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1.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15012254

RESUMO

The C2 oxidative photosynthetic carbon cycle plus the C3 reductive photosynthetic carbon cycle coexist. Both are initiated by Rubisco, use about equal amounts of energy, must regenerate RuBP, and result in exchanges of CO2 and O2 to establish rates of net photosynthesis, CO2 and O2 compensation points, and the ratio of CO2 and O2 in the atmosphere. These concepts evolved from research on O2 inhibition, glycolate metabolism, leaf peroxisomes, photorespiration, 18O2/16O2 exchange, CO2 concentrating processes, and a requirement for the oxygenase activity of Rubisco. Nearly 80 years of research on these topics are unified under the one process of photosynthetic carbon metabolism and its self-regulation.

2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 93(8): 3319-24, 1996 Apr 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11607648

RESUMO

Photosynthetic carbon metabolism is initiated by ribulose-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco), which uses both CO2 and O2 as substrates. One 2-phosphoglycolate (P-glycolate) molecule is produced for each O2 molecule fixed. P-glycolate has been considered to be metabolized exclusively via the oxidative photosynthetic carbon cycle. This paper reports an additional pathway for P-glycolate and glycolate metabolism in the chloroplasts. Light-dependent glycolate or P-glycolate oxidation by osmotically shocked chloroplasts from the algae Dunaliella or spinach leaves was measured by three electron acceptors, methyl viologen (MV), potassium ferricyanide, or dichloroindophenol. Glycolate oxidation was assayed with 3-(3,4)-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) as oxygen uptake in the presence of MV at a rate of 9 mol per mg of chlorophyll per h. Washed thylakoids from spinach leaves oxidized glycolate at a rate of 22 mol per mg of chlorophyll per h. This light-dependent oxidation was inhibited completely by SHAM, an inhibitor of quinone oxidoreductase, and 75% by 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone (DBMIB), which inhibits electron transfer from plastoquinone to the cytochrome b6f complex. SHAM stimulated severalfold glycolate excretion by algal cells, Dunaliella or Chlamydomonas, and by isolated Dunaliella chloroplasts. Glycolate and P-glycolate were oxidized about equally well to glyoxylate and phosphate. On the basis of results of inhibitor action, the possible site which accepts electrons from glycolate or P-glycolate is a quinone after the DCMU site but before the DBMIB site. This glycolate oxidation is a light-dependent, SHAM-sensitive, glycolate-quinone oxidoreductase system that is associated with photosynthetic electron transport in the chloroplasts.

3.
Plant Physiol ; 109(4): 1363-1370, 1995 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12228674

RESUMO

Leaf-type peroxisomes are not present in the primitive unicellular Prasinophycean line of algae but are present in the multicellular algae Mougeotia, Chara, and Nitella, which are in the one evolutionary line, Charophyceae, that led to higher plants. Processes related to glycolate metabolism that may have been modified or induced with the appearance of peroxisomes have been examined. The algal dissolved inorganic carbon-concentrating mechanism and alkalization of the medium during photosynthesis were not lost when peroxisomes appeared in the members of the Charophycean line of algae. Therefore, it is unlikely that lowering of the CO2 concentration in the environment was a major factor in the evolutionary appearance of peroxisomes. Multicellular Mougeotia, early members of the Charophycean line of algae, have peroxisomes, but they excrete excess glycolate into the medium. The cytosolic pyruvate reductase for D-lactate synthesis and the glycolate dehydrogenase activity almost disappeared when peroxisomal glycolate oxidase, which also oxidizes L-lactate, appeared. These biochemical changes do not indicate what caused the induction of leaf-type peroxisomes in this evolutionary line of algae. The oxygenase activity of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase and glycolate oxidase require about 200 to 400 [mu]M O2 for 0.5 Vmax. These high-O2-requiring steps in glycolate metabolism would have functioned faster with increasing atmospheric O2, which might have been the causative factor in the induction of peroxisomes.

