Differences in carbon isotope discrimination of three variants of D-ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase reflect differences in their catalytic mechanisms |
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Authors: | McNevin Dennis B Badger Murray R Whitney Spencer M von Caemmerer Susanne Tcherkez Guillaume G B Farquhar Graham D |
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Affiliation: | Molecular Plant Physiology and Environmental Biology, Research School of Biological Sciences, The Australian National University, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia. |
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Abstract: | The carboxylation kinetic (stable carbon) isotope effect was measured for purified d-ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylases/oxygenases (Rubiscos) with aqueous CO(2) as substrate by monitoring Rayleigh fractionation using membrane inlet mass spectrometry. This resulted in discriminations (Delta) of 27.4 +/- 0.9 per thousand for wild-type tobacco Rubisco, 22.2 +/- 2.1 per thousand for Rhodospirillum rubrum Rubisco, and 11.2 +/- 1.6 per thousand for a large subunit mutant of tobacco Rubisco in which Leu(335) is mutated to valine (L335V). These Delta values are consistent with the photosynthetic discrimination determined for wild-type tobacco and transplastomic tobacco lines that exclusively produce R. rubrum or L335V Rubisco. The Delta values are indicative of the potential evolutionary variability of Delta values for a range of Rubiscos from different species: Form I Rubisco from higher plants; prokaryotic Rubiscos, including Form II; and the L335V mutant. We explore the implications of these Delta values for the Rubisco catalytic mechanism and suggest that Rubiscos that are associated with a lower Delta value have a less product-like carboxylation transition state and/or allow a decarboxylation step that evolution has excluded in higher plants. |
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