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Plant Physiology 97:580-587 (1991)
© 1991 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Metabolism and Enzymology

Surface Charge-Mediated Effects of Mg2+ on K+ Flux across the Chloroplast Envelope Are Associated with Regulation of Stromal pH and Photosynthesis 1

Weihua Wu, Jeanne Peters and Gerald A. Berkowitz

Horticulture Department, Cook College, Rutgers—The State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick, New Jersey 08903

Studies of Spinacia oleracea L. were undertaken to characterize further how Mg2+ external to the isolated intact chloroplast interacts with stromal K+, pH, and photosynthetic capacity. Data presented in this report were consistent with the previously developed hypothesis that millimolar levels of external, unchelated Mg2+ result in lower stromal K+, which somehow is linked to stromal acidification. Stromal acidification directly results in photosynthetic inhibition. These effects were attributed to Mg2+ interaction (binding) to negative surface charges on the chloroplast envelope. Chloroplast envelope-bound Mg2+ was found to decrease the envelope membrane potential (inside negative) of the illuminated chloroplast by 10 millivolts. It was concluded that Mg2+ effects on photosynthesis were likely not mediated by this effect on membrane potential. Further experiments indicated that envelope-bound Mg2+ caused lower stromal K+ by restricting the rate of K+ influx; Mg2+ did not affect K+ efflux from the stroma. Mg2+ restriction of K+ influx appeared consistent with the typical effects imposed on monovalent cation channels by polyvalent cations that bind to negatively charged sites on a membrane surface near the outer pore of the channel. It was hypothesized that this interaction of Mg2+ with the chloroplast envelope likely mediated external Mg2+ effects on chloroplast metabolism.


1 New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station, Publication No. 12149-3-91. This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. Department of Agriculture Competitive Research Grants Office under Award No. 90-37262-5586. W. W. received partial support from the National Science Foundation of China.




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Copyright © 1991 by the American Society of Plant Biologists