Plant Physiol. Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
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Plant Physiology 73:268-272 (1983)
© 1983 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Articles

Carbonic Anhydrase-Deficient Mutant of Chlamydomonas reinhardii Requires Elevated Carbon Dioxide Concentration for Photoautotrophic Growth 1

Martin H. Spalding2, Robert J. Spreitzer3 and William L. Ogren

Department of Agronomy, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois 61801, United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Urbana, Illinois 61801

A mendelian mutant of the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardii has been isolated which is deficient in carbonic anhydrase (EC 4.2.1.1) activity. This mutant strain, designated ca-1-12-1C (gene locus ca-1), was selected on the basis of a high CO2 requirement for photoautotrophic growth. Photosynthesis by the mutant at atmospheric CO2 concentration was very much reduced compared to wild type and, unlike wild type, was strongly inhibited by O2. In contrast to a CO2 compensation concentration of near zero in wild type at all O2 concentrations examined, the mutant exhibited a high, O2-stimulated CO2 compensation concentration. Evidence of photorespiratory activity in the mutant but not in wild type was obtained from the analysis of photosynthetic products in the presence of 14CO2. At air levels of CO2 and O2, the mutant synthesized large amounts of glycolate, while little glycolate was synthesized by wild type under identical conditions. Both mutant and wild type strains formed only small amounts of glycolate at saturating CO2 concentration. At ambient CO2, wild type accumulated inorganic carbon to a concentration several-fold higher than that in the suspension medium. The mutant cells accumulated inorganic carbon internally to a concentration 6-fold greater than found in wild type, yet photosynthesis was CO2 limited. The mutant phenotype was mimicked by wild type cells treated with ethoxyzolamide, an inhibitor of carbonic anhydrase activity. These observations indicate a requirement for carbonic anhydrase-catalyzed dehydration of bicarbonate in maintaining high internal CO2 concentrations and high photosynthesis rates. Thus, in wild type cells, carbonic anhydrase rapidly converts the bicarbonate taken up to CO2, creating a high internal CO2 concentration which stimulates photosynthesis and suppresses photorespiration. In mutant cells, bicarbonate is taken up rapidly but, because of a carbonic anhydrase deficiency, is not dehydrated at a rate sufficiently rapid to maintain a high internal CO2 concentration.


2 Present address: MSU/DOE Plant Research Laboratory, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824.

3 Present address: Département de Biologie Moléculaire, Université de Genève, CH-1211 Genève 4, Switzerland.

1 Supported in part by a Rockefeller Foundation postdoctoral fellowship to R. J. S.




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