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Plant Physiol, January 2001, Vol. 125, pp. 46-49
What Does It Take to Be C4? Lessons from the
Evolution of C4 Photosynthesis
Gerald E.
Edwards,
Robert T.
Furbank,
Marshall D.
Hatch, and
C. Barry
Osmond*
School of Biological Sciences, Washington State University,
Pullman, Washington 99164-4236 (G.E.E.); Division of Plant Industry,
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization, Box 1600, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory 2601, Australia (R.T.F.,
M.D.H.); and Photobioenergetics Group, Research School of Biological
Sciences, Australian National University, Box 3252, Weston Creek,
Australian Capital Territory 2611, Australia (C.B.O.)
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INTRODUCTION |
Twenty-five years ago research had
already established a firm biochemical and physiological understanding
of the CO2-concentrating mechanism that creates a
high CO2 environment (1,000-3,000 µbar) in
bundle-sheath cells in leaves of C4 plants and
accounts for most of their distinctive photosynthetic properties (5).
It was then clear that the minimum requirements for this
CO2 concentrating mechanism included: (a)
cell-specific amplification of enzymes of C4
photosynthesis (i.e. phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase
[PEPC] in mesophyll, and C4 acid decarboxylases
and Rubisco in bundle-sheath cells), with complementary adjustments of
photosystem and electron transport activities; (b) novel cell-specific
organelle metabolite translocators; (c) symplastic connections of the
spatially separated sources and sinks of 4C-dicarboxylic acid transport
metabolites; and (d) barriers to CO2 diffusion
between the site of CO2 fixation by PEPCase in
mesophyll cells and sites of CO2 release and
refixation by Rubisco in bundle-sheath cells.
These requirements have been met in a great variety of ways during the
evolution of C4 plants, through diverse
cooperative pathways of carbon metabolism and integrated photoreactions
in adjacent, differentiated photosynthetic cells. Perhaps the most simple, highly evolved system is that in Sorghum (detailed
in the legend of Fig. 1), but it is in
the diversity of other systems that we can expect to discover clues as
to what it takes to be C4.

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Figure 1.
Confocal microscope image of chlorophyll
auto-fluorescence from mesophyll and bundle-sheath cells in
Sorghum bicolor. Mesophyll cell chloroplasts (outer rows,
left) that have a stroma devoid of Rubisco and thylakoids with high
activity of both photosystems show strong fluorescence from photosystem
II in grana (bottom chloroplasts, right). Adjacent bundle-sheath cells
that contain larger chloroplasts (inner rows, left) with Rubisco
replete stroma, but photosystem II-deficient thylakoids, lack grana and
show diffuse fluorescence from photosystem I alone (top chloroplasts,
right). Non-cyclic electron transport in mesophyll chloroplasts
sustains PEP synthesis, the substrate for initial
CO2 fixation by PEPCase in the mesophyll cell
cytosol, and the reduction of its product to malic acid (5). Symplastic
metabolite exchange between the two cell layers delivers malic acid for
decarboxylation by NADP-ME, generating high CO2
concentrations that minimize the oxygenase activity of Rubisco. This
decarboxylase also generates one-half the reductant needed by 3-PGA,
compensating for the photosystem I deficiency in bundle-sheath
chloroplasts (the remainder of the 3-PGA is returned for reduction in
mesophyll chloroplasts). Distinctive mesophyll chloroplast
translocators for pyruvate, PEP, and 3-PGA (3) are critical components
of cooperative C4 photosynthesis.
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INSIGHTS IN c4 PHOTOSYNTHESIS HAVE TRADITIONALLY ARISEN
FROM CLOSE WORKING RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN TAXONOMISTS, ANATOMISTS,
ECOPHYSIOLOGISTS, BIOCHEMISTS, AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGISTS |
Phylogenetic analysis confirms the multiple origins of the diverse
C4 pathways (Kellogg in 12), all of which share
PEPCase as the primary carboxylase, but which engage diverse
decarboxylases to regenerate CO2 for Rubisco in
various structural arrangements of mesophyll and bundle-sheath cells.
Leaf and cotyledon anatomies and organelle arrangements are especially
diverse in C4 members of the Chenopodiaceae,
revealed recently following better access to the organisms and research
expertise from Central Asia (19). The paradigm of spatial separation of
PEPCase and Rubisco in different cells has been challenged by recent
findings concerning Borszczowia (4), which has a
13C value of 13.1% (more typical of
C4 plants) and differentiated chloroplasts at the
poles of radially arranged single large cells. We know little of the
efficiency of the CO2-concentrating mechanism in
diverse natural variants of C4 photosynthesis,
but rely instead on the interpretation of stable isotope data and the
use of models to detect leakiness (16).
