Physiological aspects of a high-co2 requiring mutant and the high-co2 growing cells of the cyanobacteriumSynechococcus pcc7942

被引:2
|
作者
Wu Tian-fu
Song Li-rong
Liu Yong-ding
机构
[1] Chinese academy of Sciences,Institute of Hydrobiology
来源
Chinese Journal of Oceanology and Limnology | 1998年 / 16卷 / Suppl 1期
关键词
high-CO; requiring mutant; high-CO; growing cells; photosynthetic affinity; CA activity; chlorophyll fluorescence quenching; Ci uptake; inorganic carbon pool;
D O I
10.1007/BF02849091
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
A new chemically mutagenic mutant ofSynechococcus PCC7942 named high-CO2 requiring mutant, which could grow at 4% CO2 but could not grow at air levels of CO2, was isolated. Comparative studies on some physiological aspects of the mutant and high-CO2 growing cells (growing at 4% CO2) were conducted. The result showed that the mutant had lower growing rate, about 1/40th photosynthetic affinity to inorganic carbon, 25% lower carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity, lower quenching rate of chlorophyll fluorescence, and about 1/2 alkalinization rate of the medium. The CA activity responses of the two types of cells to different concentration of CO2 were determined. Upon the addition, of inorganic carbon (Ci), the rate of active Ci uptake described by the rate of chlorophyll fluorescence quenching of the mutant was obviously lower compared with that of the high-CO2 growing cells; the size of the internal inorganic carbon pool size detemined by the extent of fluorescence quenching of the mutant was also smaller.
引用
收藏
页码:133 / 139
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Response to Comment on "Phytoplankton Calcification in a High-CO2 World"
    Iglesias-Rodriguez, M. Debora
    Buitenhuis, Erik T.
    Raven, John A.
    Schofield, Oscar
    Poulton, Alex J.
    Gibbs, Samantha
    Halloran, Paul R.
    de Baar, Hein J. W.
    SCIENCE, 2008, 322 (5907)
  • [32] Ocean science -: Marine calcifiers in a high-CO2 ocean
    Fabry, Victoria J.
    SCIENCE, 2008, 320 (5879) : 1020 - 1022
  • [33] Phase evolution of cement raw meal in a high-CO2 atmosphere
    Castillo, Jose Aguirre
    Wilhelmsson, Bodil
    Brostrom, Markus
    Eriksson, Matias
    CEMENT AND CONCRETE RESEARCH, 2025, 193
  • [34] Wound healing in an elasmobranch fish is not impaired by high-CO2 exposure
    Bouyoucos, Ian A.
    Shipley, Oliver N.
    Jones, Emily
    Brooks, Edward J.
    Mandelman, John W.
    JOURNAL OF FISH BIOLOGY, 2020, 96 (06) : 1508 - 1511
  • [35] Carbon Cycle Instability for High-CO2 Exoplanets: Implications for Habitability
    Graham, R. J.
    Pierrehumbert, R. T.
    ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2024, 970 (01):
  • [36] Tropical coral reef habitat in a geoengineered, high-CO2 world
    Couce, E.
    Irvine, P. J.
    Gregorie, L. J.
    Ridgwell, A.
    Hendy, E. J.
    GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2013, 40 (09) : 1799 - 1804
  • [37] Photosynthetic system of a thermophilic cyanobacterium grown under high-CO2
    Miyairi, S
    PHOTOSYNTHESIS: MECHANISMS AND EFFECTS, VOLS I-V, 1998, : 3439 - 3442
  • [38] High-CO2 Requirement as a Mechanism for the Containment of Genetically Modified Cyanobacteria
    Clark, Ryan L.
    Gordon, Gina C.
    Bennett, Nathaniel R.
    Lyu, Haoxiang
    Root, Thatcher W.
    Pfleger, Brian F.
    ACS SYNTHETIC BIOLOGY, 2018, 7 (02): : 384 - 391
  • [39] Analysis of Pacific oyster larval proteome and its response to high-CO2
    Dineshram, R.
    Wong, Kelvin K. W.
    Xiao, Shu
    Yu, Ziniu
    Qian, Pei Yuan
    Thiyagarajan, Vengatesen
    MARINE POLLUTION BULLETIN, 2012, 64 (10) : 2160 - 2167
  • [40] High-CO2 tolerance in microalgae: possible mechanisms and implications for biotechnology and bioremediation
    Solovchenko, Alexei
    Khozin-Goldberg, Inna
    BIOTECHNOLOGY LETTERS, 2013, 35 (11) : 1745 - 1752