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Plant Physiology 72:420-425 (1983)
© 1983 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Articles

Glyoxylate and Glutamate Effects on Photosynthetic Carbon Metabolism in Isolated Chloroplasts and Mesophyll Cells of Spinach 1

Arthur L. Lawyer, Karen L. Cornwell2, Sherry L. Gee and James A. Bassham

Biotechnology Group, Chevron Chemical Company, 940 Hensley Street, Richmond, California 94804, Laboratory of Chemical Biodynamics, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720

Addition of millimolar sodium glyoxylate to spinach (Spinacia oleracea) chloroplasts was inhibitory to photosynthetic incorporation of 14CO2 under conditions of both low (0.2 millimolar or air levels) and high (9 millimolar) CO2 concentrations. Incorporation of 14C into most metabolites decreased. Labeling of 6-P-gluconate and fructose-1,6-bis-P increased. This suggested that glyoxylate inhibited photosynthetic carbon metabolism indirectly by decreasing the reducing potential of chloroplasts through reduction of glyoxylate to glycolate. This hypothesis was supported by measuring the reduction of [14C]glyoxylate by chloroplasts. Incubation of isolated mesophyll cells with glyoxylate had no effect on net photosynthetic CO2 uptake, but increased labeling was observed in 6-P-gluconate, a key indicator of decreased reducing potential. The possibility that glyoxylate was affecting photosynthetic metabolism by decreasing chloroplast pH cannot be excluded. Increased 14C-labeling of ribulose-1,5-bis-P and decreased 3-P-glyceric acid and glycolate labeling upon addition of glyoxylate to chloroplasts suggested that ribulose-bis-P carboxylase and oxygenase might be inhibited either indirectly or directly by glyoxylate. Glyoxylate addition decreased 14CO2 labeling into glycolate and glycine by isolated mesophyll cells but had no effect on net 14CO2 fixation. Glutamate had little effect on net photosynthetic metabolism in chloroplast preparations but did increase 14CO2 incorporation by 15% in isolated mesophyll cells under air levels of CO2.


2 Present address: Mikrobiologie, Fachbereich Biologie, Philipps Universität, 3550 Marburg (Lahn), Lahnberge, Federal Republic of Germany.

1 Supported by the Division of Biological Energy Conversion and Conservation, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, United States Department of Energy under Contract W-7405-ENG-48, and by a Rockefeller Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship to A. L. L.







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Copyright © 1983 by the American Society of Plant Biologists