RESUMO
The lability of Rubisco activase function is thought to have a major role in the decline of leaf photosynthesis under moderate heat (<35°C). To investigate this further, we characterized Rubisco activase and explored its role in the previously demonstrated thermal acclimation and inhibition of two genotypes of Acer rubrum originally collected from Florida (FL) and Minnesota (MN). When plants were grown at 33/25°C (day/night) for 21 d, the FL genotype compared to the MN genotype maintained about a two-fold increase in leaf photosynthetic rates at 33-42°C and had a 22% increase in the maximal rate of Rubisco carboxylation (V(cmax)) at 33°C under nonphotorespiratory conditions. Both genotypes had two leaf Rca transcripts, likely from equivalent alternative splicing events. The RCA1 and RCA2 proteins increased modestly in FL plants under warmer temperature, while only RCA2 protein increased in MN plants. Rubisco large subunit (RbsL) protein abundance was relatively unaffected in either genotype by temperature. These results support the idea that Rubisco activase, particularly the ratio of Rubisco activase to Rubisco, may play a role in the photosynthetic heat acclimation in A. rubrum and may have adaptive significance. This mechanism alone is not likely to entirely explain the thermotolerance in the FL genotype, and future research on adaptive mechanisms to high temperatures should consider activase function in a multipathway framework.
RESUMO
Phylogenetic relationships in the genus Eleusine (Poaceae: Chloridoideae) were investigated using nuclear ITS and plastid trnT-trnF sequences. Separate and combined data sets were analyzed using parsimony, distance, and likelihood based methods, including Bayesian. Data congruence was examined using character and topological measures. Significant data heterogeneity was detected, but there was little conflict in the topological substructure measures for triplets and quartets, and resolution and clade support increased in the combined analysis. Data incongruence may be a result of noise and insufficient information in the slower evolving trnT-trnF. Monophyly of Eleusine is strongly supported in all analyses, but basal relationships in the genus remain uncertain. There is good support for a CAIK clade (E. coracana subsp. coracana and africana, E. indica, and E. kigeziensis), with E. tristachya as its sister group. Two putative ITS homeologues (A and B loci) were identified in the allotetraploid E. coracana; the 'B' locus sequence type was not found in the remaining species. Eleusine coracana and its putative 'A' genome donor, the diploid E. indica, are confirmed close allies, but sequence data contradicts the hypothesis that E. floccifolia is its second genome donor. The 'B' genome donor remains unidentified and may be extinct.