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1.
Apex and Bristol cultivars of oilseed rape (Brassica napus) were irradiated with 0.63 W m?2 of UV-B over 5 d. Analyses of the response of net leaf carbon assimilation to intercellular CO2 concentration were used to examine the potential limitations imposed by stomata, carboxylation velocity and capacity for regeneration of ribulose 1,5-bis-phosphate on leaf photosynthesis. Simultaneous measurements of chlorophyll fluorescence were used to estimate the maximum quantum efficiency of photosystem II (PSII) photochemistry, the quantum efficiency of linear electron transport at steady-state photosynthesis, and the light and CO2-saturated rate of linear electron transport. Ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) content and activities were assayed in vitro. In both cultivars the UV-B treatment resulted in decreases in the light-saturated rate of CO2 assimilation, which were accompanied by decreases in carboxylation velocity and Rubisco content and activity. No major effects of UV-B were observed on end-product inhibition and stomatal limitation of photosynthesis or the rate of photorespiration relative to CO2 assimilation. In the Bristol cultivar, photoinhibition of PSII and loss of linear electron transport activity were observed when CO2 assimilation was severely inhibited. However, the Apex cultivar exhibited no major inhibition of PSII photochemistry or linear electron transport as the rate of CO2 assimilation decreased. It is concluded that loss of Rubisco is a primary factor in UV-B inhibition of CO2 assimilation.  相似文献   

2.
Potato (Solanum tuberosum cv. Désirée) plants expressing yeast invertase directed either to the apoplast, vacuole or cytosol were biochemically and physiologically characterised. All lines of transgenic plants showed similarities to plants growing under water stress. Transformants were retarded in growth, and accumulated hexoses and amino acids, especially proline, to levels up to 40-fold higher than those of the wild types. In all transformants rates of CO2 assimilation and leaf conductance were reduced. From the unchanged intercellular partial pressure of CO2 and apoplastic cis-abscisic acid (ABA) content of transformed leaves it was concluded that the reduced rate of CO2 assimilation was not caused by a limitation in the availability of CO2 for␣the ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase (Rubisco). In the transformants the amount of Rubisco protein was not reduced, but both activation state and carboxylation efficiency of photosynthesis were lowered. In vacuolar and cytosolic transformants this inhibition of Rubisco might be caused by a changed ratio of organic bound and inorganic phosphate, as indicated by a doubling of phosphorylated intermediates. But in apoplastic transformants the pattern of phosphorylated intermediates resembled that of leaves of water-stressed potato plants, although the cause of inhibition of photosynthesis was not identical. Whereas in water-stressed plants increased contents of the phytohormone ABA are supposed to mediate the adaptation to water stress, no contribution of ABA to reduction of photosynthesis could be detected in invertase transformants. Received: 29 May 1996 / Accepted: 30 December 1996  相似文献   

3.
The effect of leaf temperature on stomatal conductance and net CO2 uptake was studied on French bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) using either dehydrated attached leaves (25–40% water deficit) or cut leaves supplied with 10–4 M abscisic acid (ABA) solution to the transpiration stream. Decreasing leaf temperature caused stomatal opening and increased net CO2 uptake (which was close to zero at around 25° C) to a level identical to that of control leaves (without water deficit) at around 15° C. (i) The ABA effect on stomatal closure was modulated by temperature and, presumably, ABA is at least partly responsible for stomatal closure of french bean submitted to a drought stress. (ii) For leaf temperatures lower than 15° C, net CO2 uptake was no longer limited by water deficit even on very dehydrated leaves. This shows that dehydrated leaves retain a substantial part of their photosynthetic capacity which can be revealed at normal CO2 concentrations when stomata open at low temperature. In contrast to leaves fed with ABA, decreasing the O2 concentration from 21% to 1% O2 did not increase either the rate of net CO2 uptake or the thermal optimum for photosynthesis of dehydrated leaves. The quantum yield of PSII electron flow (measured by F/Fm) was lower in 1% O2 than in 21% O2 for each leaf pretreatment given (non-dehydrated leaves, dehydrated leaves, and leaves fed with ABA) even within a temperature range in which leaf photosynthesis at normal CO2 concentration was the same in these two O2 concentrations. It is concluded that this probably indicates an heterogeneity of photosynthesis, since this difference in quantum yield disappears when using high CO2 concentrations during measurements.Abbreviations and Symbols ABA abscisic acid - Fm maximum chlorophyll fluorescence - F difference between steady-state chlorophyll fluorescence and Fm - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density We would like to thank Dr. J.-M. Briantais (Laboratoire d'écologie végétale, Orsay, France) for help during fluorescence measurements and Ms. J. Liebert for technical assistance.  相似文献   

