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First published online August 6, 2008; 10.1104/pp.108.122622 Plant Physiology 148:786-795 (2008) © 2008 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
Peroxisomal Malate Dehydrogenase Is Not Essential for Photorespiration in Arabidopsis But Its Absence Causes an Increase in the Stoichiometry of Photorespiratory CO2 Release1,[W],[OA]School of Biological Sciences, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington 99164–4236 (A.B.C.); Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence in Plant Energy Biology, Molecular Plant Physiology Group, Research School of Biological Sciences, Australian National University, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory 2601, Australia (A.B.C., M.R.B.); and Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence in Plant Energy Biology and Centre of Excellence for Plant Metabolomics, University of Western Australia, Crawley, Western Australia 6009, Australia (I.P., W.Z., S.M.S.)
Peroxisomes are important for recycling carbon and nitrogen that would otherwise be lost during photorespiration. The reduction of hydroxypyruvate to glycerate catalyzed by hydroxypyruvate reductase (HPR) in the peroxisomes is thought to be facilitated by the production of NADH by peroxisomal malate dehydrogenase (PMDH). PMDH, which is encoded by two genes in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), reduces NAD+ to NADH via the oxidation of malate supplied from the cytoplasm to oxaloacetate. A double mutant lacking the expression of both PMDH genes was viable in air and had rates of photosynthesis only slightly lower than in the wild type. This is in contrast to other photorespiratory mutants, which have severely reduced rates of photosynthesis and require high CO2 to grow. The pmdh mutant had a higher O2-dependent CO2 compensation point than the wild type, implying that either Rubisco specificity had changed or that the rate of CO2 released per Rubisco oxygenation was increased in the pmdh plants. Rates of gross O2 evolution and uptake were similar in the pmdh and wild-type plants, indicating that chloroplast linear electron transport and photorespiratory O2 uptake were similar between genotypes. The CO2 postillumination burst and the rate of CO2 released during photorespiration were both greater in the pmdh mutant compared with the wild type, suggesting that the ratio of photorespiratory CO2 release to Rubisco oxygenation was altered in the pmdh mutant. Without PMDH in the peroxisome, the CO2 released per Rubisco oxygenation reaction can be increased by over 50%. In summary, PMDH is essential for maintaining optimal rates of photorespiration in air; however, in its absence, significant rates of photorespiration are still possible, indicating that there are additional mechanisms for supplying reductant to the peroxisomal HPR reaction or that the HPR reaction is altogether circumvented.
The oxygenation of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate by Rubisco initiates the photorespiratory metabolic pathway (Badger, 1985
The recycling of carbon by the photorespiratory pathway involves at least 11 enzymatic steps that occur in three leaf organelles (chloroplast, mitochondria, and peroxisomes; Reumann and Weber, 2006
Mutants of the photorespiratory cycle have provided much to the understanding of this biochemical pathway (Somerville and Ogren, 1982
However, some subtle mutations in photorespiration do exist; an example of this is peroxisomal HPR, in which a mutant in barley (Hordeum vulgare) was selected by screening plants that grew poorly in air. The HPR mutant showed reduced levels of the NADH-dependent peroxisomal HPR activity, but rates of photosynthesis were only reduced by 25% compared with wild-type plants when measured under ambient CO2 concentrations (Murray et al., 1989
Perturbing the flow of carbon through an alternative photorespiratory pathway has important implications for CO2 efflux following the Rubisco oxygenation reaction. Evidence strongly indicates that the photorespiratory pathway releases 1 mol of CO2 for every 2 mol of 2-PG entering the cycle during the conversion of Gly to Ser (Farquhar et al., 1980
The role of PMDH and the HPR reaction are unclear in photorespiration. In Arabidopsis, two PMDH genes have been identified and inactivated either individually or together (Pracharoenwattana et al., 2007
CO2 Assimilation Rate, Growth Analysis, and Leaf Characteristics
Rates of net CO2 assimilation measured at approximately air CO2 concentrations (373 µbar) in both the wild-type and pmdh1 plants were significantly higher than in the pmdh2 and double pmdh1pmdh2 lines (Table I
). However, when rates of net CO2 assimilation were measured at elevated CO2 (1,515 µbar), there was no significant difference between the lines (Table I). Stomatal conductance was similar in all genotypes except for the pmdh2 lines, which had lower stomatal conductance values then the other lines under both measurement conditions (Table I). The CO2 compensation point (
The pmdh1pmdh2 lines grew more slowly in air (as would be expected), as indicated by plant size, and growth analyses showed that growth rate on a leaf area basis was 30% to 40% less than in the wild type (Table II ). However, under elevated atmospheric CO2 concentrations (2.8 mbar), the growth rates of the wild-type and pmdh1pmdh2 lines were not significantly different (Table II). The growth analysis measurements were conducted during the first 31 d after germination, before the plants were too big for the imaging system. Additionally, there were no significant differences in Rubisco content (µmol site m–2), total leaf nitrogen per area (mmol m–2), and leaf mass per area (g m–2) in the wild-type and pmdh1pmdh2 lines grown under elevated atmospheric CO2 (Table II).
