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Plant Physiology 82:136-141 (1986)
© 1986 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Articles

Regulation of Carbon Flow by Nitrogen and Light in the Red Alga, Gelidium coulteri1

Bruce A. Macler

Department of Botany, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720

The red alga Gelidium coulteri Harv. photosynthetically fixed [14C] bicarbonate at high rates under defined conditions in unialgal laboratory culture. The fixation rate and flow of photosynthate into various end products were dependent on the nitrogen status of the tissue. Plants fed luxury levels of nitrogen (approximately 340 micromolar) showed fixation rates several-fold higher than those seen for plants starved for nitrogen. The addition of NO3 or NH4+ to such starved plants further inhibited fixation over at least the first several hours after addition. The majority of 14C after incubations of 30 minutes to 8 hours was found in the compounds floridoside, agar and floridean starch. In addition, amino acids and intermediate compounds of the reductive pentose phosphate pathway, glycolytic pathway and tricarboxylic acid cycle were detected. Nitrogen affected the partitioning of labeled carbon into these compounds. Plants under luxury nitrogen conditions had higher floridoside levels and markedly lower amounts of agar and starch than found in plants limited for nitrogen. Amino acid, phycobiliprotein and chlorophyll levels were also significantly higher in nitrogen-enriched plants. Addition of NO3 to starved plants led to an increase in floridoside, tricarboxylic acid cycle intermediates and amino acids within 1 hour and inhibited carbon flow into agar and starch. Carbon fixation in the dark was only 1 to 7% of that seen in the light. Dark fixation of [14C]bicarbonate yielded label primarily in tricarboxylic acid cycle intermediates, amino acids and polysaccharides. Nitrogen stimulated amino acid synthesis at the expense of agar and starch. Floridoside was only a minor component in the dark. Pulse-chase experiments, designed to show carbon turnover, indicated a 2-fold increase in labeling of agar over 96 hours of chase in the light. No increases were seen in the dark. Low molecular weight pools, including floridoside, decreased 2- to 5-fold over this period under both light and dark conditions. Nitrogen status did not influence turnover. There was little or no organic carbon released into the culture medium over this period. The results are consistent with biosynthetic pathways to floridoside and agar that share the common intermediate UDP-D-galactose. It is hypothesized that synthesis of floridoside is regulated by nitrogen and light at the enzymic level.


1 Supported by Ocean Genetics, Inc., and the National Science Foundation grant OCE-8360570.







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Copyright © 1986 by the American Society of Plant Biologists