4.
Drought- and ABA-induced changes in photosynthesis of barley plants   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The changes caused by drought stress and abscisic acid (ABA) on photosynthesis of barley plants (Hordeum vulgare. L. cv. Alfa) have been studied. Drought stress was induced by allowing the leaves to lose 12% of their fresh weight. Cycloheximide (CHI), an inhibitor of stress-induced ABA accumulation, was used to distinguish alterations in photosynthetic reactions that are induced after drought stress in response to elevated ABA levels from those that are caused directly by altered water relations. Four hoars after imposition of drought stress or 2 h after application of ABA, Ihe bulk of the leaf's ABA content measured by enzyme-amplified ELISA, increased 14- and 16-fold, respectively. CHI fully blocked the stress-induced ABA accumulation. Gas exchange measurements and analysis of enzyme activities were used to study the reactions of photosynthesis to drought stress and ABA. Leaf dehydration or ABA treatment led to a noticeable decrease in both the initial slope of the curves representing net photosynthetic rate versus intercellular CO2 concentration and the maximal rate of photosynthesis; dehydration of CHI-treated plants showed much slower inhibition of the latter. The calculated values of the intercellular CO2 concentration, CO2 compensation point and maximal carboxylating efficiency of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) carboxylase support the suggestion that biochemical factors are involved in the response of photosynthesis to ABA and drought stress. RuBP carboxylase activity was almost unaffected in ABA- and CHI-treated, non-stressed plants. A drop in enzyme activity was observed after leaf dehydration of the control and ABA-treated plants. When barley plants were supplied with ABA, the activity of carbonic anhydrase (CA, EC 4.2.2.1) increased more than 2-fold. Subsequent dehydration caused an over 1.5-fold increase in CA activity of the control plants and a more than 2.5-fold increase in ABA-treated plants. Dehydration of CHI-treated plants caused no change in enzyme activity. It is suggested that increased activity of CA is a photosynthetic response to elevated ABA concentration.  相似文献   

5.
Interventions to increase crop radiation use efficiency rely on understanding of how biochemical and stomatal limitations affect photosynthesis. When leaves transition from shade to high light, slow increases in maximum Rubisco carboxylation rate and stomatal conductance limit net CO2 assimilation for several minutes. However, as stomata open intercellular [CO2] increases, so electron transport rate could also become limiting. Photosynthetic limitations were evaluated in three important Brassica crops: Brassica rapa, Brassica oleracea and Brassica napus. Measurements of induction after a period of shade showed that net CO2 assimilation by B. rapa and B. napus saturated by 10 min. A new method of analyzing limitations to induction by varying intercellular [CO2] showed this was due to co-limitation by Rubisco and electron transport. By contrast, in B. oleracea persistent Rubisco limitation meant that CO2 assimilation was still recovering 15 min after induction. Correspondingly, B. oleracea had the lowest Rubisco total activity. The methodology developed, and its application here, shows a means to identify the basis of variation in photosynthetic efficiency in fluctuating light, which could be exploited in breeding and bioengineering to improve crop productivity.  相似文献   