The in Response to Oxygen Concentrations
The
O2 Exchange and Rubisco Reactions at the ![]()
The rates of 16O2 evolution, 18O2 uptake, and net CO2 exchange were also measured with the leaf discs in a closed system attached to the mass spectrometer (Fig. 1). The rates of CO2 exchange and 18O2 uptake in the dark were similar between the wild-type and pmdh1pmdh2 plants in response to changing oxygen levels (data not shown). Additionally, measurements of 16O2 evolution and 18O2 uptake at the compensation point, where net CO2 exchange is zero, were similar in the wild-type and pmdh1pmdh2 plants at both 10% and 20% oxygen (Fig. 3, A and B
). However, 16O2 evolution and 18O2 uptake were significantly lower in the pmdh1pmdh2 plants compared with the wild-type plants at the highest oxygen levels (40%; Fig. 3, A and B). The rates of Rubisco oxygenation (vo) and carboxylation (vc) reactions at the
Postillumination Burst and Photorespiratory Release of CO2 The postillumination burst (PIB), determined by turning off the light and monitoring the rapid efflux of 12CO2 in the dark after an initial 10-min period in the light, was significantly higher in the pmdh1pmdh2 plants compared with the wild-type plants at 20% and higher oxygen levels (Fig. 4A ). The values of PIB measured at low oxygen (10%) were similar in the wild-type and pmdh1pmdh2 plants (Fig. 4A). The photorespiratory release of CO2 was determined by injection of CO2 enriched in 13C into the leaf chamber to saturate the rates of the Rubisco carboxylation reaction in the light and subsequently monitoring the rates of photorespiratory 12CO2 release. The release was greater in the pmdh1pmdh2 plants compared with the wild-type plants at 20% and higher oxygen levels but not at 10% oxygen (Fig. 4B). The ratio of PIB to the rate of vo as well as the ratio of photorespiratory CO2 release to vo were higher in the pmdh1pmdh2 plants compared with the wild-type plants at 20% and 40% oxygen but not at 10% oxygen (Fig. 4, C and D).
Metabolite Analysis
Leaf discs were harvested after 10 min at the
The Role of PMDH It is apparent that PMDH activity is not essential for photosynthesis in air in Arabidopsis. However, it is necessary for optimal rates of photosynthesis and growth in air (Tables I and II). The explanation for how the photorespiratory pathway functions without PMDH activity in air may lie in two areas: first, the potential sources of reductant for the HPR reaction; second, the ability of hydroxypyruvate to be processed by alternative reactions either in the peroxisome or the cytosol.
It is widely accepted that the PMDH provides reductant in the form of NADH to facilitate the reduction of hydroxypyruvate by HPR (Reumann and Weber, 2006
Previous studies of a barley HPR mutant (Murray et al., 1989
Growth and Leaf Analysis As in other photorespiratory mutants, the growth rates at high CO2 were similar between the wild-type and pmdh1pmdh2 plants (Table II). Additionally, the amount of Rubisco, the leaf mass per area, and the total leaf nitrogen were similar in wild-type and pmdh1pmdh2 plants grown under elevated CO2 (Table II). These similarities between wild-type and pmdh1pmdh2 plants under high CO2 growth conditions are important because they indicate that the differences in photosynthetic and photorespiratory parameters in air between the genotypes are based on metabolic differences during the measurement conditions and are not due to prior growth conditions. This is particularly important with regard to Rubisco content, as will be further discussed below.
