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First published online April 10, 2003; 10.1104/pp.102.018861 Plant Physiology 132:1464-1474 (2003) © 2003 American Society of Plant Biologists In Vivo Changes of the Oxidation-Reduction State of NADP and of the ATP/ADP Cellular Ratio Linked to the Photosynthetic Activity in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii1Istituto di Biofisica del Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Sezione di Milano, Dipartimento di Biologia dell'Università di Milano, Via Celoria 26, Milano 20133, Italy
The ATP/ADP and NADP/NADPH ratios have been measured in whole-cell extract of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, to understand their availability for CO2 assimilation by the Calvin cycle in vivo. Measurements were performed during the dark-light transition of both aerobic and anaerobic cells, under illumination with saturating or low light intensity. Two different patterns of behavior were observed: (a) In anaerobic cells, during the lag preceding O2 evolution, ATP was synthesized without changes in the NADP/NADPH ratio, consistently with the operation of cyclic electron flow. (b) In aerobiosis, illumination increased the ATP/ADP ratio independently of the intensity used, whereas the amount of NADPH was decreased at limiting photon flux and regained the dark-adapted level under saturating photon flux. Moreover, under these conditions, the addition of low concentrations of uncouplers stimulated photosynthetic O2 evolution. These observations suggest that the photosynthetic generation of reducing equivalents rather than the rate of ATP formation limits the photosynthetic assimilation of CO2 in C. reinhardtii cells. This situation is peculiar to C. reinhardtii, because neither NADPH nor ATP limited this process in plant leaves, as shown by their increase upon illumination in barley (Hordeum vulgare) leaves, independent of light intensity. Experiments are presented and were designed to evaluate the contribution of different physiological processes that might increase the photosynthetic ATP/NADPH ratiothe Mehler reaction, respiratory ATP supply following the transfer of reducing equivalents via the malate/oxaloacetate shuttle, and cyclic electron flow around PSIto this metabolic situation.
The assimilation of CO2 in oxygenic photosynthesis depends upon the generation of NADPH and ATP by the light-driven electron transport from water to NADP. This process uses the two photochemical reactions catalyzed by photosystem II (PSII) and photosystem I (PSI) in series and also comprises the cytochrome b6f complex, which is reduced by PSII via plastoquinol and oxidized by PSI via plastocyanin. It is coupled to the synthesis of ATP via the generation of an electrochemical proton gradient across the photosynthetic membranes. The stoichiometry of one ATP per NADPH (or one ATP per two electrons; for review, see Witt, 1979
Different pathways have been proposed to perform such a role: (a) The first
one is the Mehler reaction (Egneus et al.,
1975
Alternatively, (b) the ATP needed in excess of NADPH could be provided by
cyclic photophosphorylation, i.e. the synthesis of ATP coupled to the cyclic
electron transport around PSI. This process does not reduce NADP, but results
in ATP synthesis because of the generation of a
Because of the involvement of these additional processes in the
photosynthetic activity in vivo, the energetics of CO2 fixation
appears to be significantly modified with respect to the in vitro conditions.
Consistent with the idea that the sole linear electron flow in isolated
spinach (Spinacia oleracea) chloroplasts does not provide the
ATP/NADPH stoichiometry required for CO2 assimilation, the
steady-state level of ATP decreased drastically after a decrease of the light
intensity that caused a 70% reduction of the O2 evolution rate,
whereas NADPH remained fully reduced
(Heber, 1973
In this work, we analyze in details the changes in the redox state of the
NADPH/NADP couple and the ATP/ADP ratio in intact cells of Chlamydomonas
reinhardtiiand in barley (Hordeum vulgare) leaves
during the dark-light transitions and at steady state under both saturating
and limiting light intensities. We report that light induced ATP synthesis
without changes in the redox state of NADP in C. reinhardtii under
anaerobic conditions, consistent with the previously reported operation of
cyclic flow around PSI (Finazzi et al.,
1999 Experiments are presented to evaluate the contribution of different physiological processes (the Mehler reaction, respiratory ATP supply via the malate/oxaloacetate shuttle, and cyclic electron flow around PSI) to the photosynthesis of C. reinhardtii. These experiments suggest that the latter process is the main contributor to the "extra" ATP generation in the case of this alga.
