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2. PHOTOSYNTHESIS: THE LIGHT REACTION AND CARBON METABOLISM The photosynthesis is the sequence of reactions, performed by green plants, blue-green algae and photosynthetic bacteria, in which light energy from the sun is converted into chemical energy and used to produce carbohydrates and ultimately all the materials of the plant (Figure 2.1.). Fig. 2.1. The basic scheme of photosynthesis in leaves of plants. The photosynthetic reaction of green plants and blue-green algae can be summarized as: 6CO2 + 12H2O + light energy ──► C6H12O6 + 6O2 + 6H2O. There are two distinct phases in photosynthesis, the light (or light-dependent) reactions and the dark (or light-independent) reactions. In green plants and blue-green algae the light reactions involve the photolysis of water, producing hydrogen atoms and molecular oxygen. This oxygen, given off during photosynthesis, is the main source of atmospheric oxygen, essential for aerobic organisms. The hydrogen atoms produced are used to reduce NADP+ to NADPH+H+ and the energy released also forms of ATP from ADP and inorganic phosphate (photophosphorylation). This ATP and NADPH+H+ are used up during the dark reactions in which carbon dioxide is fixed into carbohydrates. 2.1. Leaf as photosynthetic organ The main photosynthetic organ of most green plants is a leaf, consisting of a lateral outgrowth from a stem and comprising lamina, petiole, and leaf base. The leaf typically consists of conducting tissues and photosynthetic cells (the mesophyll) often differentiated into palisade and spongy mesophyll, surrounded by epidermis. The epidermis is perforated by a leaf pores, called stomata, usually more numerous on the abaxial (lower) side of the leaf. The epidermis is usually covered by a waxy cutinized layer termed the cuticle. This prevents excessive water loss by transpiration. 2.1.1. Chloroplast The photosynthetic cell includes the special cellular organelles called chloroplasts (Figure 2.2.). Chloroplasts are one of the family organelles bounded by a double membrane and known generally as plastids. As the name implies, chloroplasts are identified by the fact that they contain the chlorophyll pigments responsible for the green colour of leaves. In addition to chlorophyll, chloroplasts contain large amounts of carotenes and xanthophylls. Fig. 2.2. Structural model of a chloroplast from the assimilatory tissue of a higher plant (from Mohr et Schopfer 1995). A typical higher plant chloroplast is generally described as discoid diameter of with a maximum 5 to 10 µm. Chloroplasts are located in the cytosol of the cell and, consequently, are normally seen pressed between the cell wall and the prominent central vacuole. Chloroplasts are most often limited to the inner, or mesophyll, leaf cells and stomatal guard cells, although a species for which chloroplasts may be found in epidermal cells are known. In those species that have epidermal chloroplasts and their number per cell are generally smaller than in the mesophyll cells. The number of chloroplasts in the mesophyll cell is typically in the range of 10 to 100, although values of several hundred have been reported for some species. As well, the chloroplasts in palisade mesophyll cells are generally larger and more numerous than in the spongy mesophyll cells. We recognize four major structural regions or compartments in chloroplasts (see Figure 2.2.): (1) a pair of outer limiting membranes, collectively known as the envelope, (2) an unstructured background matrix or stroma, (3) a highly structured internal system of membranes, called thylakoids, and (4) the intrathylakoid space, or lumen. The envelope defines the outer limits of the organelle. These membranes are 5.0 to 7.5 nm thick and are separated by a 10.0 nm intermembrane space. Because the inner envelope membrane is selectively permeable, the envelope also serves to isolate the chloroplast and regulate the exchange of metabolites between the chloroplast and the cytosol that surrounds it. The intermembrane space is freely accessible to metabolites in the cytoplasm. Thus it appears that the outer envelope membrane offers little by way of a permeability barrier. It is left to the inner envelope membrane to regulate the flow of molecular traffic between the chloroplast and cytoplasm. The envelope encloses the unstructured background matrix of the chloroplast or stroma. The composition of the stroma is predominantly protein. The stroma contains all of the enzymes responsible for photosynthetic carbon reduction, including ribulose-1,5bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase, generally referred to by the acronym rubisco. Rubisco, which accounts for fully half of the total chloroplast protein, is no doubt the world’s single abundant protein. In addition to rubisco and other enzymes involved to carbon reduction, the stroma contains enzymes for a variety of other metabolic pathways as well as DNA, RNA, and the necessary machinery for transcription and translation of protein. The internal chloroplast membranes form a complex system of granal and intergranal lamellae. The grana are formed from two or three up to approximately a hundred disclike flattened vesicles (thylakoids) stacked on top of each other. They are oriented in a variety of directions