4.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 92(24): 11230-3, 1995 Nov 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11607591

RESUMO

The O2 and CO2 compensation points (O2 and CO2) of plants in a closed system depend on the ratio of CO2 and O2 concentrations in air and in the chloroplast and the specificities of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco). The photosynthetic O2 is defined as the atmospheric O2 level, with a given CO2 level and temperature, at which net O2 exchange is zero. In experiments with C3 plants, the O2 with 220 ppm CO2 is 23% O2; O2 increases to 27% with 350 ppm CO2 and to 35% O2 with 700 ppm CO2. At O2 levels below the O2, CO2 uptake and reduction are accompanied by net O2 evolution. At O2 levels above the O2, net O2 uptake occurs with a reduced rate of CO2 fixation, more carbohydrates are oxidized by photorespiration to products of the C2 oxidative photosynthetic carbon cycle, and plants senesce prematurely. The CO2 increases from 50 ppm CO2 with 21% O2 to 220 ppm with 100% O2. At a low CO2/high O2 ratio that inhibits the carboxylase activity of Rubisco, much malate accumulates, which suggests that the oxygen-insensitive phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase becomes a significant component of the lower CO2 fixation rate. Because of low global levels of CO2 and a Rubisco specificity that favors the carboxylase activity, relatively rapid changes in the atmospheric CO2 level should control the permissive O2 that could lead to slow changes in the immense O2 pool.

5.
Plant Physiol ; 103(1): 243-249, 1993 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12231930

RESUMO

Three isoforms of dihydroxyacetone phosphate reductase in extracts from Dunaliella tertiolecta have been separated by a diethylaminoethyl cellulose column chromatography with a shallow NaCl gradient. The chloroplasts contained the two major isoforms, and the third, minor form was in the cytosol. The isoforms are unstable in the absence of glycerol and they are cold labile, but they may be partially reactivated at 35[deg]C. The first chloroplast form to elute from the DEAE cellulose column was the major form when the cells were grown on high NaCl and it has been referred to as the form for glycerol production for osmoregulation or "osmoregulator form." The second form increased in specific activity when inorganic phosphate was increased in the growth media to stimulate growth, and it has been given the designation for the form for glyceride synthesis, "glyceride form." The osmoregulator form was stimulated by NaCl added to the enzyme assay, but not by reduced Escherichia coli thioredoxin. The glyceride form had properties similar to the enzyme in leaf chloroplast, such as inhibition by NaCl and by fatty acyl-coenzyme A derivatives and some stimulation by dithiothreitol, uridine diphosphate galactose, cyti-dine diphosphate dipalmatoyl diglyceride, and reduced E. coli thioredoxin. Thus, Dunaliella chloroplasts have a salt-stimulated osmoregulatory form of dihydroxyacetone phosphate reductase, which seems to have a role in glycerol production, and an isoform, which may be involved in glyceride synthesis and which has properties similar to the enzyme in chloroplasts of higher plants.

6.
Plant Physiol ; 100(4): 2113-5, 1992 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16653249

RESUMO

Unicellular green algae have a mechanism for concentrating dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) only when grown in low CO(2). To find proposed transporter protein(s) for DIC, we isolated intact chloroplasts from Dunaliella tertiolecta cells, separated the chloroplast envelopes by isopyknic centrifugation, and separated their polypeptides by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Two peptides of apparent molecular masses of 45 and 47 kD were constituents of the inner chloroplast envelope only if the cells had been adapted to low CO(2) in the light or grown in low CO(2). These two low CO(2)-induced peptides appear to be part of the algal DIC pump.