The
In addition to the above parameters, values of
During photorespiration, 1 mol of 2-PG is assumed to release 0.5 mol of CO2 during the conversion of Gly to Ser; therefore, the value of
The rates of O2 uptake and evolution, measured at the
We used two techniques to investigate the relationship of the ratio of photorespiratory CO2 released per oxygenation reaction. In the first method, we monitored the PIB of CO2 in the dark from the leaf tissue after measuring O2 and CO2 exchange at the
Additionally, the export of Ser and/or Gly via the vascular system (Madore and Grodzinski, 1984
The second method of estimating the release of CO2 during photorespiration was to take advantage of the mass spectrometer's ability to measure CO2 isotopologues, 12CO2 and 13CO2, simultaneously. After the rates of O2 and 12CO2 exchange were measured at the
Both the PIB and 13CO2 techniques show that the rates of photorespiratory release of CO2 were greater in the pmdh1pmdh2 plants compared with the wild-type plants (Fig. 4, A and B). This indicates that either the pmdh1pmdh2 plants had greater rates of photorespiration or that the amount of CO2 released per oxygenation reaction was greater compared with that in the wild-type plants. At 20% oxygen, the measured rates of vo were similar in both genotypes (Fig. 3C), and the ratio of photorespiratory CO2 release per Rubisco oxygenation reaction in the pmdh1pmdh2 plants was higher compared with the wild-type plants using both methods of determining photorespiratory CO2 (Fig. 4, C and D). This supports the predicted higher
Overall, the metabolite analysis did not provide any evidence for major perturbation of photorespiratory metabolism (Supplemental Table S1). The small increases in Gly and Ser are consistent with a block downstream at the PMDH step, while decreases in Gln and Asp are consistent with less efficient ammonia reassimilation. It is intriguing 2-ketoglutaric acid and isocitrate increased, by 3.6- and 7.5-fold, respectively, in the pmdh1pmdh2 plants compared with the wild-type plants (Supplemental Table S1). This may suggest that the altered consumption of reductant (NADH) in the peroxisomes due to the lack of PMDH caused the NADH/NAD ratio in the mitochondria to increase. An increase in mitochondrial NADH/NAD has been demonstrated to inhibit the NAD-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase (Igamberdiev and Gardestrom, 2003
The data reported here with the pmdh1pmdh2 mutant clearly show that some restrictions to the photorespiratory pathway can lead to changes in the pathway of carbon and photorespiratory CO2 release. Indeed, the results here represent the most dramatic demonstration of this reported in the literature. Studies on various photorespiratory mutants have not consistently agreed on the way that potential CO2 release steps may be altered. Studies with a barley mutant deficient in Ser:glyoxylate aminotransferase demonstrated significantly elevated release of labeled CO2 from exogenously supplied glyoxylate (Murray et al., 1987
Based on previous studies, the most obvious explanation for an increased CO2 release stoichiometry would be an alternative oxidative decarboxylation of accumulating pools of glyxoylate and hydroxypyruvate through their nonenzymatic interactions with H2O2 to produce formate and glycolate, respectively, plus CO2 (Halliwel, 1974
The peroxisomal NAD+-malate dehydrogenase 2 (pmdh2) appears to play a more prominent role than the peroxisomal NAD+-malate dehydrogenase 1 (pmdh1) during photorespiration. Rates of photosynthesis in air were reduced in the double pmdh1pmdh2 mutant, but by only 30%. The rates of gross O2 evolution and uptake were similar in pmdh1pmdh2 and wild-type plants, indicating that chloroplast linear electron transport and photorespiratory O2 uptake by Rubisco were similar between genotypes. The CO2 PIB and the rate of CO2 released during photorespiration were both greater in the pmdh1pmdh2 mutant compared with the wild-type plants, suggesting that the ratio of photorespiratory CO2 release to Rubisco oxygenation was altered in the mutant. In summary, PMDH is essential for maintaining optimal rates of photorespiration in air; however, in its absence, significant rates of photorespiration are still possible, indicating that there are additional mechanisms for supplying reductant to the peroxisomal HPR reaction or that the HPR reaction is altogether circumvented.
