable to fix CO2 photosynthetically, also produced LEDR, but the mesophyll protoplasts, compared with bundle sheath protoplasts, required twice the time of illumination to obtain the maximal rate. The results suggest that the substrates for LEDR in C4 plants are generated during a period of illumination not only via the Calvin cycle reactions, but also by the conversion of endogenous compounds present in leaf cells. The stimulation of LEDR under glycine is discussed in relation to its direct or indirect effect on mitochondrial respiration.  相似文献   

11.
Uptake of35S-sulphate by bundle sheath strands (BSC) from leaves of maize plants (Zea mays L. ev. Dekalb L 72 A) was higher than that by isolated mesophyll protoplasts (MC) of maize. Ion uptake followed the Michaelis-Menten kinetic satuiation curves. SO2 4-uptake increased after addition of malate, NADPH, malate + NADP+ to BSC suspensions, but not to MC susp: nsions.  相似文献   

12.
C4-acid metabolism by isolated bundlesheath chloroplasts, mitochondria and strands of Eriochloa borumensis Hack., a phosphoennolpyruvate-carboxykinase (PEP-CK) species, was investigated. Aspartate, oxaloacetate (OAA) and malate were decarboxylated by strands with several-fold stimulation upon illumination. There was strictly light-dependent decarboxylation of OAA and malate by the chloroplasts, but the chloroplasts did not decarboxylate aspartate in light or dark. PEP was a primary product of OAA or malate decarboxylation by the chloroplasts and its formation was inhibited by 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethylurea or NH4Cl. There was very little conversion of PEP to pyruvate by bundle-sheath chloroplasts, mitochondria or strands. Decarboxylation of the three C4-acids by mitochondria was light-independent. Pyruvate was the only product of mitochondrial metabolism of C4-acids, and was apparently transaminated in the cytoplasm since PEP and alanine were primarily exported out of the bundle-sheath strands. Light-dependent C4-acid decarboxylation by the chloroplasts is suggested to be through the PEP-CK, while the mitochondrial C4-acid decarboxylation may proceed through the NAD-malic enzyme (NAD-ME) system. In vivo both aspartate and malate are considered as transport metobolites from mesophyll to bundle-sheath cells in PEP-CK species. Aspartate would be metabolized by the mitochondria to OAA. Part of the OAA may be converted to malate and decarboxylated through NAD-ME, and part may be transported to the chloroplasts for decarboxylation through PEP-CK localized in the chloroplasts. Malate transported from mesophyll cells may serve as carboxyl donor to chloroplasts through the chloroplastic NAD-malate dehydrogenase and PEP-CK. Bundle-sheath strands and chloroplasts fixed 14CO2 at high rates and exhibited C4-acid-dependent O2 evolution in the light. Studies with 3-mercaptopicolinic acid, a specific inhibitor of PEP-CK, have indicated that most (about 70%) of the OAA formed from aspartate is decarboxylated through the chloroplastic PEP-CK and the remaining (about 30%) OAA through the mitochondrial NAD-ME. Pyruvate stimulation of aspartate decarboxylation is discussed; a pyruvate-alanine shuttle and an aspartate-alanine shuttle are proposed between the mesophyll and bundle-sheath cells during aspartate decarboxylation through the PEP-CK and NAD-ME system respectively.Abbreviations CK carboxykinase - -Kg -ketoglutarate - ME malic enzyme - 3-MPA 3-mercaptopicolinic acid - OAA oxaloacetate - PEP phosphoenolpyruvate - R5P ribose-5-phosphate  相似文献   

13.
A procedure is described for isolating and purifying mesophyll protoplasts and bundle sheath protoplasts of the C4 plant Panicum miliaceum. Following enzymic digestion of leaf tissue, mesophyll protoplasts and bundle sheath protoplasts are released and purified by density centrifugation. The lower density of mesophyll protoplasts allowed rapid separation of the two protoplast types. Evidence for separation of mesophyll protoplasts and bundle sheath protoplasts (up to 95% purity) is provided from light microscopy (based on size difference in both chloroplasts and protoplasts), levels of marker enzymes in the preparations (i.e. pyruvate, Pi dikinase and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase for mesophyll and ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase for bundle sheath), and differences in substrate-dependent O2 evolution by chloroplasts isolated from protoplasts.  相似文献   

