55 research outputs found

    Adenylate ratios in the cytosol, chloroplasts and mitochondria of barley leaf protoplasts during photosynthesis at different carbon dioxide concentrations

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    AbstractBarley (Hordeum vulgare) protoplasts were incubated in darkness and in the light at saturating and limiting CO2 concentrations. The protoplasts were fractioned by a membrane filtration technique which allows quenching of the metabolism by acidification within about 0.1 s and the ATP/ADP ratios in the cytasol, chloroplasts and mitochondria were determined. It is concluded that the cytosolic ATP/ADP ratio is considerably higher during photosynthesis at limiting CO2 (which is the normal situation for a C3 plant in air) compared to photosynthesis at saturating CO2 or darkness

    Involvement of cyanide-resistant and rotenone-insensitive pathways of mitochondrial electron transport during oxidation of glycine in higher plants

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    AbstractMetabolism of glycine in isolated mitochondria and protoplasts was investigated in photosynthetic, etiolated (barley and pea leaves) and fat-storing (maize scutellum) tissues using methods of [1-14C]glycine incorporation and counting of 14CO2 evolved, oxymetric measurement of glycine oxidation and rapid fractionation of protoplasts incubated in photorespiratory conditions with consequent determination of ATP/ADP ratios in different cell compartments. The involvement of different paths of electron transport in mitochondria during operation of glycine decarboxylase complex (GDC) was tested in different conditions, using aminoacetonitrile (AAN), the inhibitor of glycine oxidation in mitochondria, rotenone, the inhibitor of Complex I of mitochondrial electron transport, and inhibitors of cytochrome oxidase and alternative oxidase. It was shown that glycine has a preference to other substrates oxidized in mitochondria only in photosynthetic tissue where succinate and malate even stimulated its oxidation. Rotenone had no or small effect on glycine oxidation, whereas the role of cyanide-resistant path increased in the presence of ATP. Glycine oxidation increased ATP/ADP ratio in cytosol of barley protoplasts incubated in the presence of CO2, but not in the CO2-free medium indicating that in conditions of high photorespiratory flux oxidation of NADH formed in the GDC reaction passes via the non-coupled paths. Activity of GDC in fat-storing tissue correlated with the activity of glyoxylate-cycle enzymes, glycine oxidation did not reveal preference to other substrates and the involvement of paths non-connected with proton translocation was not pronounced. It is suggested that the preference of glycine to other substrates oxidized in mitochondria is achieved in photosynthetic tissue by switching to rotenone-insensitive intramitochrondrial NADH oxidation and by increasing of alternative oxidase involvement in the presence of glycine

    Influence of mitochondrial genome rearrangement on cucumber leaf carbon and nitrogen metabolism

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    The MSC16 cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.) mitochondrial mutant was used to study the effect of mitochondrial dysfunction and disturbed subcellular redox state on leaf day/night carbon and nitrogen metabolism. We have shown that the mitochondrial dysfunction in MSC16 plants had no effect on photosynthetic CO2 assimilation, but the concentration of soluble carbohydrates and starch was higher in leaves of MSC16 plants. Impaired mitochondrial respiratory chain activity was associated with the perturbation of mitochondrial TCA cycle manifested, e.g., by lowered decarboxylation rate. Mitochondrial dysfunction in MSC16 plants had different influence on leaf cell metabolism under dark or light conditions. In the dark, when the main mitochondrial function is the energy production, the altered activity of TCA cycle in mutated plants was connected with the accumulation of pyruvate and TCA cycle intermediates (citrate and 2-OG). In the light, when TCA activity is needed for synthesis of carbon skeletons required as the acceptors for NH4+ assimilation, the concentration of pyruvate and TCA intermediates was tightly coupled with nitrate metabolism. Enhanced incorporation of ammonium group into amino acids structures in mutated plants has resulted in decreased concentration of organic acids and accumulation of Glu

    Preparation of leaf mitochondria and studies on mitochondrial photorespiratory reactions

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    A procedure for the preparation of spinach leaf mitochondria was developed. The procedure combines differential centrifugation, partition in dextran- polyethyleneglycol two-phase system and Percoli density gradient centri- fugation. The different steps separate the material mainly according to size, surface properties and density, respectively. No chlorophyll was present in the final mitochondrial preparation and the mitochondria were also markedly enriched relative to peroxisomes and microsomes as esti­mated from the recovery of marker enzymes. The latency of enzyme activities was used to study the apparent intactness of the mitochondrial membranes. These measurements showed that both the inner and outer mitochondrial membranes were more than 90 % intact. The mitochondria were also functionally intact since the coupling between respiration and oxidative phosphorylation was retained. The purity of the preparation made it possible to study cytochromes from leaf mitochondria. The cytochrome content of stalk and leaf mitochondria was measured in order to compare mitochondria from photosynthesizing and non-photosynthesizing tissue. The measurements were performed by difference spectroscopy both at room temperature and at liquid nitrogen temperature. Qualitatively the cytochrome content in mitochondria from stalks and leaves was identical. Quantiatively leaf mitochondria contained,on a protein basis, only half the amount of the different cytochromes as compared to stalk mitochondria. The relative content of the different cytochromes was, however, similar suggesting that the composition of the respiratory chain was the same. The photorespiratory conversion of glycine to serine takes place in the mitochondria and involves oxidative decarboxylation of glycine. The ability to oxidize glycine via the respiratory chain was present in spinach leaf mitochondria, but absent in mitochondria prepared from roots, stalks and leaf veins from the same plants. This confirmed the specific localization of the glycine oxidizing activity to photosyntheticaliy active tissue, as suggested by studies with other plant material. The conversion of glycine to serine is a complex reaction depending on the combined action of two enzymes: glycine decarboxylase and serine hydroxymethyltransferase. The effect of inhibitors on the serine hydroxy­methyl transferase activity and the rate of the glycine bicarbonate exchange reaction associated with glycine decarboxylase was studied. These reactions represent partial steps in the conversion of glycine to serine and the aim was to investigate the site of inhibition for the different inhibitors, namely, isonicotinyl hydrazide (a pyridoxa!phosphate antagonist), amino- acetonitrile, glycinehydroxamate (glycine analogues) and cyanide. The results showed that these inhibitors had a complex pattern of inhibition. The same inhibitor affected more than one site and often with an apparently different mechanism. It was, however, found that aminoacetonitrile at low concentrations specifically inhibited glycine decarboxylase and that cyanide specifically inhibited serine hydroxymethyltransferase.digitalisering@um

    What's New in Photosynthesis

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