7.
Plant Physiol ; 100(1): 352-9, 1992 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16652968

RESUMO

A cytosolic form of dihydroxyacetone phosphate (DHAP) reductase was purified 200,000-fold from spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) leaves to apparent electrophoretic homogeneity. The purification procedure included anion-exchange chromatography, gel filtration, hydrophobic chromatography, and dye-ligand chromatography on Green-A and Red-A agaroses. The enzyme, prepared in an overall yield of 14%, had a final specific activity of about 500 mumol of DHAP reduced min(-1) mg(-1) protein, a subunit molecular mass of 38 kD, and a native molecular mass of 75 kD. A chloroplastic isoform of DHAP reductase was separated from the cytosolic form by anion-exchange chromatography and partially purified 56,000-fold to a specific activity of 135 mumol min(-1) mg(-1) protein. Antibodies generated in rabbits against the cytosolic form did not cross-react with the chloroplastic isoform. The two reductases were specific for NADH and DHAP. Although they exhibited some dissimilarities, both isoforms were severely inhibited by higher molecular weight fatty acyl coenzyme A esters and phosphohydroxypyruvate and moderately inhibited by nucleotides. In contrast to previous reports, the partially purified chloroplastic enzyme was not stimulated by dithiothreitol or thioredoxin, nor was the purified cytosolic enzyme stimulated by fructose 2,6-bisphosphate. A third DHAP reductase isoform was isolated from spinach leaf peroxisomes that had been prepared by isopycnic sucrose density gradient centrifugation. The peroxisomal DHAP reductase was sensitive to antibodies raised against the cytosolic enzyme and had a slightly smaller subunit molecular weight than the cytosolic isoform.

8.
Plant Physiol ; 98(2): 578-83, 1992 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16668680

RESUMO

Carbonyl sulfide (COS), a substrate for carbonic anhydrase, inhibited alkalization of the medium, O(2) evolution, dissolved inorganic carbon accumulation, and photosynthetic CO(2) fixation at pH 7 or higher by five species of unicellular green algae that had been air-adapted for forming a CO(2)-concentrating process. This COS inhibition can be attributed to inhibition of external HCO(3) (-) conversion to CO(2) and OH(-) by the carbonic anhydrase component of an active CO(2) pump. At a low pH of 5 to 6, COS stimulated O(2) evolution during photosynthesis by algae with low CO(2) in the media without alkalization of the media. This is attributed to some COS hydrolysis by carbonic anhydrase to CO(2). Although COS had less effect on HCO(3) (-) accumulation at pH 9 by a HCO(3) (-) pump in Scenedesmus, COS reduced O(2) evolution probably by inhibiting internal carbonic anhydrases. Because COS is hydrolyzed to CO(2) and H(2)S, its inhibition of the CO(2) pump activity and photosynthesis is not accurate, when measured by O(2) evolution, by NaH(14)CO(3) accumulation, or by (14)CO(2) fixation.

9.
FEBS Lett ; 279(2): 313-5, 1991 Feb 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2001745

RESUMO

Evidence for a transport system for glycolate in Chlamydomonas was obtained. [14C]Glycolate was taken up rapidly, reaching an equilibrium in less than 2 s at 4 degrees C. Glycolate uptake was stimulated by valinomycin and high KCl or high KCl alone and inhibited by N-ethylmaleimide. This uptake was not dependent on temperature or pH in contrast to uptake of benzoate by diffusion which decreased by orders of magnitude with increasing external pH. Based on these data, a transporter for glycolate is proposed.


Assuntos
Chlamydomonas/metabolismo , Glicolatos/metabolismo , Benzoatos/metabolismo , Transporte Biológico/efeitos dos fármacos , Membrana Eritrocítica/metabolismo , Etilmaleimida/farmacologia , Humanos , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Técnicas In Vitro , Cloreto de Potássio/farmacologia , Temperatura , Valinomicina/farmacologia
10.
Plant Physiol ; 92(3): 622-9, 1990 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16667325

RESUMO

Scenedesmus cells grown on high CO(2), when adapted to air levels of CO(2) for 4 to 6 hours in the light, formed two concentrating processes for dissolved inorganic carbon: one for utilizing CO(2) from medium of pH 5 to 8 and one for bicarbonate accumulation from medium of pH 7 to 11. Similar results were obtained with assays by photosynthetic O(2) evolution or by accumulation of dissolved inorganic carbon inside the cells. The CO(2) pump with K(0.5) for O(2) evolution of less than 5 micromolar CO(2) was similar to that previously studied with other green algae such as Chlamydomonas and was accompanied by plasmalemma carbonic anhydrase formation. The HCO(3) (-) concentrating process between pH 8 to 10 lowered the K(0.5) (DIC) from 7300 micromolar HCO(3) (-) in high CO(2) grown Scenedesmus to 10 micromolar in air-adapted cells. The HCO(3) (-) pump was inhibited by vanadate (K(i) of 150 micromolar), as if it involved an ATPase linked HCO(3) (-) transporter. The CO(2) pump was formed on low CO(2) by high-CO(2) grown cells in growth medium within 4 to 6 hours in the light. The alkaline HCO(3) (-) pump was partially activated on low CO(2) within 2 hours in the light or after 8 hours in the dark. Full activation of the HCO(3) (-) pump at pH 9 had requirements similar to the activation of the CO(2) pump. Air-grown or air-adapted cells at pH 7.2 or 9 accumulated in one minute 1 to 2 millimolar inorganic carbon in the light or 0.44 millimolar in the dark from 150 micromolar in the media, whereas CO(2)-grown cells did not accumulate inorganic carbon. A general scheme for concentrating dissolved inorganic carbon by unicellular green algae utilizes a vanadate-sensitive transporter at the chloroplast envelope for the CO(2) pump and in some algae an additional vanadate-sensitive plasmalemma HCO(3) (-) transporter for a HCO(3) (-) pump.

