Plant Physiol.
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Plant Physiology 60:230-234 (1977)
© 1977 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Articles

Steady-State Photosynthesis in Alfalfa Leaflets

Effects of Carbon Dioxide Concentration 1

Steven G. Platt2, Zvi Plaut3 and James A. Bassham

a Laboratory of Chemical Biodynamics, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720

When the CO2 concentration to which Medicago sativa L. var. El Unico leaflets were exposed was increased from half-saturation to saturation (doubled rate of photosynthesis), glycolate and glycine production apparently decreased due to inhibition of a portion of the glycolate pathway. Serine and glycerate production was not inhibited. We conclude that serine and glycerate were made from 3-phosphoglycerate and not from glycolate and that the conversion of glycine to serine may not be the major source of photorespiratory CO2 in alfalfa. In investigations of glycolate and photorespiratory metabolism, separate labeling data should be obtained for glycine and serine as those two amino acids may be produced from different precursors and respond differently to environmental perturbations. The increased photosynthetic rate (at saturating CO2) resulted in greater labeling of both soluble and insoluble products. Sucrose labeling increased sharply, but there was no major shift of tracer carbon flow into sucrose relative to other metabolites. The flow of carbon from the reductive pentose phosphate cycle into the production of tricarboxylic acid cycle intermediates and amino acids increased. Only small absolute increases occurred in steady-state pool sizes of metabolites of the reductive pentose phosphate cycle at elevated CO2, providing further evidence that the cycle is well regulated.


2 To whom requests for reprints should be addressed. Present address: Western Regional Research Center, A.R.S., U.S.D.A., Berkeley, Calif. 94710.

3 Present address: Agricultural Research Organization, Bet-Dagan, Israel.

1 This work was supported in part by the United States Energy Research and Development Administration, and in part by the Western Regional Research Center of the United States Department of Agriculture.







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ASPB Publications PLANT PHYSIOLOGY THE PLANT CELL
Copyright © 1977 by the American Society of Plant Biologists