ATP/ADP and NADPH/NADP Cellular Contents in C. reinhardtii Cells
Table I shows that the
NADPH/NADP ratio in dark-adapted aerobic cells of C. reinhardtii was
approximately 1.5 (in substantial agreement with a previous report;
Rebéillé and Gans,
1988
In the same samples, an ATP content of approximately 130 nmol
mg1 chlorophyll (Chl) was found, as shown in
Figure 1C. Figure 1, A and C, refers to
aerobic conditions. The ATP/ADP ratio dropped from approximately 15
(Fig. 1C) to approximately 5
when anaerobiosis was established (Fig.
1D), whereas the NADPH/NADP ratio rose from approximately 1.5 to
3.5 (Fig. 1B). Concomitantly,
the maximum fluorescence emission yield (Fm) largely
decreased (not shown), indicating the transition to state 2
(Wollman and Delepelaire,
1984
Illumination of the cells under state 2 conditions, in the time lag
preceding the start of O2 evolution (data not shown; however, see
Finazzi et al., 1999
In aerobic conditions again, large variations of the NADPH/NADP and ATP/ADP
ratios were also observed upon illumination. When a light (51 µE
m2 s1) that was
limiting the rate of electron transport to 15% of its maximum was provided, a
decrease of the NADPH/NADP ratio to a value of approximately 0.7 was observed
(Fig. 1A). At the same time,
the ATP/ADP ratio increased with respect to the dark level, which was already
very high (Fig. 1C). At
saturating intensity (831 µE m2
s1), the NADPH/NADP ratio largely increased,
recovering its dark value, whereas the ATP/ADP ratio again slightly increased
with respect to the level measured at low light
(Fig. 1C). These observations
strongly suggest that it is the rate of NADP reduction rather than that of ATP
synthesis that sets the velocity of carbon assimilation in C.
reinhardtii when light intensity is limiting the rate of photosynthesis.
It should be noticed, however, that the figures presented above refer to
estimations of the nucleotide pools size in the entire cell. This raises the
question as to the real significance of the observed changes: Although
variations in the NADPH/NADP pools should reflect essentially photosynthetic
activity, a misinterpretation of photosynthetic contribution to changes in the
ATP content cannot be ruled out a priori, because of the bias induced by the
turnover of the other cellular pools. Two pieces of evidences, however,
indicate that the photosynthetic contribution is largely prevailing under
illumination: (a) The overall photosynthetic ATP metabolism can be estimated
(from the photosynthetic oxygen evolution activity at saturating light
saturation) as 160*3 = 480 µmol mg1 Chl
h1 or approximately 130 nmol
mg1 Chl s1. This
indicates that the overall ATP cellular content is consumed by photosynthesis
in 1 s. In addition, (b) under anaerobic conditions (state 2, no
CO2 assimilation), where the dark ATP content is decreased by less
than a factor of 2 (Fig. 1) and
the respiratory activity is prevented, illumination rapidly restored maximum
level of ATP concentration, again suggesting that most of the observed changes
involve chloroplast activity. This idea is also reinforced by previous
estimation of the different cellular ATP pools in vascular plants, where the
chloroplast one represents at least 50% of the total amount
(Stitt et al., 1982
To establish whether the reoxidation of NADPH upon illumination was due to
its use for carbon assimilation, we measured the changes of NADP concentration
during illumination under conditions where CO2 assimilation was
prevented. This was obtained by omitting bicarbonate from the reaction medium
adjusted to pH 6.0 and letting photosynthesis proceed until all available
CO2 had been consumed. At this stage, oxygen evolution was strongly
reduced (to approximately 5% of the initial value) and the compensation point
of O2 evolution and uptake by respiration was attained. After 10
more min of illumination with saturating light, the cells were analyzed for
NADP and ATP content, as above. Figure
2 shows that under CO2 limitation, the NADP
concentration decreased to the same value observed in anaerobic conditions
(Fig. 2B), whereas in the
presence of bicarbonate, this decrease was not observed
(Fig. 2A). The ATP
concentration, however, remained high in both samples. As a complementary
approach, NADP and ATP concentrations were measured in a mutant deficient in
the Rubisco enzyme (T60; Khrebtukova and
Spreitzer, 1996
To further confirm the idea that the NADPH generation rate limits
photosynthesis in C. reinhardtii under low light intensity, we have
measured the effect of low concentrations of ionophores on the light-driven
oxygen evolution at low light. We reasoned that stimulation of photosynthetic
O2 evolution would be expected if NADPH generation is really the
limiting factor, because the partial uncoupling of electron transport should
accelerate the rate of NADPH formation. This would occur via the partial
removal of the "photosynthetic control", i.e. the kinetic
inhibition exerted by the
Figure 3 shows that when this compound was added at low concentrations, a stimulation of photosynthesis was observed, together with the expected stimulation of respiration. This strongly confirms the limitation of CO2 assimilation by the rate of NADP reduction rather than by that of ATP formation in C. reinhardtii. At higher concentrations, the ionophore inhibited photosynthesis (the effect being almost complete at the concentration of 5 µM), as expected because of the drastic inhibition of ATP synthesis.