Although some wild plants such as Flaveria and
Eleocharis have been amenable to molecular genetic analysis
(2), most progress has been made with maize and Amaranthus
sp. These advances can be followed in a collection of research reports
(17), in specialist reviews (3, 14), and in a book that comprehensively
integrates C4 plant biology from the molecule to
the biosphere (12). We will highlight them here by citations from then
and now.
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EVOLUTION OF DIVERSE C4 PHOTOSYNTHETIC PATHWAYS
REFLECTS EVOLUTIONARY OUTCOMES IN THE FACE OF ONE DOMINANT SELECTIVE
PRESSURE, THE DECLINING CO2, AND HIGH O2
CONCENTRATIONS IN THE ATMOSPHERE THROUGHOUT THE TERTIARY |
It is believed that the C4 pathway has
probably existed at low abundance for much of the past 12 to 13 million
years, since the time of the fossil grass Tomlinsonia, which
has Kranz anatomy and a 13C value of 13.7%
(Cerling in 12). Much 13C evidence from many
indirect sources (soil carbonates deposited about grass roots, tooth
enamel of herbivores, etc.) dates the explosion of
C4 plant biomass at some six to eight million
years ago when atmospheric CO2 concentrations
fell to about 200 µbar in air with 20 mbar O2.
Under these conditions the catalytic shortcomings of Rubisco favor the
oxygenation of RuBP and energetically wasteful photorespiratory carbon
recycling in the photorespiratory carbon oxidation (PCO) and
photosynthetic carbon reduction (PCR) cycles. This so-called Rubisco
penalty increases the energy cost of C3 photosynthesis beyond the cost of the CO2
concentrating mechanisms that evolved in C4
photosynthesis. Thus C4 plants gained a
competitive edge during the low CO2 atmospheres
and warmer periods of the Palaeozoic (Sage in 12). The subsequent
evolutionary success of C4 photosynthesis was due
to their improved water use efficiency and nutrient use efficiency, as
well as their high photosynthetic capacity at higher temperature, all
of which follow from Rubisco function in bundle-sheath cells served by
a CO2-concentrating mechanism. The productivity
of C4 crops today also stems from their longer
growth cycles in the tropics, and their success as weeds owes much to
their aggressive reproductive strategies.
Although a plausible series of evolutionary steps through different
C3-C4 intermediates has
been proposed (11), the significance of these plants remains
controversial. All extant C4 plants use a 4C
acid-decarboxylase-based CO2-concentrating
mechanism in bundle-sheath cells, but the partial
C4 cycle in some
C3-C4 intermediates does not seem to contribute to a CO2-concentrating
mechanism (Monson in 12). Other
C3-C4 intermediates show
higher Gly decarboxylase in bundle-sheath mitochondria and lower
CO2 compensation points (11), but it seems
unlikely that relocation of the photorespiratory CO2 evolving apparatus into bundle-sheath cells
could be a prelude to development of a
CO2-concentrating mechanism to inhibit
photorespiration. Some ask if Moricandia is a failed
experiment (Kellogg in 12), and others suggest reversions from
C4 to the C3 pathway in
Salsola (10).
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DIFFERENTIATION OF COOPERATIVE PHOTOSYNTHETIC PROCESSES IN ADJACENT
CELLS OF C4 PLANTS DEPENDS ON DIVERSE TRANSCRIPTIONAL,
POSTTRANSCRIPTIONAL, AND TRANSLATIONAL PROCESSES, AND SOMEHOW ON
POSITION |
Relatively small changes in gene regulation may be required for
the assembly of the catalytic systems of C4
photosynthesis. Advances in our understanding of the regulated
expression of identical genomes (20) in nuclei and chloroplasts of
adjacent cells have been summarized by Sheen (13): "...
pre-existing genes were recruited for the C4
pathway after acquiring potent and surprisingly diverse regulatory elements... consisting of synergistic and
combinatorial enhancers and silencers, the use of 5' and 3'
untranslated regions for transcriptional and post-transcriptional
regulations, and the function of novel transcription factors." One
plausible overview (Monson in 12) suggests that
C4 biochemical profiles may arise from genes for
anaplerotic or housekeeping functions in C3
metabolism through up- and down-regulation of activities by cis-acting
promoters. Specific catalytic functions in C4
photosynthesis may emerge through gene duplication, and differential
expression in adjacent cells may be dominated by 3'-promoter
sequences and posttranscriptional events.
The molecular evolution of PEPCase and the control of its expression is
reasonably well understood (Westhoff et al. in 17). Bläsing et
al. (1) recently used site-directed mutagenesis to confirm the identity
of two interacting regions that confer the distinctive kinetic
properties of C4 PEPCase in Flaveria.
Much less is known of the evolution of distinctive decarboxylation systems in bundle-sheath cells of different C4
plants or of the lower specificity factor of C4
Rubisco. Single decarboxylase systems such as NADP-ME in
Sorghum (Fig. 1) may be less common than multiple pathways
involving NAD-malic enzyme (ME)/PEP-carboykinase type, as well as
NAD-ME/NADP-ME and NADP-ME/PEP-carboxykinase type (e.g. Walker et al.
in 17). Diversity in decarboxylation types is matched by diversity of
photosystem II/photosystem I ratios in mesophyll and bundle-sheath
cells (9) that accommodates the varied energy demands of the
CO2 concentrating mechanism.
