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Plant Physiology 45:178-182 (1970)
© 1970 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Articles

Effect of Oxygen on the Light-enhanced Dark Carbon Dioxide Fixation in Chlorella Cells 1

Daisuke Hogetsu and Shigetoh Miyachi

a Institute of Applied Microbiology, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan

With Chlorella ellipsoidea cells, the effect of oxygen was investigated on the products of enhanced dark 14CO2 fixation immediately following preillumination in the absence of CO2. When the reaction mixture was made aerobic by bubbling air (CO2-free) throughout preillumination and the following dark 14CO2 fixation periods, the initial fixation product was mainly 3-phosphoglyceric acid. When nitrogen gas had been used instead of air, only about one-half of the total radioactivity in the initial fixation products was in 3-phosphoglyceric acid and the rest in aspartic, phosphoenolpyruvic, and malic acids. The percentage distribution of radioactivity incorporated in these initial products rapidly decreased during the rest of the dark period. Concurrent with the decrease in the initial 14CO2 fixation products, some increase was observed in the radioactivities of the sugar phosphates. The maximal radioactivity incorporated in sugar mono- and diphosphates accounted for only 10% of total 14C, under either the aerobic or anaerobic conditions. Under anaerobic conditions most of the 14C incorporated was eventually transferred to alanine, whereas the main end products under aerobic conditions were aspartate and glutamate. The pattern of 14CO2 fixation products was unaffected by the atmospheric condition during the period of preillumination. The preferential flow of the fixed carbon atom to alanine or aspartate depended on the presence or absence of oxygen during the period of dark CO2 fixation.


1 This investigation was supported by a grant from the Japanese Ministry of Education.







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