14.
Aspartate stimulated by as much as three fold the rate of malate decarboxylation by Zea mays bundle sheath cells. Both the basal and aspartate stimulated rates of malate decarboxylation were light-dependent. Stimulation appeared to be due to aspartate as such, rather than depending on aspartate metabolism, and was due partly to a reduction in the malate concentration required for maximum decarboxylation and partly to an increased maximum velocity of decarboxylation. The extractable activities of NADP malic enzyme, glyceraldehyde phosphate dehydrogenase, and 3-phosphoglycerate kinase recoverable from cells were not increased by preincubating cells with aspartate, and aspartate did not affect the activity of these enzymes in cell-free extracts. It is suggested that aspartate may influence the transport of either malate into or pyruvate out of bundle sheath chloroplasts.  相似文献   

15.
Maize mesophyll chloroplasts loaded with radioactively labeled 3-phosphoglycerate or phosphoenolpyruvate exchange these compounds for externally provided inorganic phosphate, 3-phosphoglycerate, phosphoenolpyruvate, and dihydroxyacetone phosphate. These exchanges are inhibited by pyridoxal phosphate. 3-Phosphoglycerate uptake, which leads to accumulation of this substance in the stroma, is competitively inhibited by inorganic phosphate and phosphoenolpyruvate. These results are consistent with the transport of 3-phosphoglycerate, phosphoenolpyruvate, inorganic phosphate, and dihydroxyacetone phosphate being mediated by a common carrier (the phosphate translocator). The activation energy of 3-phosphoglycerate uptake as determined from its temperature dependence is 19.5 kcal (4–15 °C). In isolated chloroplasts malate and phosphoenolpyruvate production from oxalacetate and pyruvate, respectively, is inhibited by 3-phosphoglycerate, the extent of inhibition being dependent on the relative concentrations of inorganic phosphate and 3-phosphoglycerate. We propose that 3-phosphoglycerate from bundle-sheath cells may serve as a feedback regulator of mesophyll cell photosynthesis.  相似文献   

16.
Woo KC 《Plant physiology》1983,71(1):112-117
The evolution of O2 in spinach chloroplasts in the presence of oxaloacetate (OAA) was inhibited by a wide range of dicarboxylates. In contrast, (ammonia, 2-oxoglutarate)-dependent O2 evolution was stimulated by malate, succinate, fumarate, glutarate, maleiate, and l-tartrate although OAA has little effect. This increase in O2 evolution was accompanied by a similar increase in 14C incorporation from [5-14C]oxoglutarate into amino acids which was sensitive to azaserine inhibition. Glutamate and aspartate inhibited (ammonia, 2-oxoglutarate)-dependent O2 evolution, but this inhibition was relieved by the addition of succinate, malate, or fumarate. OAA-dependent O2 evolution also was inhibited by glutamate and aspartate, but succinate, malate, or fumarate had little effect on this inhibition. Phthalonate and n-butyl malonate inhibited (ammonia, 2-oxoglutarate)-dependent O2 evolution competitively with respect to 2-oxoglutarate and uncompetitively with respect to malate. Both these inhibitors inhibited OAA-dependent O2 evolution competitively. This evidence suggests that different mechanisms might be involved in the transport of OAA, 2-oxoglutarate, and malate into the chloroplasts.  相似文献   