11.
Plant Physiol ; 92(3): 630-6, 1990 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16667326

RESUMO

Rates of photosynthetic O(2) evolution, for measuring K(0.5)(CO(2) + HCO(3) (-)) at pH 7, upon addition of 50 micromolar HCO(3) (-) to air-adapted Chlamydomonas, Dunaliella, or Scenedesmus cells, were inhibited up to 90% by the addition of 1.5 to 4.0 millimolar salicylhydroxamic acid (SHAM) to the aqueous medium. The apparent K(1)(SHAM) for Chlamydomonas cells was about 2.5 millimolar, but due to low solubility in water effective concentrations would be lower. Salicylhydroxamic acid did not inhibit oxygen evolution or accumulation of bicarbonate by Scenedesmus cells between pH 8 to 11 or by isolated intact chloroplasts from Dunaliella. Thus, salicylhydroxamic acid appears to inhibit CO(2) uptake, whereas previous results indicate that vanadate inhibits bicarbonate uptake. These conclusions were confirmed by three test procedures with three air-adapted algae at pH 7. Salicylhydroxamic acid inhibited the cellular accumulation of dissolved inorganic carbon, the rate of photosynthetic O(2) evolution dependent on low levels of dissolved inorganic carbon (50 micromolar Na-HCO(3)), and the rate of (14)CO(2) fixation with 100 micromolar [(14)C] HCO(3) (-). Salicylhydroxamic acid inhibition of O(2) evolution and (14)CO(2)-fixation was reversed by higher levels of NaHCO(3). Thus, salicylhydroxamic acid inhibition was apparently not affecting steps of photosynthesis other than CO(2) accumulation. Although salicylhydroxamic acid is an inhibitor of alternative respiration in algae, it is not known whether the two processes are related.

12.
Plant Physiol ; 91(1): 345-51, 1989 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16667023

RESUMO

Two isoforms of dihydroxyacetone phosphate reductase were present in Dunaliella tertiolecta. The major form was located in the chloroplast and the minor form in the cytosol. The chloroplastic reductase eluted first from a DEAE cellulose column followed immediately by the cytosolic form. Both forms were unstable and cold labile. Addition of 5 millimolar dithiothreitol helped to stabilize the enzymes. The cytosolic isoform of DHAP reductase was detected only if the cells were in an active log phase of growth. Then its activity was 20 to 30% of the total reductase activity. When cell cultures entered late log phase of growth the activity of the cytosolic form of the enzyme disappeared, but the chloroplastic form remained. The cytosolic DHAP reductase from Dunaliella has some properties similar to the cytosolic isoform from spinach leaves. Detergents inhibited both enzymes. However, neither form of the algal dihydroxyacetone phosphate reductase was stimulated by fructose 2,6-bisphosphate. In Dunaliella the properties of the chloroplastic form were those expected for glycerol production for osmoregulation, whereas the cytosolic form, like the reductases in leaves, is more likely involved in glycerol phosphate formation for lipid synthesis.