6.
Thomas Graan  John S. Boyer 《Planta》1990,181(3):378-384
We re-examined the question of whether the stomata limit photosynthesis in dehydrated sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.) plants having low leaf water potentials. A gas-exchange apparatus was modified to operate at external CO2 partial pressures as high as 3000 Pa (3%), which were much higher than previously achieved. This allowed photosynthesis and stomatal behavior to be monitored simultaneously at very high CO2 in the same leaf. The data were compared with those from leaves treated with abscisic acid (ABA) where effects on photosynthesis are entirely stomatal. Photosynthesis was inhibited at low water potential and was only slightly enhanced by increasing the external CO2 partial pressure from 34 Pa (normal air) to 300 Pa. Photosynthesis in ABA-treated leaves was similarly inhibited but recovered fully at 300 Pa. In both cases, the stomata closed to the same extent as judged from the average conductance of the leaves. Because the ABA effect resulted from diffusion limitation for CO2 caused by stomatal closure, the contrasting data show that most of the dehydration effect was nonstomatal at low water potentials. When CO2 partial pressures were raised further to 3000 Pa, photosynthesis increased somewhat at low water potentials but not in ABA-treated leaves. This indicates that some nonstomatal component of photosynthesis responded differently in leaves at low water potential and leaves treated with ABA. Because this component was only partially restored by very high CO2, it was likely to be metabolic and was an important source of photosynthetic inhibition.Abbreviations and Symbol ABA abscisic acid - Chl chlorophyll - pa external partial pressure of CO2 - Pi intercellular partial pressure of CO2 - w water potential This work was supported by grant DE-FG02-87ER13776 from the Department of Energy and a grant from E.I. DuPont de Nemours and Company.  相似文献   

7.
Rubisco activity decreases under water stress, for reasons as yet unclear. Here, the covariation of stomatal conductance (gs) and relative water content (RWC), often observed during water stress, was impaired to assess the separate effects of these factors on Rubisco activity. Three different treatments were applied to soybean (Glycine max) and tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum): leaf desiccation (LD), in which stomatal closure was accompanied by large decreases of RWC; water stress (WS), in which minor decreases of RWC were observed along with stomatal closure; and exogenous application of abscisic acid (ABA), which triggered stomatal closure without changing RWC. Decreased RWC did not induce decreased initial Rubisco activity, which was impaired only in soybean by 40% when the gs dropped below 50 mmol m(-2) s(-1), regardless of the treatment. The mechanism for decreased activity differed among treatments, owing to decreased activation in LD and to total activity and protein content in WS and ABA. Despite the occurrence of Rubisco regulation, CO2 availability in the chloroplast, not impairment of Rubisco activity, limits photosynthesis during WS.  相似文献   

8.
A complementary DNA for the small subunit of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) was cloned from tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) and fused in the antisense orientation to the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter. This antisense gene was introduced into the tobacco genome, and the resulting transgenic plants were analyzed to assess the effect of the antisense RNA on Rubisco activity and photosynthesis. The mean content of extractable Rubisco activity from the leaves of 10 antisense plants was 18% of the mean level of activity of control plants. The soluble protein content of the leaves of anti-small subunit plants was reduced by the amount equivalent to the reduction in Rubisco. There was little change in phosphoribulokinase activity, electron transport, and chlorophyll content, indicating that the loss of Rubisco did not affect these other components of photosynthesis. However, there was a significant reduction in carbonic anhydrase activity. The rate of CO2 assimilation measured at 1000 micromoles quanta per square meter per second, 350 microbars CO2, and 25°C was reduced by 63% (mean value) in the antisense plants and was limited by Rubisco activity over a wide range of intercellular CO2 partial pressures (pi). In control leaves, Rubisco activity only limited the rate of CO2 assimilation below a pi of 400 microbars. Despite the decrease in photosynthesis, there was no reduction in stomatal conductance in the antisense plants, and the stomata still responded to changes in pi. The unchanged conductance and lower CO2 assimilation resulted in a higher pi, which was reflected in greater carbon isotope discrimination in the leaves of the antisense plants. These results suggest that stomatal function is independent of total leaf Rubisco activity.  相似文献   