17.
Castrillo  M.  Aso  P.  Longart  M.  Vermehren  A. 《Photosynthetica》1997,33(1):39-50
The location of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RuBPCO) in the leaf mesophyll of some dicotyledonous C4 plants was confirmed by immunofluorescent labelling. The anti-RuBPCO immune serum was obtained by inoculating a rabbit with commercially obtained RuBPCO. Specificity of these antibodies was tested by immunodiffusion, immunoelectrophoresis, and Western blotting. Fresh hand-cuts of leaves from dicotyledonous C4 plants, Amaranthus caudatus, A. dubius, Gomphrena globosa, and Portulaca oleracea, were incubated with the conjugated anti-RuBPCO immune serum and then with a commercial FITC-anti-rabbit IgG conjugate. Nerium oleander was used a control C3 plant pattern and Zea mays as a C4 plant pattern. The immunofluorescent label was distributed in both mesophyll and bundle sheath in all the C4 plants tested. It is an unequivocal proof that in the C4 dicotyledonous plants the RuBPCO is not only located in the chloroplasts of the bundle sheath cells but also in the chloroplasts of the mesophyll cells. In these plants therefore, the C4 pathway cannot exclusively be viewed as an intercellular level concentration mechanism. In the mesophyll cytoplasm, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase traps CO2, while in the mesophyll chloroplasts, RuBPCO operates with atmospheric CO2 and CO2 from the C4 decarboxylation step at an intracellular level, which could mean a significant energetic economy. The CO2 from photorespiration could be saved and reincorporated. Location of RuBPCO in the mesophyll and/or bundle sheath chloroplasts is a matter of inter- and intracellular compartmentation which makes another variation of C4 photosynthetic pathway possible. This revised version was published online in September 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

18.
Photosynthetic activities of bundle sheath cell strands isolated from several C4 pathway species were examined. These included species that decarboxylate C4 acids via either NADP-malic enzyme (Zea mays, NADP-malic enzyme-type), NAD-malic enzyme (Atriplex spongiosa and Panicum miliaceum, NAD-malic enzyme-type) or phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (Chloris gayana and Panicum maximum, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase-type). Preparations from each of these species fixed 14CO2 at rates ranging between 1.2 and 3.5 μmol min?1 mg?1 of chlorophyll, with more than 90% of the 14C being assimilated into Calvin cycle intermediates. With added HCO3? the rate of light-dependent O2 evolution ranged between 2 and 4 μmol min?1 mg?1 of chlorophyll for cells from NAD-malic enzyme-type and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase-type species but with Z. mays cells there was no O2 evolution detectable. Most of the 14CO2 fixed by Z. mays cells provided with H14CO3? plus ribose 5-phosphate accumulated in the C-1 of 3-phosphoglycerate. However, 3-phosphoglycerate reduction was increased several fold when malate was also provided. Cells from all species rapidly decarboxylated C4 acids under appropriate conditions, and the CO2 released from the C-4 carboxyl was reassimilated via the Calvin cycle. Malate decarboxylation by Z. mays cells was dependent upon light and an endogenous or exogenous source of 3-phosphoglycerate. Bundle sheath cells of NAD-malic enzyme-type species rapidly decarboxylated [14C]malate when aspartate and 2-oxoglutarate were also provided, and [14C]aspartate was decarboxylated at similar rates when 2-oxoglutarate was added. Cells from phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase-type species decarboxylated [14C]aspartate when 2-oxoglutarate was added and they also catalyzed a slower decarboxylation of malate. Cells from NAD-malic enzyme-type and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase-type species evolved O2 in the light when C4 acids were added. These results are discussed in relation to proposed mechanisms for photosynthetic metabolism in the bundle sheath cells of species utilizing C4 pathway photosynthesis.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Further evidence has been provided that C4-pathway species characterized by having low malic enzyme activity contain exceptionally high activities of aspartate and alanine aminotransferases. The total activity of both enzymes is distributed about equally between mesophyll and bundle sheath cells. However, the activity in the two cell types is due to different isoenzymes. In addition to the one quantitatively major isoenzyme associated with each cell type there were at least two additional isozymes of each aminotransferase detectable in the different species examined. Increases in activity of both aminotransferases of ten-fold or more were observed during greening of leaves of dark-grown plants. This increased activity was due specifically to the two quantitatively major isoenzymes associated, respectively, with the mesophyll and bundle sheath cells of green leaves, providing further evidence for their specific role in photosynthesis. Apparently, neither the aspartate nor alanine aminotransferases of mesophyll cells was associated with chloroplasts or other subcellular organelles. However, the major aspartate aminotransferase isoenzyme of bundle sheath cells was associated with mitochondria. These findings are discussed in relation to the probable role of aspartate and alanine aminotransferases in C4-pathway photosynthesis.  相似文献   

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