13.
Plant Physiol ; 89(4): 1264-9, 1989 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16666694

RESUMO

Neither Dunaliella cells grown with 5% CO(2) nor their isolated chloroplasts had a CO(2) concentrating mechanism. These cells primarily utilized CO(2) from the medium because the K((0.5)) (HCO(3) (-)) increase from 57 micromolar at pH 7.0 to 1489 micromolar at pH 8.5, where as the K((0.5)) CO(2) was about 12 micromolar over the pH range. After air adaptation for 24 hours in light, a CO(2) concentrating mechanism was present that decreased the K(0.5) (CO(2)) to about 0.5 micromolar and K(0.5) (HCO(3) (-)) to 11 micromolar at pH 8. These K(0.5) values suggest that air-adapted cells preferentially concentrated CO(2) but could also use HCO(3) (-) from the medium. Chloroplasts isolated from air-adapted cells had a K((0.5)) for total inorganic carbon of less than 10 micromolar compared to 130 micromolar for chloroplasts from cells grown on high CO(2). Chloroplasts from air-adapted cells, but not CO(2)-grown cells, concentrate inorganic carbon internally to 1 millimolar in 60 seconds from 240 micromolar in the medium. Maximum uptake rates occurred after preillumination of 45 seconds to 3 minutes. The CO(2) concentrating mechanism by chloroplasts from air-adapted cells was light dependent and inhibited by 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) or flurocarbonyl-cyamidephenylhydrazone (FCCP). Phenazine-methosulfate at 10 micromolar to provide cyclic phosphorylation partially reversed the inhibition by DCMU but not by FCCP. One to 0.1 millimolar vanadate, an inhibitor of plasma membrane ATPase, inhibited inorganic carbon accumulation by isolated chloroplasts. Vanadate had no effect on CO(2) concentration by whole cells, as it did not readily cross the cell plasmalemma. Addition of external ATP to the isolated chloroplast only slightly stimulated inorganic carbon uptake and did not reverse vanadate inhibition by more than 25%. These results are consistent with a CO(2) concentrating mechanism in Dunaliella cells which consists in part of an inorganic carbon transporter at the chloroplast envelope that is energized by ATP from photosynthetic electron transport.

14.
Plant Physiol ; 89(3): 904-9, 1989 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16666640

RESUMO

A physiologically significant level of intracellular carbonic anhydrase has been identified in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii after lysis of the cell wall-less mutant, cw15, and two intracellular polypeptides have been identified which bind to anti-carbonic anhydrase antisera. The susceptibility of the intracellular activity to sulfonamide carbonic anhydrase inhibitors is more than three orders-of-magnitude less than that of the periplasmic enzyme, indicating that the intracellular activity was distinct from the periplasmic from of the enzyme. When electrophoretically separated cell extracts or chloroplast stromal fractions were probed with either anti-C. reinhardtii periplasmic carbonic anhydrase antiserum or anti-spinach carbonic anhydrase antiserum, immunoreactive polypeptides of 45 kilodaltons and 110 kilodaltons were observed with both antisera. The strongly immunoreactive 37 kilodalton polypeptide due to the periplasmic carbonic anhydrase was also observed in lysed cells, but neither the 37 kilodalton nor the 110 kilodalton polypeptides were present in the chloroplast stromal fraction. These studies have identified intracellular carbonic anhydrase activity, and putative intracellular carbonic anhydrase polypeptides in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii represented by a 45 kilodalton polypeptide in the chloroplast and a 110 kilodalton form probably in the cytoplasm, which may be associated with an intracellular inorganic carbon concentrating system.

15.
Plant Physiol ; 89(3): 897-903, 1989 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16666639

RESUMO

A Chlamydomonas reinhardtii mutant has been isolated that cannot grow photoautotrophically on low CO(2) concentrations but can grow on elevated CO(2). In a test cross, the high CO(2)-requirement for growth showed a 2:2 segregation. This mutant, designated CIA-5, had a phenotype similar to previously identified mutants that were defective in some aspect of CO(2) accumulation. Unlike previously isolated mutants, CIA-5 did not have detectable levels of the periplasmic carbonic anhydrase, an inducible protein that participates in the acquisition of CO(2) by C. reinhardtii. CIA-5 also did not accumulate inorganic carbon to levels higher than could be accounted for by diffusion. This mutant strain did not synthesize any of the four polypeptides preferentially made by wild type C. reinhardtii when switched from an environment containing elevated CO(2) levels to an environment low in CO(2). It is concluded that this mutant fails to induce the CO(2) concentrating system and is incapable of adapting to low CO(2) conditions.