The remarkable difference existing between the results obtained in intact chloroplasts isolated from a number of vascular plants and those obtained here calls for an explanation. The differences observed might depend on the fact that in intact cells the photosynthetic metabolism occurs together with all of the other cellular activities, whereas in isolated mature chloroplasts photosynthesis, it is the only physiological process going on.
We have therefore decided to compare the observations made above for C.
reinhardtii with the changes of ATP and NADP in vascular plants. We have
estimated the level of these metabolites in intact barley leaves, either upon
dark adaptation or in steady-state photosynthesis under low or high (14 times
higher) light intensity. Figure
4 shows that illumination was accompanied by a decrease of the
NADP content (indicating an increase of the NADPH concentration), which was
essentially light independent, at variance with what observed in
Figure 1 in the case of C.
reinhardtii. An increase of the ATP/ADP ratio was also observed,
consistent with the results obtained in
Figure 1 and with previous data
from plant leaves and isolated protoplasts (e.g., see
Santarius and Heber, 1965
Thus, it appears that the situation observed in the case of plants is
somewhat intermediate between that of chloroplasts, because the same pattern
of NADPH is observed in the two systems, and that of C. reinhardtii,
because no ATP decrease is observed. We note however, that Prinsley and
coworkers (1986
To understand whether the same interaction between chloroplastic and mitochondrial metabolism might explain the finding that in C. reinhardtii, ATP is produced in excess with respect to NADPH, we have measured the efficiency of oxaloacetate to act as an electron acceptor. For this experiment, cells were illuminated in the absence of CO2 (at the CO2 compensation point, where no O2 changes are observed), and the ability of different compounds to restore O2 evolution was tested.
We found that oxaloacetate addition induced a restoration of activity,
which was approximately 25% of the maximum rate observed upon addition of
bicarbonate (Fig. 5). This
result suggests a possible contribution of mitochondrial metabolism to
photosynthetic CO2 assimilation through the malate-oxaloacetate
shuttle system, as already proposed in the case of plants. The occurrence of
such a phenomenon in the case of C. reinhardtii is consistent with
the findings of Lemaire and coworkers
(1988
By the same experimental approach, we found that the addition of ascorbate
did not restore O2 evolution but rather induced a slow
O2 uptake, indicating that ascorbate, or rather the free radical
produced by its oxidation (Miyake and
Asada, 1992
To estimate the contribution of the mitochondrial metabolism to
photosynthesis in C. reinhardtii, we have measured the effect of
oligomycin on oxygen evolution and on the ATP/ADP ratios measured at both low
and high light intensities. This compound specifically inhibits the
mitochondrial ATP synthase complex without affecting that of the chloroplasts
(Kroemer et al., 1988
This suggests that the contribution of respiration to the generation of the
ATP required to assimilate CO2 is rather limited in the case of
C. reinhardtii. This latter conclusion is also substantiated by the
comparison of the effects of oligomycin (and of the Dum-1 mutation) on the ATP
levels during illumination under anaerobic and aerobic conditions. Although
ATP synthesis takes place without consumption for CO2 fixation in
the first condition (the cells are in state 2, and no photosynthetic
O2 evolution is observed in this state;
Finazzi et al., 1999
The results presented above indicate that the photosynthetic electron transport per se is able to produce the ATP and NADPH in the ratio of more than 1.5 in C. reinhardtii. Both the ascorbate-Mehler reaction and mitochondrial metabolism seem to play a minor role in the generation of the extra ATP required to promote CO2 fixation.
Therefore, a contribution from cyclic electron flow seems to be a better
candidate, because it has been already shown to be extremely efficient in
C. reinhardtii, at least under state 2 conditions (Finazzi et al.,
1999
We have already recognized, however
(Finazzi et al., 2002
To verify this possibility, we have measured the effect of DCMU and of the
cytochrome b6f inhibitor
2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone (DBMIB) on electron
flow through the cytochrome b6f complex in the
case of cells treated as in Figure
1, i.e. incubation under dim light in a weakly agitated flask. As
a consequence of this treatment, the redox state of the PQ pool (which
controls the activation of the kinase responsible for state transitions; for
review, see Wollman, 2001
Figure 7A shows that this is
the case, because the Fm measured in algae incubated under
the same conditions of Figure 1
was actually intermediate between that of states 1 and 2. As expected, the
consequences of DCMU addition on the electron flow through cytochrome
f were also intermediate. In state 1, this compound completely
inhibited electron flow (Fig.