9.
10.
The losses in chloroplast capacity to fix CO2 when photosynthesis is reduced at low leaf water potential (ψ1) have been proposed to result from photoinhibition. We investigated this possibility in soil-grown sunflower (Helianthus annuus L. cv IS894) using gas exchange techniques to measure directly the influence of light during dehydration on the in situ chloroplast capacity to fix CO2. The quantum yield for CO2 fixation as well as the rate of light- and CO2-saturated photosynthesis were strongly inhibited at low ψ1. The extent of inhibition was the same whether the leaves were exposed to high or to low light during dehydration. When intercellular partial pressures of CO2 were decreased to the compensation point, which was lower than the partial pressures resulting from stomatal closure, the inhibition of the quantum yield was also unaffected. Photoinhibition could be observed only after high light exposures were imposed under nonphysiological low CO2 and O2 where both photosynthesis and photorespiration were suppressed. The experiments are the first to test whether gas exchange at low ψ1 is affected by potentially photoinhibitory conditions and show that the loss in chloroplast capacity to fix CO2 was entirely the result of a direct effect of water availability on chloroplast function and not photoinhibition.  相似文献   

11.
The future environment may be altered by high concentrations of salt in the soil and elevated [CO2] in the atmosphere. These have opposite effects on photosynthesis. Generally, salt stress inhibits photosynthesis by stomatal and non-stomatal mechanisms; in contrast, elevated [CO2] stimulates photosynthesis by increasing CO2 availability in the Rubisco carboxylating site and by reducing photorespiration. However, few studies have focused on the interactive effects of these factors on photosynthesis. To elucidate this knowledge gap, we grew the barley plant, Hordeum vulgare (cv. Iranis), with and without salt stress at either ambient or elevated atmospheric [CO2] (350 or 700 μmol mol−1 CO2, respectively). We measured growth, several photosynthetic and fluorescence parameters, and carbohydrate content. Under saline conditions, the photosynthetic rate decreased, mostly because of stomatal limitations. Increasing salinity progressively increased metabolic (photochemical and biochemical) limitation; this included an increase in non-photochemical quenching and a reduction in the PSII quantum yield. When salinity was combined with elevated CO2, the rate of CO2 diffusion to the carboxylating site increased, despite lower stomatal and internal conductance. The greater CO2 availability increased the electron sink capacity, which alleviated the salt-induced metabolic limitations on the photosynthetic rate. Consequently, elevated CO2 partially mitigated the saline effects on photosynthesis by maintaining favorable biochemistry and photochemistry in barley leaves.  相似文献   

12.
Barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) and tomato Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) were grown hydroponically and examined 2, 5, and 10 d after being deprived of nitrogen (N) supply. Leaf elongation rate declined in both species in response to N stress before there was any reduction in rate of dryweight accumulation. Changes in water transport to the shoot could not explain reduced leaf elongation in tomato because leaf water content and water potential were unaffected by N stress at the time leaf elongation began to decline. Tomato maintained its shoot water status in N-stressed plants, despite reduced water absorption per gram root, because the decline in root hydraulic conductance with N stress was matched by a decline in stomatal conductance. In barley the decline in leaf elongation coincided with a small (8%) decline in water content per unit area of young leaves; this decline occurred because root hydraulic conductance was reduced more strongly by N stress than was stomatal conductance. Nitrogen stress caused a rapid decline in tissue NO 3 - pools and in NO 3 - flux to the xylem, particularly in tomato which had smaller tissue NO 3 - reserves. Even in barley, tissue NO 3 - reserves were too small and were mobilized too slowly (60% in 2 d) to support maximal growth for more than a few hours. Organic N mobilized from old leaves provided an additional N source to support continued growth of N-stressed plants. Abscisic acid (ABA) levels increased in leaves of both species within 2 d in response to N stress. Addition of ABA to roots caused an increase in volume of xylem exudate but had no effect upon NO 3 - flux to the xylem. After leaf-elongation rate had been reduced by N stress, photosynthesis declined in both barley and tomato. This decline was associated with increased leaf ABA content, reduced stomatal conductance and a decrease in organic N content. We suggest that N stress reduces growth by several mechanisms operating on different time scales: (1) increased leaf ABA content causing reduced cell-wall extensibility and leaf elongation and (2) a more gradual decline in photosynthesis caused by ABA-induced stomatal closure and by a decrease in leaf organic N.Abbreviation and symbols ABA abscisic acid - ci leaf internal CO2 concentration - Lp root hydraulic conductance  相似文献   