16.
Plant Physiol ; 89(3): 958-62, 1989 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16666648

RESUMO

Chlamydomonas in the resting phase of growth has an equal capacity of about 15 micromole O(2) uptake per hour per milligram of chlorophyll for both the cytochrome c, CN-sensitive respiration, and for the alternative, salicylhydroxamic acid-sensitive respiration. Alternative respiration capacity was measured as salicylhydroxamic acid inhibited O(2) uptake in the presence of CN, and cytochrome c respiration capacity as CN inhibition of O(2) uptake in the presence of salicylhydroxamic acid. Measured total respiration was considerably less than the combined capacities for respiration. During the log phase of growth on high (2-5%) CO(2), the alternative respiration capacity decreased about 90% but returned as the culture entered the lag phase. When the alternative oxidase capacity was low, addition of salicylic acid or cyanide induced its reappearance. When cells were grown on low (air-level) CO(2), which induced a CO(2) concentrating mechanism, the alternative oxidase capacity did not decrease during the growth phase. Attempts to measure in vivo distribution of respiration between the two pathways with either CN or salicylhydroxamic acid alone were inconclusive.

17.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 86(6): 1855-9, 1989 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2928307

RESUMO

Two adjacent N-terminal tryptic peptides of the large subunit of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase [3-phospho-D-glycerate carboxy-lyase (dimerizing), EC 4.1.1.39] from spinach, wheat, tobacco, and muskmelon were removed by limited tryptic proteolysis. Characterization by peptide sequencing, amino acid composition, and tandem mass spectrometry revealed that the N-terminal residue from the large subunit of the enzyme from each plant species was acetylated proline. The sequence of the penultimate N-terminal tryptic peptide from the large subunit of the spinach and wheat enzyme was consistent with previous primary structure determinations. However, the penultimate N-terminal peptide from the large subunit of both the tobacco and muskmelon enzymes, while identical, differed from the corresponding peptide from spinach and wheat by containing a trimethyllysyl residue at position 14. Thus, tryptic proteolysis occurred at lysine-18 rather than lysine-14 as with the spinach and wheat enzymes. A comparison of the DNA sequences for the large subunit of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase indicates that the N terminus has been post-translationally processed by removal of methionine-1 and serine-2 followed by acetylation of proline-3. In addition, for the enzyme from tobacco and muskmelon a third post-translational modification occurs at lysine-14 in the form of N epsilon-trimethylation.


Assuntos
Plantas/enzimologia , Processamento de Proteína Pós-Traducional , Ribulose-Bifosfato Carboxilase/metabolismo , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Aminoácidos/análise , Cromatografia Líquida de Alta Pressão , Frutas , Espectrometria de Massas , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Peso Molecular , Fragmentos de Peptídeos/metabolismo , Plantas Tóxicas , Nicotiana , Triticum , Tripsina/metabolismo , Verduras
18.
Plant Physiol ; 89(1): 305-8, 1989 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16666531

RESUMO

Young or mature rosette leaves from spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) plants growing in the field, in the greenhouse, or in a growth chamber under a regimen of 8 hours light and 16 hours dark contained 15 to 50 nanomoles per minute per gram wet weight of NADH:dihydroxyacetone phosphate reductase activity. Of this activity, 75 to 87% was the chloroplastic isoform and 25 to 13% was the cytosolic form. When plants were induced to senesce, as measured by stem elongation and flowering, the percentage of the two reductase isoforms in rosette or stem leaves changed to about 12% as the chloroplastic and 88% as the cytosolic isoform. The change in enzyme activity of the rosette leaves occurred within 3 days, before phenotypic changes were observed. Likewise, when plants senesced in continuous darkness, the percentage of chloroplastic to cytosolic reductase changed from 80:20% to 25:75% after 62 hours before changes in total protein or chlorophyll occurred. The ratio of activities did not change in the first 16 hours of darkness or overnight. In each case the change in ratio resulted from about a 75% decrease in activity of the chloroplastic isoform and up to 14-fold increase in cytosolic isoform. In spinach leaves purchased at a local market primarily only the cytosolic isoform remained. When plants were returned to normal day-nights, after 62 hours in continuous darkness, the activity of the chloroplastic isoform increased, but not to control levels after 3 days, while the cytosolic enzyme decreased within 1 day to normal day-night values. Changes in activity were not due to changes during in vitro assays in activation by thioredoxin for the chloroplastic isoform or fructose 2,6-phosphate for the cytosolic isoform.

