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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Planta 140 (1978), S. 275-282 
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Cotyledons ; CO2 dark fixation ; Cucurbita ; Gluconeogenesis ; RUDP carboxylase
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract We did this work to discover the pathway of CO2 fixation into sugars in the dark during gluconeogenesis by the cotyledons of 5-day-old seedlings of Cucurbita pepo L. We paid particular attention to the possibility of a contribution from ribulosebisphosphate carboxylase. The detailed distribution of 14C after exposure of excised cotyledons to 14CO2 in the dark was determined in a series of pulse and chase experiments. After 4s in 14CO2, 89% of the 14C fixed was in malate and aspartate. In longer exposures, and in chases in 12CO2, label appeared in alanine, phosphoenolpyruvate, 3-phosphoglycerate and sugar phosphates, and accumulated in sugars. The transfer of label from C-4 acids to sugars was restricted by inhibition of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase in vivo by 3-mercaptopicolinic acid. We conclude as follows. Initial fixation of CO2 in the dark is almost entirely into phosphoenolpyruvate, probably via phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.31) which we showed to be present in appreciable amounts. Incorporation into sugars occurs chiefly, if not completely, as a result of randomization of the carboxyl groups of the C-4 acids and subsequent conversion of the oxaloacetate to sugars via the accepted sequence for gluconeogenesis. Ribulosebisphosphate carboxylase appears to make very little contribution to sugar synthesis from fat.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Carbon dioxide assimilation ; Light and carbon assimilation ; Spinacia (photosynthesis) ; Sucrose synthesis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract When leaves of Spinacia oleracea L. were subjected to a decrease from a saturating to a limiting irradiance, photosynthetic carbon assimilation exhibited a pronounced lag. This comprised a postlower-illumination CO2 burst (Vines et al. 1982, Plant Physiol. 70, 629–631) and a slow increase in the rate of carbon assimilation to the new lower steady-state rate. The latter phenomenon was distinguishable from the former because it was present in leaves when photorespiration was inhibited by high concentrations of CO2 or by 2% O2. A lag which followed a decrease in irradiance was also evident in leaves of Zea mays in air or in isolated spinach protoplasts photosynthesising in high CO2. The lag was not stomatal in origin. The origin of the lag which followed the decrease in irradiance was investigated. Measurements of total 14CO2 fixation and 14C incorporated into sucrose during the transition in irradiance showed that sucrose synthesis displayed an overshoot during the transient which accounted for all of the carbon fixed during the first 90 s of the transition period. The behaviour of hexose phosphates in the intact leaf and in the cytosol was inconsistent with their supporting sucrose synthesis during the transient. It is concluded that the overshoot in sucrose synthesis imposes a drain on chloroplast intermediates which contributes to the temporary lag in the rate of carbon assimilation.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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