Literature DB >> 11828024

Effects of HgCl(2) on CO(2) dependence of leaf photosynthesis: evidence indicating involvement of aquaporins in CO(2) diffusion across the plasma membrane.

Ichiro Terashima1, Kiyomi Ono.   

Abstract

Experiments were conducted to examine whether mercury-sensitive aquaporins facilitate photosynthetic CO(2) diffusion across the plasma membrane of leaf mesophyll cells. Discs without abaxial epidermes from Vicia faba leaflets were treated with HgCl(2), an inhibitor of aquaporins. Hydraulic conductivity of the plasma membrane of these discs, measured as the weight loss of the discs in the 1 M sorbitol solution, was inhibited by sub-mM concentrations of HgCl(2) by 70 to 80%. Photosynthetic CO(2) fixation was also inhibited by the HgCl(2) treatment in a similar concentration range. When 0.3 mM HgCl(2) solution was fed to the V. faba leaflets with intact epidermes via the transpiration stream, the rate of photosynthesis on leaf area basis (A) measured at photosynthetically active photon flux density of 700 micromol m(-2) s(-1) and at leaf temperature of 25 degrees C, decreased by about 20 to 30% at any CO(2) concentration in the intercellular spaces (C(i)). However, when CO(2) concentration in the chloroplast stroma (C(c)) was calculated from fluorescence and gas exchange data and A was plotted against C(c), A at low C(c) concentrations did not differ before and after the treatment. The conductance for CO(2) diffusion from the intercellular spaces to the chloroplast stroma (g(i)) decreased to 40 and 30% of the control value, when the leaflets were fed with 0.3 mM and 1.2 mM HgCl(2), respectively. Similar results were obtained with leaves of Phaseolus vulgaris. Although effects of HgCl(2) were not specific, the present results showed that HgCl(2) consistently lowered g(i). It is, thus, probable that the photosynthetic CO(2) uptake across the plasma membrane of the mesophyll cells is facilitated by mercury-sensitive aquaporins.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 11828024     DOI: 10.1093/pcp/pcf001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Plant Cell Physiol        ISSN: 0032-0781            Impact factor:   4.927


  33 in total

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8.  Function of Nicotiana tabacum aquaporins as chloroplast gas pores challenges the concept of membrane CO2 permeability.

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10.  Transpiration response of 'slow-wilting' and commercial soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) genotypes to three aquaporin inhibitors.

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