Growth Conditions Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) seeds were surface sterilized, stratified, and allowed to imbibe on wet filter paper. Seeds were germinated on half-strength Murashige and Skoog medium with 1% (w/v) Suc and then transferred to potting soil (Debco seedling raising mix). For the gas-exchange measurements and the high-CO2 growth analysis, plants were grown under 2.8 mbar of CO2 in a controlled-environment growth cabinet at an irradiance of 200 µmol quanta m–2 s–1 at plant height, and air temperature of 25°C during the day and 15°C at night, with a daylength of 14 h. Wild-type and pmdh1pmdh2 plants used for the growth analysis under ambient CO2 concentrations were grown during the southern hemisphere's autumn month of May in a glasshouse under natural light conditions (25°C day and 15°C night temperatures). For all plants, 0.9-L pots were used, and the potting soil was mixed with 2.4 to 4 g Osmocote/L soil (15:4.8:10.8:1.2 nitrogen:phosphorus:potassium:magnesium + trace elements: boron, copper, iron, manganese, molybdenum, and zinc; Scotts Australia) and watered daily.
Measurements of Net CO2 Assimilation Rates
Mass Spectrometric Measurements
Growth analyses were done on a leaf area expansion basis by nondestructively measuring the displayed leaf area of individual plants at time intervals. Total leaf area (including petioles) was measured by imaging the chlorophyll fluorescence (CF Imager; Technologica) and using the leaf area function available for total fluorescent pixels of each plant. The area was calibrated against a known image standard. Leaf area expansion rates are calculated from the slope of ln(area) versus time in units of cm2 cm–2 d–1, and means and SE values are reported for four to five separate plants imaged over a 7- to 10-d time course during the exponential growth phase of each seedling. Imaging commenced at approximately 22 d after sowing.
Plant tissues (10–30 mg) were snap frozen and pulverized in liquid nitrogen. The enzymes in the tissue were inactivated by heating at 70°C for 15 min in 500 µL of extraction solution (methanol:water = 20:3, with adipic acid as internal standard). Cells debris was removed by centrifugation. For each sample, 60 µL of supernatant was transferred to a new tube and dried using a SpeedVac. The residue was dissolved in 20 µL of pyridine with methoxylamine hydrochloride (20 mg mL–1) and incubated at 30°C for 90 min with shaking. Metabolites were converted to tert-butyldimethylsilyl derivatives by reacting at 70°C for 30 min with 30 µL of N-methyl-N-[tert-butyldimethylsilyl]trifluoroacetimide plus 1% tert-butyldimetheylchlorosilane. The metabolite derivatives were analyzed by GC-MS (Agilent 6890 gas chromatograph coupled with a 5973N mass selective detector). GC-MS data were processed by AMDIS. Metabolite derivatives were identified by comparison of the retention time and mass spectra of authentic standards, and the amount of metabolites was calculated by total ion current signal of each metabolite peak normalized to the internal standard and tissue weight.
The content of Rubisco catalytic sites was measured by stoichiometric binding of [14C]carboxy-arabinitol-P2, and its carbamylation status was measured by exchanging [14C]carboxy-arabinitol-P2 loosely bound at uncarbamylated sites with an excess of unlabeled C-carboxy-arabinitol-P2 (Ruuska et al., 1998
The calculations used were described previously (Ruuska et al., 2000
If the whole chain electron transport results in NADPH production for photosynthesis and photorespiration, then vc can be calculated as:
ANOVA was conducted using Student's t test in Statistica (version 6.0; StatSoft). Tukey's LSD test was used for post hoc comparisons.
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
We thank Dave Zeelenberg for running the metabolite analysis and Steve Clayton for total nitrogen analysis. Additionally, A.B.C. thanks Susanne von Caemmerer for many helpful discussions. Received May 7, 2008; accepted July 26, 2008; published August 6, 2008.
1 This work was supported by the Australian Research Council (grant nos. FF0457721 and CE0561495) and the Centres of Excellence Program of the Government of Western Australia. The author responsible for distribution of materials integral to the findings presented in this article in accordance with the policy described in the Instructions for Authors (www.plantphysiol.org) is: Steven M. Smith (ssmith{at}cyllene.uwa.edu.au).
[W] The online version of this article contains Web-only data.
[OA] Open Access articles can be viewed online without a subscription. www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.108.122622 * Corresponding author; e-mail acousins{at}wsu.edu.
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