7B), while being without effect in state 2
(Fig. 7D), as already
established previously (Finazzi et al.,
1999
This finding can be interpreted in two ways: (a) Cyclic and linear electron transport coexist in the same chloroplast; or (b) two populations of cells are present at the same time in the experimental system, one in state 1 and the other in state 2 conditions. To discriminate between these two hypotheses, we have repeated the same measurement at lower light intensity. We reasoned that, if the rate of cyclic flow is lower than that of the linear one, then competition between the two might influence the relative fraction of the cytochrome complexes involved in cyclic flow according to the first hypothesis, but not according to the other, where no contact between the chains operating in the linear and cyclic electron flow mode is expected. The results of these experiments are reported in Figure 8 and clearly indicate that the extent of inhibition by DCMU was largely decreased at low light intensity, suggesting that cyclic and linear flow are not confined to different cell populations.
The data presented here are consistent with the well established concept of "assimilatory power" (for review, see Giersh et al., 1980
We interpret this finding as the consequence of the fact that linear and
cyclic electron flow operate at the same time in chloroplasts in C.
reinhardtii, thus contributing to the increase of the amount of ATP at
the expense of the NADPH content. The very high efficiency of cyclic flow
observed in C. reinhardtii (Figs.
7 and
8; see also
Finazzi et al., 1999
In these plants, Forti and Parisi
(1963 It appears therefore that different metabolic choices have been performed by photosynthetic organisms to achieve the correct balancing between generation of reducing equivalents and ATP, and thus maintain sufficient ATP and NADPH levels for CO2 assimilation during illumination, at variance with isolated chloroplast.
Strains and Culture Conditions
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii wild type (from strain 137 C) and T60
(devoid of Rubisco; Khrebtukova and
Spreitzer, 1996
Photosynthesis and respiration were measured as O2 exchanges in
the presence of 5 mM NaHCO3 (unless otherwise indicated)
using a Clark-type electrode (Radiometer, Copenhagen) in a homemade cell, at
25°C. Illumination was provided by a halogen lamp, which was filtered
through a heat filter. Light intensity was adjusted, as needed, by neutral
density filters. Fluorescence emission was measured in the same cell employed
to measure oxygen exchanges using a PAM fluorimeter (Walz, Effeltrich,
Germany). For measurements, algae were resuspended at 120 to 150 µg Chl
mL1. Fluorescence induction kinetics were
measured in a homemade apparatus, where emission was excited at 590 nm, and
were measured in the near infrared region. Chl concentration was determined by
measuring the A680 of the cell culture in a
spectrophotometer equipped with a scatter attachment, on the basis of a
calibration curve constructed after extraction of the Chl with 80% (w/v)
acetone (Finazzi et al.,
1999
An aliquot of the cell suspension used to measure oxygen exchanges and
fluorescence emission was used to measure ATP and ADP in trichloroacetic acid
extracts as previously described (Finazzi
et al., 1999 NADP and NADPH were measured at pH 8.0 by enzymatic cycling, using Glc-6-phosphate as the electron donor and 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol as the acceptor in the presence of Glc-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and ferredoxin-NADP reductase used here as an NADPH-specific diaphorase. The rate of 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol reduction was measured in a dual wavelength spectrophotometer, as the absorbance change at 605500 nm. A calibration was done in each sample upon addition of a known amount of NADP.
Pure ferredoxin-NADP reductase was prepared as previously described
(Forti, 1971
Algae were resuspended in a minimal medium, with the addition of 20% (w/v)
Ficoll to prevent cell sedimentation. Chl concentration was approximately 70
µg Chl mL1. Spectroscopic measurements were
performed at room temperature, using a homemade spectrophotometer
(Joliot et al., 1981
We gratefully acknowledge the skillful technical assistance of Sandro Zangrossi. Received December 9, 2002; returned for revision January 15, 2003; accepted January 28, 2003.
Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.102.018861.
1 This work was supported by the Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche of
Italy.
2 Present address: Unité Propre de Recherche 1261 Centre National de
la Recherche Scientifique, 13 rue Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris, France. * Corresponding author; e-mail Giorgio.Forti{at}unimi.it; fax 390250314813.
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