relative to the long axis of the chloroplast and their number and size varies with different species. The thylakoids found within a region of membrane sacking are called grana thylakoids. Some thylakoids, quite often every second one, extend beyond the grana stacks into the stroma as single, nonappressed thylakoids. These stroma thylakoids are flexible interconnecting channels, continuous with and linking together the channels of individual grana. While the organization of thylakoids into stacked and unstacked regions is typical, it is be no means universal. The chloroplasts in the bundle sheath cells of C4 photosynthetic plants do not contain grana. The thylakoids membranes contain the chlorophyll and carotenoid pigments and are the site of the light-dependent, energy-conserving reactions of photosynthesis. The interior space of the thylakoids is known as the lumen. The lumen is the site of water oxidation and, consequently, the source of oxygen evolved in photosynthesis. Otherwise it functions primarily as a reservoir for protons that are pumped across the thylakoids membrane during electron transport and that are used to drive ATP synthesis. 2.1.2. Endosymbiotic theory about genesis of plastids This theory says that plastids and mitochondria arose from symbiotic prokaryotic organism living within a eukaryotic host cell. It is thought that plastids probably originated from organism similar to present-day blue-green algae while mitochondria arose from aerobic bacteria. Such conclusions are based on various similarities between plastids and mitochondria and free-living prokaryotes. For example, such organelles are self replicating and contain DNA, which in addition to having a different base composition from the nuclear DNA, are circular rather than linear. The ribosomes of chloroplasts and mitochondria are smaller than those in other parts of cytoplasm but similar in size to those of prokaryotes. There is evidence moreover, that the origin of plastids could be polyphyletic, i.e. in different groups of plants different types of symbionts have been incorporated. Thus in the higher plants and Chlorophyta and Rhodophyta, which all have chloroplasts with a double membrane, it is thought that the plastids are derived from a prokaryotic symbiont. However in other groups of algae the chloroplasts may be surrounded by three or four membranes, implying that these are derived from eukaryotic symbionts. 2.2. Photosynthetic pigments and light The light is a form of radiant energy. It is a visible electromagnetic radiation with wavelengths ranging from 360 nm (violet) to 780 nm (far-red). Those regions of the spectrum, which our eyes can detect, we perceive as violet, blue, green, yellow, orange, and red light. Whereas ultraviolet (100-360 nm) and infrared (longer than 780nm) regions of the spectrum, which our eyes cannot detected, are referred to as ultraviolet and infra-red radiation, respectively (see Table 2.1.). The energy of light can be absorbed by molecules called pigments. Table 2.1. Radiation and relation between wavelength range and energy of photons. Colour Wavelength range (nm) Average Energy (kJ.mol-1 photons) Ultraviolet 100 - 360 UV-C 100 - 280 471 UV-B 280 - 320 399 UV-A 320 - 360 332 Visible 360 - 780 Violet 360 - 425 290 Blue 425 - 490 274 Green 490 - 550 230 Yellow 550 - 585 212 Orange 585 - 640 196 Red 640 - 700 181 Far-red 700 - 780 166 Infra-red longer than 780 85 The green plants use in photosynthesis the spectrum between 400 nm and 700 nm (see Figure 2.3.). This range of light is broadly defined as photosynthetically active radiation (PAR). The PAR intensity is measured as the photon fluence rates, expressed as mol photons m-2 s-1 PAR, or energy fluence rates, expressed as W m-2 PAR. Fig. 2.3. The photosynthetically active radiation. The chlorophylls (Figure 2.4.) are the main class of photosynthetic pigments. They are pigments primarily responsible for harvesting light energy used in photosynthesis. Chlorophylls absorb red and blue-violet light and thus reflect green light, so giving plants their characteristic green colour. Chlorophylls are involved in the light reactions of photosynthesis and are located in the chloroplast in thylakoids membranes. The chlorophyll molecule consists of two parts, a porphyrin head and a long hydrocarbon, or phytol tail. A porphyrin is a cyclic tetrapyrrole, made up of four nitrogen-containing pyrrole rings arranged in a cyclic fashion. Completing the chlorophyll molecule is a magnesium ion (Mg2+) chelated to the four nitrogen atoms in the centre of the ring. Four species of chlorophyll, designated chlorophyll a, b, c, and d, are known. The chemical structure of chlorophyll a, the primary photosynthetic pigment in all higher plants, algae, and cyanobacteria, is shown in Figure. The summary chemical formula is C55H72O5N4Mg. Chlorophyll b is similar except that a formyl group (-CHO) substitutes for the methyl group on ring II. The summary chemical formula of chlorophyll b is C55H70O6N4Mg. Chlorophyll b is found in virtually all higher plants and green algae, although viable mutants deficient of chlorophyll b are known. The principal difference between chlorophyll a and chlorophyll c lacks the phytol tail. Finally chlorophyll d, found only in the red algae, is similar to chlorophyll a except that a (─O─OCHO) group replaces the (─OCH═CH2) group on ring II. When grown in the dark, angiosperm seedlings do not accumulate chlorophyll. Their yellow colour is due primarily to the presence of carotenoids. Dark-grown seedlings do, however accumulate significant amounts of protochlorophyll a, the immediate precursor to chlorophyll a. The chemical structure of protochlorophyll differs from chlorophyll only by the presence of a double bond between carbons 7 and 8 in ring IV. The reduction of this bond is catalysed by the enzyme NADH: protochlorophyll oxidoreductase. In angiosperm this reaction requires light, but in gymnosperm and most algae chlorophyll can synthesized in the dark. There is a general consensus among investigators that chlorophyll b is synthesized from chlorophyll a. The carotenoids (Figure 2.4.) comprise a family of yellow, orange or red pigments present in most photosynthetic organism. Found in large quantity in roots of carrot and tomato fruit, carotenoid pigments are also prominent in green leaves, where are located in the chloroplast in thylakoids membranes. The carotenoids absorb blue-violet, blue and blue-green light. In the fall of the year, the chlorophyll pigments are degraded and the more stable carotenoid pigments account for the brilliant orange and yellow colours so characteristics of autumn foliage. The carotenoid pigments are C40 terpenoids biosynthetically derived from the isoprenoid. The carotenoid family of pigments includes the carotenes (β-carotene, αcarotene) and the xanthophylls (lutein, cryptoxanthin, zeaxanthin, violaxanthin). The carotenes are hydrocarbons and the xanthophylls are oxygenated derivates of the carotenes. The carotenes are predominantly orange or red–orange pigments. β-carotene is the major carotenoid in higher plants and algae. Fig.2.4. Pigments of the thylakoid membrane (from Mohr et Schopfer 1995). A comparison of the absorption spectrum of chlorophylls a and b and the carotenoids with the action spectrum of photosynthesis (Figure 2.5.) has been very important in the study of photosynthesis. This shows which pigments are contributing absorbed light energy to the photosynthetic process. For green plants the action spectrum shows that chlorophyll is the pigment responsible for photosynthesis, since peak photosynthetic activity occurs at the absorption peaks of chlorophylls a and b. Fig. 2.5. A comparasion of the action spectrum of photosynthesis with the absorption spectra of chlorophylls a and b and carotenoids (orig. Anonymous, modified by Hejnák 2005). The phycobilins serve as accessory light-harvesting blue or red pigments in the bluegreen and red algae and cyanobacteria or as a critical regulatory system in green plants. Like the carotenoids they are accessory pigments in photosynthesis, but unlike the chlorophylls and carotenoids they are water soluble. Structurally they are very similar to the porphyrin part of the chlorophyll molecule, except that they contain no magnesium. The three photosynthetic phycobilins are phycoerythrin (also known as phycoerythrobilin), phycocyanin (phycocyanobilin), and allophycocyanin (allophycocyanobilin). The phytochromobilin, fourth of phycobilins, is an important photoreceptor that regulates various aspects of growth and development of green plants. The phytochrome is a receptor that plays an important role in many photomorphogenetic phenomena. Its chromophore structure and absorption spectrum are similar to that allophycocyanin. The phytochrome (literally, plant pigment) is unique because it exists in two forms that are photoreversible. The form P660 (or Pr) absorbs maximally at 660 nm. However, absorption of 660 nm light converts the pigment to a second, far-red absorption form P735 (or Pfr). Absorption of far-red light by Pfr converts it back to the red-absorption form. Pfr is believed to be an active form of the pigment that is capable of initiating a wide range of morphogenetic responses. 2.3. Photosynthetic electron transport and ATP synthesis In thylakoid membranes there are two photochemical systems containing photosynthetic and accessory pigments and electron carriers. In this photosystems I and II (PSI and PSII) there are groups of functionally cooperating pigment molecules consisting of photochemically active chlorophyll a at the reaction centres and photochemically inactive chlorophylls a or b and carotenoids as antenna pigments. The antenna pigments absorb light but do not participate directly in photochemical reactions. However, antenna chlorophylls and carotenoids lie very close together such that excitation energy can easily pass between adjacent pigment molecules by a radiationless transfer process. The energy of absorbed photons thus migrates through the antenna complex, passing from one chlorophyll molecule to another until it eventually arrives at the reaction center. Fig. 2.6. The model of a photosynthetic pigment complex (photosystem). The energy of the quanta absorbed by the antenna pigments is transferred by radiationless energy migration to a photochemically active reaction centre of PSI with chlorophyll a P700 or PSII with chlorophyll a P680. (after Mohr et Schopfer 1995) The reaction centre consists of one or two molecules of chlorophyll a, called the reaction centre chlorophyll, plus associated proteins and cofactors. The reaction