Mass spectrometric measurements of dissolved free (13)CO(2) were used to monitor CO(2) uptake by air grown (low CO(2)) cells and protoplasts from the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. In the presence of 50 micromolar dissolved inorganic carbon and light, protoplasts which had been washed free of external carbonic anhydrase reduced the (13)CO(2) concentration in the medium to close to zero. Similar results were obtained with low CO(2) cells treated with 50 micromolar acetazolamide. Addition of carbonic anhydrase to protoplasts after the period of rapid CO(2) uptake revealed that the removal of CO(2) from the medium in the light was due to selective and active CO(2) transport rather than uptake of total dissolved inorganic carbon. In the light, low CO(2) cells and protoplasts incubated with carbonic anhydrase took up CO(2) at an apparently low rate which reflected the uptake of total dissolved inorganic carbon. No net CO(2) uptake occurred in the dark. Measurement of chlorophyll a fluorescence yield with low CO(2) cells and washed protoplasts showed that variable fluorescence was mainly influenced by energy quenching which was reciprocally related to photosynthetic activity with its highest value at the CO(2) compensation point. During the linear uptake of CO(2), low CO(2) cells and protoplasts incubated with carbonic anhydrase showed similar rates of net O(2) evolution (102 and 108 micromoles per milligram of chlorophyll per hour, respectively). The rate of net O(2) evolution (83 micromoles per milligram of chlorophyll per hour) with washed protoplasts was 20 to 30% lower during the period of rapid CO(2) uptake and decreased to a still lower value of 46 micromoles per milligram of chlorophyll per hour when most of the free CO(2) had been removed from the medium. The addition of carbonic anhydrase at this point resulted in more than a doubling of the rate of O(2) evolution. These results show low CO(2) cells of Chlamydomonas are able to transport both CO(2) and HCO(3) (-) but CO(2) is preferentially removed from the medium. The external carbonic anhydrase is important in the supply to the cells of free CO(2) from the dehydration of HCO(3) (-).
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1055998 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1104/pp.89.4.1213 | DOI Listing |
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