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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Chloroplast metabolism ; Hydrogen peroxide ; Regulation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Hydrogen peroxide (6x10-4 M) causes a 90% inhibition of CO2-fixation in isolated intact chloroplasts. The inhibition is reversed by adding catalase (2500 U/ml) or DTT (10 mM). If hydrogen peroxide is added to a suspension of intact chloroplasts in the light, the incorporation of carbon into hexose- and heptulose bisphosphates and into pentose monophosphates is significantly increased, whereas; carbon incorporation into hexose monophosphates and ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate is decreased. At the same time formation of 6-phosphogluconate is dramatically stimulated, and the level of ATP is increased. All these changes induced by hydrogen peroxide are reversed by addition of catalase or DTT. Additionally, the conversion of [14C]glucose-6-phosphate into different metabolites by lysed chloroplasts in the dark has been studied. In presence of hydrogen peroxide, formation of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate is inhibited, whereas formation of other bisphosphates,of triose phosphates, and pentose monophosphates is stimulated. Again, DTT has the opposite effect. The release of 14CO2 from added [14C]glucose-6-phosphate by the soluble fraction of lysed chloroplasts via the reactions of oxidative pentose phosphate cycle is completely inhibited by DTT (0.5 mM) and re-activated by comparable concentrations of hydrogen peroxide. These results indicate that hydrogen peroxide interacts with reduced sulfhydryl groups which are involved in the light activation of enzymes of the Calvin cycle at the site of fructose- and sedoheptulose bisphophatase, of phosphoribulokinase, as well as in light-inactivation of oxidative pentose phosphate cycle at the site of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1617-4623
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Cells of wild-type Schizosacharomyces pombe exposed to UV radiation in either G1 or G2 phase show enhanced inactivation of colony-forming ability if plated in the presence of caffeine. This UV-sensitization by caffeine is abolished in both G1 and G2 phase cells by the rad1 mutation; since both caffeine and the rad1 mutation markedly reduce recombinational events, this suggests that a recombinational repair process is active in cells irradiated either in G1 or G2 phase. A prereplicative or sister chromatid exchange recombinational process appears to account for caffeine-sensitive repair of UV-damage in G2 cells (which possess at the time of radiation exposure the duplicated genome necessary for recombination), since caffeine-sensitive repair begins immediately and is completed before resumption of DNA synthesis. In contrast, since caffeine-sensitive repair of UV-damage in G1 cells displays a considerable lag and then occurs concomitantly with DNA synthesis, it appears that G1 cells must acquire a second genome in order to accomplish a caffeine-sensitive recovery process. Since a duplicated genome is required for caffeinesensitive repair, all such repair would seem to involve a recombinational mechanism. In G1 cells the process may be a post-replication recombinational mechanism. Since G2 phase cells are considerably more UV-resistant than G1 phase cells, the prereplicative recombinational process appears to be a much more efficient process for dealing with UV-induced damage than the post-replication mechanism. UV-induced mutagenesis was examined in wildtype and rad mutants using a forward mutation system. Rad mutants which show higher UV-induced mutation rates than wild-type retain UV-sensitization by caffeine (and thus presumably retain the recombinational mechanism). In contrast, rad strains which are relatively UV-immutable compared to wild-type do not possess the caffeine-sensitive UV-repair process. The recombinational process therefore may be the major pathway responsible for UV-induced mutation.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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