19.
Plant Physiol ; 88(3): 543-6, 1988 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16666345

RESUMO

Cells of Dunaliella tertiolecta from the log phase of growth were broken by rapid extrusion at low pressure through a Yeda press and the chloroplasts were isolated by centrifugation through a Percoll gradient. Osmolarity of the growth media, the suspending media, and the Percoll gradient was kept identical to minimize change in chloroplast volume and mitochondrial entrapment. The isolated intact chloroplasts were obtained in a 30 to 50% yield based on chlorophyll and were stable to washing with buffered medium. Isolated chloroplast yield and purity was dependent on cell culture condition; a cycle of 16 hours light and 8 hours dark with continuous high CO(2) was optimum. Isolated chloroplasts were about 90% intact by microscopic examination, ferricyanide-dependent O(2) evolution, and the distribution of four stromal enzymes. Enzymes associated with glycolate metabolism were not in the chloroplast fraction. The isolated chloroplasts with 10 millimolar bicarbonate evolved 24 micromoles of O(2) and fixed 21 micromoles of CO(2) per hour per milligram of chlorophyll, which rates were about one-third of those by whole cells. The inhibition of oxygen evolution by 10 millimolar phosphate was reversed by P-glycerate. Whole chloroplasts were also isolated from cells adapted to low CO(2) in air for 24 hours. On low CO(2) the cells excreted more gelatinous material, which had to be removed with additional washing of the cells, before it was possible to obtain good chloroplast preparations.

20.
Plant Physiol ; 88(3): 896-903, 1988 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16666401

RESUMO

A dihydroxyacetone phosphate (DHAP) reductase has been isolated in 50% yield from Dunaliella tertiolecta by rapid chromatography on diethylaminoethyl cellulose. The activity was located in the chloroplasts. The enzyme was cold labile, but if stored with 2 molar glycerol, most of the activity was restored at 30 degrees C after 20 minutes. The spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) reductase isoforms were not activated by heat treatment. Whereas the spinach chloroplast DHAP reductase isoform was stimulated by leaf thioredoxin, the enzyme from Dunaliella was stimulated by reduced Escherichia coli thioredoxin. The reductase from Dunaliella was insensitive to surfactants, whereas the higher plant reductases were completely inhibited by traces of detergents. The partially purified, cold-inactivated reductase from Dunaliella was reactivated and stimulated by 25 millimolar Mg(2+) or by 250 millimolar salts, such as NaCl or KCl, which inhibited the spinach chloroplast enzyme. Phosphate at 3 to 10 millimolar severely inhibited the algal enzyme, whereas phosphate stimulated the isoform in spinach chloroplasts. Phosphate inhibition of the algal reductase was partially reversed by the addition of NaCl or MgCl(2) and totally by both. In the presence of 10 millimolar phosphate, 25 millimolar MgCl(2), and 100 millimolar NaCl, reduced thioredoxin causes a further twofold stimulation of the algal enzyme. The Dunaliella reductase utilized either NADH or NADPH with the same pH maximum at about 7.0. The apparent K(m) (NADH) was 74 micromolar and K(m) (NADPH) was 81 micromolar. Apparent V(max) was 1100 mumoles DHAP reduced per hour per milligram chlorophyll for NADH, but due to NADH inhibition highest measured values were 350 to 400. The DHAP reductase from spinach chloroplasts exhibited little activity with NADPH above pH 7.0. Thus, the spinach chloroplast enzyme appears to use NADH in vivo, whereas the chloroplast enzyme from Dunaliella or the cytosolic isozyme from spinach may utilize either nucleotide.

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