Accepting that "C4 genes are independently
regulated by multiple control mechanisms in response to developmental,
environmental and metabolic signals" (Berry et al. in 17), two large
questions remain far from resolution. First, the paramount importance
of positional information in relation to vascular development is clear
(6), but the positional signals that guide differentiation of
complementary cell types remain elusive (Dengler and Nelson in 12).
Second, the importance of environmental signals in cell-specific expression of key genes has been recognized, but the effects of light,
for example, in different species are as different as day and night
(required in Zea, but not in Amaranthus; 13).
Regulatory signals such as inter-photosystem redox status clearly
produce differential responses in different gene expression systems in different species. It may be sometime before gene regulation can be
reduced to suites of "... unique or universal mechanisms
underlying cell-type specificity, coordinate nuclear-chloroplast
actions, hormonal, metabolic, stress and light responses" (13).
Environmental responsiveness is most obvious in the
submersed-to-emergent transition from C3 to
C4 photosynthesis in culms of
Eleocharis in which C4 metabolism can
be induced by abscisic acid while submerged (15), illustrating the
importance of simultaneous evaluation of genotypic and environmental
diversity. The organ-specific control of photosynthetic pathways such
as C3 metabolism in the cotyledons of
C4 Chenopodiaceae (19) suggests that genotypic
variation and environmental-selective pressures have explored most
of the conceivable options in C4 metabolism.
In the meantime, notions that crop yields can be improved through
greater photosynthetic capacity and that C4
metabolism alone may boost yield of C3 crops
continue to stimulate creative research. Such projects are exposing the
consequences of introducing C4 photosynthetic
traits into C3 plants, but evidence of functional C4 metabolism has yet to be published.
Achievement of high levels of expression of C4
enzymes in Oryza (8) suggests that trans-acting factors
present in rice recognize C4 genomic clones, and
that mechanisms for up-regulation of "housekeeping genes" such as
Ppc and Pdk still exist in
C3 plants. The discovery that the over expression
of Zea NADP-ME in rice chloroplasts is accompanied by
reduction in photosystem II activity and reduced granal stacking (14)
opens astonishing possibilities for research into coregulation of
unrelated genes.
As emphasized in the beginning, getting the enzymes in the right place
is a first step, but we know next to nothing about regulatory
interactions that determine assimilatory flux in
C4 plants. Anti-sense experiments with
C4 Flaveria show that in spite of the
CO2 concentrating mechanism, Rubisco remains the
major determinant of carbon flux at high light and moderate temperature in C4 plants (18), with PEPCase and
pyruvate-orthophosphate dikinase showing lower control
coefficients. The complex regulatory cascades of many
C4 enzymes may be exercised more commonly as
light-dark switches than as flux control systems during photosynthetic
CO2 fixation. We still lack understanding of what
it takes to be C4 in anything but the most
general terms, and building functional C4 traits
into C3 plants remains an immense challenge,
especially in terms of the structural components.
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RECREATION OF CRETACEOUS CO2 CONCENTRATIONS IN
BUNDLE-SHEATH CELLS THROUGH DIVERSE C4 PATHWAYS IN 8,000 TO
10,000 SPECIES IN 31 ANGIOSPERM FAMILIES HAS BEEN A SIGNAL, BUT PERHAPS
TRANSIENT, EVENT IN PHOTOSYNTHETIC EVOLUTION |
There have been well-defined advances and contractions in the
distribution of C4 plants during the last full
Glacial, 20,000 to 30,000 years ago (Cerling in 12). Another
contraction of C4 plants may begin in the
lifetime of our grandchildren perhaps in the time it may take to
transfer C4 traits effectively into C3 crops and to see them accepted by consumers.
It is obvious that the low atmospheric CO2
concentration that was the major selective pressure favoring
C4 photosynthesis is vanishing, in an instant as
it were, on geological time scales. The industrial revolution is
returning several billion years of fossil photosynthesis to the
atmosphere as CO2 in the course of a few hundred
years. Doubling of atmospheric CO2 concentration,
confidently expected to occur in the second one-half of the 21st
century, may itself mitigate the Rubisco penalty in many
C3 plants in many habitats (except perhaps where
accompanied by higher temperatures and drought), with little impact on
assimilation or growth of C4 plants (7). This
global experiment will certainly test our assumptions as to what it
means to be C4, and what value
C4 Oryza then? Quo vadis, C4?
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
The authors thank Hans Heldt and Peter Westhoff for advice
during the preparation of the manuscript.
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FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author; e-mail osmond{at}rsbs.anu.edu.au; fax
61-2-6287-4241.
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