13.
Infection of bean leaves by Colletotrichum lundemuthianum causes vein necrosis and subsequent localized wilting of the blade. The effect of infection on photosynthesis was investigated by imaging leaf chlorophyll fluorescence as a means of mapping stomatal and metabolic inhibition of photosynthesis. During infection, CO2 assimilation (An), stomatal conductance to water vapour, and photosynthetic electron transport rate (Jt) decreased, whereas dark respiration increased. An decreased more than was expected from the reduction in green leaf area, showing that photosynthesis was inhibited in apparently healthy areas. Under subsaturating irradiance, images of Jt in air showed that photosynthesis decreased gradually, with this effect shifting from green to necrotic areas. Sudden increase in CO2 concentration to 0·74% in the atmosphere around the leaf only partially reversed this inhibition, showing that both stomatal and metabolic inhibition occurred. Under limiting irradiance, decreases in Jt and in maximal Jt during high CO2 exposure as leaf damage severity increased suggested that metabolic inhibition was mediated through an inhibition of Ribulose 1·5‐bisphosphate (RuBP) regeneration. Finally, the importance of our data in terms of assessing the loss of photosynthetic yield from visible symptoms – as is currently performed in epidemiology – is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Restrictions to photosynthesis can limit plant growth at high temperature in a variety of ways. In addition to increasing photorespiration, moderately high temperatures (35–42 °C) can cause direct injury to the photosynthetic apparatus. Both carbon metabolism and thylakoid reactions have been suggested as the primary site of injury at these temperatures. In the present study this issue was addressed by first characterizing leaf temperature dynamics in Pima cotton (Gossypium barbadense) grown under irrigation in the US desert south‐west. It was found that cotton leaves repeatedly reached temperatures above 40 °C and could fluctuate as much as 8 or 10 °C in a matter of seconds. Laboratory studies revealed a maximum photosynthetic rate at 30–33 °C that declined by 22% at 45 °C. The majority of the inhibition persisted upon return to 30 °C. The mechanism of this limitation was assessed by measuring the response of photosynthesis to CO2 in the laboratory. The first time a cotton leaf (grown at 30 °C) was exposed to 45 °C, photosynthetic electron transport was stimulated (at high CO2) because of an increased flux through the photorespiratory pathway. However, upon cooling back to 30 °C, photosynthetic electron transport was inhibited and fell substantially below the level measured before the heat treatment. In the field, the response of assimilation (A) to various internal levels of CO2 (Ci) revealed that photosynthesis was limited by ribulose‐1,5‐bisphosphate (RuBP) regeneration at normal levels of CO2 (presumably because of limitations in thylakoid reactions needed to support RuBP regeneration). There was no evidence of a ribulose‐1,5‐bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) limitation at air levels of CO2 and at no point on any of 30 ACi curves measured on leaves at temperatures from 28 to 39 °C was RuBP regeneration capacity measured to be in substantial excess of the capacity of Rubisco to use RuBP. It is therefore concluded that photosynthesis in field‐grown Pima cotton leaves is functionally limited by photosynthetic electron transport and RuBP regeneration capacity, not Rubisco activity.  相似文献   

15.
Biochemistry of C3-photosynthesis in high CO2   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The short-term responses of C3 photosynthesis to high CO2 are described first. Regulation of photosynthesis in the short term is determined by interaction among the capacities of light harvesting, electron transport, ribulose-1, 5-bisphosphate carboxylase (Rubisco) and orthophosphate (Pi) regeneration during starch and sucrose synthesis. Photosynthesis under high CO2 conditions is limited by either electron transport or Pi regeneration capacities, and Rubisco is deactivated to maintain a balance between each step in the photosynthetic pathway. Subsequently, the long-term effects on, photosynthesis are discussed. Long-term CO2 enhancement leads to carbohydrate accumulation. Accumulation of carbohydrates is not associated with a Pi-regeneration limitation on photosynthesis, and this limitation is apparently removed during long-term exposure to high CO2. Enhanced CO2 does not affect Rubisco content and electron transport capacity for a given leaf-nitrogen content. In addition, the deactivated Rubisco immediately after exposure to high CO2 does not recover during the subsequent prolonged exposure. Such evidence may indicate that plants do not necessarily have an ideal acclimation response to high CO2 at the biochemical level.  相似文献   

