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Plant Physiology 84:609-612 (1987) © 1987 American Society of Plant Biologists Photosynthesis of Euglena gracilis under Cobalamin-Sufficient and -Limited Growing Conditions 1Department of Hygiene, Kobe University School of Medicine, Chuo-ku, Kobe 650, Japan, Department of Agricultural Chemistry, University of Osaka Prefecture, Sakai, Osaka 591, Japan
Cobalamin is essential for growth of Euglena gracilis and photosynthesis. Methylcobalamin in Euglena chloroplasts (Y Isegawa, Y Nakano, S Kitaoka, 1984 Plant Physiol 76: 814-818) functions as a coenzyme of methionine synthetase. The requirement of cobalamin for photosynthesis appeared remarkably high in Euglena grown under the dark-precultured condition. The required amount of cobalamin for normal photosynthetic activity was 7.4 x 1011 molar, while 7.4 x 1010 molar cobalamin was required for normal growth. The lowered photosynthetic activity in cobalamin-limited cells was restored 20 hours after feeding cyanocobalamin or methionine to cobalamin-limited cells. Lowering of photosynthetic activity was due to loss of photosystem I activity. This photosynthetic activity was recovered after supplementation by methionine or cobalamin. The results suggest that methionine serves for the stabilization of photosystem I. This paper is the first report of the physiological function of cobalamin in chloroplasts of photosynthetic eukaryotes.
1 This paper is the second in a series on the physiological function of cobalamin in Euglena gracilis z.
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