The role of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase during C4 photosynthetic isotope exchange and stomatal conductance.

Plant Physiol

Molecular Plant Physiology Group , Research School of Biological Sciences, Australian National University, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory 2601, Australia.

Published: November 2007

AI Article Synopsis

  • PEPC is crucial for C(4) photosynthesis, affecting CO(2) assimilation, pH regulation, and stomatal opening; differences were observed between mutant plants with reduced PEPC activity.
  • The PEPC-deficient mutants (Pp and pp) exhibited significantly lower CO(2) assimilation rates (78% and 10% of wild-type, respectively) and impaired stomatal conductance, particularly in the pp mutant, which responded slower to light and CO(2) changes.
  • Isotope discrimination showed that while the Pp mutant's coordination of C(4) photosynthesis was largely unaffected, the pp mutant indicated a shift towards Rubisco activity for CO(2) fixation, alongside discrepancies in isotopic

Article Abstract

Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC; EC 4.1.1.31) plays a key role during C(4) photosynthesis and is involved in anaplerotic metabolism, pH regulation, and stomatal opening. Heterozygous (Pp) and homozygous (pp) forms of a PEPC-deficient mutant of the C(4) dicot Amaranthus edulis were used to study the effect of reduced PEPC activity on CO(2) assimilation rates, stomatal conductance, and (13)CO(2) (Delta(13)C) and C(18)OO (Delta(18)O) isotope discrimination during leaf gas exchange. PEPC activity was reduced to 42% and 3% and the rates of CO(2) assimilation in air dropped to 78% and 10% of the wild-type values in the Pp and pp mutants, respectively. Stomatal conductance in air (531 mubar CO(2)) was similar in the wild-type and Pp mutant but the pp mutant had only 41% of the wild-type steady-state conductance under white light and the stomata opened more slowly in response to increased light or reduced CO(2) partial pressure, suggesting that the C(4) PEPC isoform plays an essential role in stomatal opening. There was little difference in Delta(13)C between the Pp mutant (3.0 per thousand +/- 0.4 per thousand) and wild type (3.3 per thousand +/- 0.4 per thousand), indicating that leakiness (), the ratio of CO(2) leak rate out of the bundle sheath to the rate of CO(2) supply by the C(4) cycle, a measure of the coordination of C(4) photosynthesis, was not affected by a 60% reduction in PEPC activity. In the pp mutant Delta(13)C was 16 per thousand +/- 3.2 per thousand, indicative of direct CO(2) fixation by Rubisco in the bundle sheath at ambient CO(2) partial pressure. Delta(18)O measurements indicated that the extent of isotopic equilibrium between leaf water and the CO(2) at the site of oxygen exchange () was low (0.6) in the wild-type and Pp mutant but increased to 0.9 in the pp mutant. We conclude that in vitro carbonic anhydrase activity overestimated as compared to values determined from Delta(18)O in wild-type plants.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2048775PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1104/pp.107.103390DOI Listing

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