16.
Nuphar lutea is an amphibious plant with submerged and aerial foliage, which raises the question how do both leaf types perform photosynthetically in two different environments. We found that the aerial leaves function like terrestrial sun-leaves in that their photosynthetic capability was high and saturated under high irradiance (ca. 1,500 μmol photons m−2 s−1). We show that stomatal opening and Rubisco activity in these leaves co-limited photosynthesis at saturating irradiance fluctuating in a daily rhythm. In the morning, sunlight stimulated stomatal opening, Rubisco synthesis, and the neutralization of a night-accumulated Rubisco inhibitor. Consequently, the light-saturated quantum efficiency and rate of photosynthesis increased 10-fold by midday. During the afternoon, gradual closure of the stomata and a decrease in Rubisco content reduced the light-saturated photosynthetic rate. However, at limited irradiance, stomatal behavior and Rubisco content had only a marginal effect on the photosynthetic rate, which did not change during the day. In contrast to the aerial leaves, the photosynthesis rate of the submerged leaves, adapted to a shaded environment, was saturated under lower irradiance. The light-saturated quantum efficiency of these leaves was much lower and did not change during the day. Due to their low photosynthetic affinity for CO2 (35 μM) and inability to utilize other inorganic carbon species, their photosynthetic rate at air-equilibrated water was CO2-limited. These results reveal differences in the photosynthetic performance of the two types of Nuphar leaves and unravel how photosynthetic daily rhythm in the aerial leaves is controlled.  相似文献   

17.
A simple ‘big leaf’ ecosystem gas exchange model was developed, using eddy covariance data collected at an undisturbed tropical rainforest in south-western Amazonia (Brazil). The model used mechanistic equations of canopy biochemistry combined with an empirical stomatal model describing responses to light, temperature and humidity. After calibration, the model was driven using hourly data from a weather station at the top of the tower at the measurement site, yielding an estimate of gross primary productivity (annual photosynthesis) in 1992/1993 of about 200 mol C m?2 year ?. Although incoming photon flux density emerged as the major control on photosynthesis in this forest, at a given PAR CO2 assimilation rates were higher in the mornings than in the afternoons. This was attributable to stomatal closure in the afternoon in response to increasing canopy-to-air vapour pressure differences. Although most morning gas exchange was clearly limited by the rate of electron transport, afternoon gas exchange was generally observed to be very nearly co-limited by both Rubisco activity (Vmax) and electron transport rate. The sensitivity of the model to changes in nitrogen allocation showed that the modelled ratio of Vmax to electron transport (Jmax) served nearly to maximize the annual carbon gain, and indeed, would have resulted in almost maximum annual carbon gain at the pre-industrial revolution atmospheric CO2 concentration of 27 Pa. Modelled gross primary productivity (GPP) was somewhat lower at 27 Pa, being about 160 mol C m?2 year?1. The model suggests that, in the absence of any negative feedbacks on GPP, future higher concentrations of atmospheric CO2 will continue to increase the GPP of this rainforest, up to about 230 mol C m?2 year?1 at 70 Pa.  相似文献   

18.
Ward, D. A. and Drake, B. G. 1988. Osmotic stress temporarilyreverses the inhibitions of photosynthesis and stomatal conductanceby abscisic acid—evidence that abscisic acid induces alocalized closure of stomata in intact, detached leaves.—J.exp. Bot 39: 147–155. The influence of osmotic stress on whole leaf gas exchange wasmonitored in detached leaves of Glycine max supplied with anexogenous concentration (10–5 mol dm–3) of ±abscisicacid (ABA) sufficient to inhibit net photosynthesis and stomatalconductance by 60% and 70%, respectively, under a saturatingirradiance and normal air. Raising the osmotic (sorbitol) concentrationof the ABA solutions feeding leaves elicited rapid and synchronousreversals of the ABA-dependent inhibitions of net photosynthesisand conductance. These reversals reached a peak simultaneously,after which photosynthesis and conductance declined. The magnitudeof the transient stimulations at peak height was dependent uponthe sorbitol concentration of the ABA feeding solution, althoughthe time-course of the transients (half time, 4–6 min)was similar for the different osmotic concentrations applied.Irrespective of transient size the relative changes of photosynthesisand conductance were comparable; consequently the calculatedpartial pressure of CO2 in the substomatal space (Ci) remainedrelatively constant during the transient phase. In contrastto the ABA-treated leaves, elevating the osmotic concentrationof the distilled water supply feeding control leaves stimulatedconductance to a much greater relative extent than photosynthesis.The co-stimulations of photosynthesis and conductance inducedin ABA-treated leaves by osmotic shock were not due to a restrictionin the transpirational uptake of ABA and occurred irrespectiveof the source osmoticum applied. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that the ABA-dependentinhibition of photosynthesis at constant Ci is an artifact causedby the spatially heterogeneous closure of stomata in responseto ABA. Alternative explanations for the responses are, however,considered. Key words: Abscisic acid, photosynthesis, osmotic stress, Glycine max, stomatal conductance  相似文献   

19.
The stomatal distribution, non-uniform stomatal closure, stomatal conductance, and gas-exchange of several hybrid poplar clones under light stress were studied using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and gas-exchange. Non-uniform stomatal closure was found under natural light stress by SEM, and there was a linear relationship between the stomatal aperture and stomatal conductance. We suggest a formula for modification of intercellular CO2 concentration, which can restore consideration of stomatal factors leading to midday depression of photosynthesis in some cases. Received: 11 January 1999 / Accepted: 6 April 2000  相似文献   

20.
The present study was performed to investigate the adjustment of the rate parameters of the light and dark reactions of photosynthesis to the natural growth light in leaves of an overstorey species, Betula pendula Roth, a subcanopy species, Tilia cordata P. Mill., and a herb, Solidago virgaurea L., growing in a natural plant community in Järvselja, Estonia. Shoots were collected from the site and individual leaves were measured in a laboratory applying a standardized routine of kinetic gas exchange, Chl fluorescence and 820 nm transmittance measurements. These measurements enabled the calculations of the quantum yield of photosynthesis and rate constants of excitation capture by photochemical and non-photochemical quenchers, rate constant for P700+ reduction via the cytochrome b6f complex with and without photosynthetic control, actual maximum and potential (uncoupled) electron transport rate, stomatal and mesophyll resistances for CO2 transport, Km(CO2) and Vm of ribulose-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase (Rubisco) in vivo. In parallel, N, Chl and Rubisco contents were measured from the same leaves. No adjustment toward higher quantum yield in shade compared with sun leaves was observed, although relatively more N was partitioned to the light-harvesting machinery in shade leaves ( H. Eichelmann et al., 2004 ). The electron transport rate through the Cyt b6f complex was strongly down-regulated under saturating light compared with darkness, and this was observed under atmospheric, as well as saturating CO2 concentration. In vivo Vm measurements of Rubisco were lower than corresponding reported measurements in vitro, and the kcat per reaction site varied widely between leaves and growth sites. The correlation between Rubisco Vm and the photosystem I density was stronger than between Vm and the density of Rubisco active sites. The results showed that the capacity of the photosynthetic machinery decreases in shade-adjusted leaves, but it still remains in excess of the actual photosynthetic rate. The photosynthetic control systems that are targeted to adjust the photosynthetic rate to meet the plant's needs and to balance the partial reactions of photosynthesis, down-regulate partial processes of photosynthesis: excess harvested light is quenched non-photochemically; excess electron transport capacity of Cyt b6f is down-regulated by ΔpH-dependent photosynthetic control; Rubisco is synthesized in excess, and the number of activated Rubisco molecules is controlled by photosystem I-related processes. Consequently, the nitrogen contained in the components of the photosynthetic machinery is not used at full efficiency. The strong correlation between leaf nitrogen and photosynthetic performance is not due to the nitrogen requirements of the photosynthetic apparatus, but because a certain amount of energy must be captured through photosynthesis to maintain this nitrogen within a leaf.  相似文献   

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