center chlorophyll is, in effect, an energy sink-it is the longest wavelength, lowest energy-absorbing chlorophyll in the complex. Because the reaction centre is the site of the primary photochemical redox reaction, it is here that light energy is actually converted to chemical energy. The reaction centres of PSI and PSII are designated as P700 and P680, respectively. These designations identify the reaction centre as species of chlorophyll a, or pigment (P), with an absorbance maximum at either 700 nm (PSI) or 680 nm (PSII). The efficiency of energy transfer through the antenna chlorophyll to the reaction is very high-only about 10 percent of the energy is lost. The principal advantage of associating a single reaction centre with a large number of antenna chlorophyll molecules is to increase efficiency in the collection and utilization. The simplified model of the photosynthetic pigment complex (photosystem) shows Figure 2.6. The photosystem I has a chlorophyll a/b ratio of about 6-10/1, and the photosystem II has a chlorophyll a/b ratio of about 1.2-2/1, most of the chlorophyll b. Third system in thylakoid membranes is the cytochrome b/f complex, which transfer electrons from PSII to PSI. A schematic of the photosynthetic electron transport chain depicting the arrangement of PSI, PSII, and the cytochrome b/f complex in the thylakoid membrane is presented in Figure. A fourth complexthe ATP synthase-is also shown. The ATP synthase use a proton gradient generated by electron transport for ATP synthesis. Fig. 2.7. The light reaction of photosynthesis. The Z-scheme of electron transport between photosystems II and I (after Vodrážka 1993, modified). P680 and P700 – reactions centre of photosystems II and I, with terminal pigments, Q and FeS – primary electron acceptors, PQ – plastoquinone, cyt b6/f – cytochromes, PC – plastocyanin, Fd – ferredoxin – translators of electrons, Z – donor of electrons, K – complex developing O2 2.3.1. Photophosphorylation Light-driven production of ATP by chloroplasts is known as photophosphorylation (photosynthetic phosphorylation). The light-induced photosynthetic electron transport is utilized as a source of energy for the production of ATP from ADP and inorganic phosphate. Photophosphorylation is very important because, in addition to using ATP (along with NADPH+H+) for the reduction of CO2, a continual supply of ATP is required to support a variety of other metabolic activities in the chloroplast. These activities include synthesis of protein in the stroma and transport of proteins and metabolites across the envelope membranes. When the electron transport is operating according to the Z-scheme shown in Figures 2.7., electrons are continuously supplied from water and withdrawn as NADPH+H+ via photosystems I and II. During the transfer of electrons from the primary electron acceptor of photosystem II to P700 through plastoquinone, cytochrome b/f complex and plastocyanin, one molecule of ATP is formed, because transfer of electrons between PSII and PSI is energetically downhill. Some of that energy is used to move protons from the stroma side of the membrane to the lumen side. These protons contribute to a proton gradient that can be used to drive ATP synthesis (Figure 2.8.). This flow-through form of electron transport is consequently known as noncyclic electron transport. Formation of ATP in association with noncyclic electron transport is known as noncyclic photophosphorylation. The photosynthetic splitting of water into gaseous oxygen and reducing equivalents is known as photolysis of water (the Hill reaction).The two molecules of water are split to produce of one molecule oxygen, four electrons, which go through the electron transport chain, and four protons. The electrons and protons eventually reduce NADP+ to NADPH+H+. However PSI units and PSII units in the membrane are not physically linked as implied by the Z-scheme, but is even segregated into different regions of the thylakoid. One consequence of this heterologous distribution in the membranes is that PSI units may transport electrons independently of PSII, a process known as cyclic electron transport. In this case ferredoxin transfers the electron back to PQ rather than to NADP+. The electron then returns to P700+, passing through the cytochrome complex and plastocyanin. Since these electrons also pass through PQ and the cytochrome complex, cyclic electron transport will also support ATP synthesis, a process known as cyclic photophosphorylation. Cyclic photophosphorylation is a source of ATP required for chloroplast activities over and above that required in the carbon reduction cycle. Fig. 2.8. The organization of the photosynthetic electron transport system in the thylakoid membrane (from Hopkins 1995). 2.4. Photosynthetic carbon reduction (PCR) cycle In the chloroplast stroma there are the sequences of light-independent reactions (or dark reactions) that utilize the energy (in the form of ATP) and reducing power (in the form of NADPH) produced during light reactions of photosynthesis, to reduce carbon dioxide. This process can take one of two forms, depending on whether the subject is a C3 or a C4 plant. The details of the fixation of carbon dioxide differ in the two types of the plants but the end result in both cases is the production of carbohydrates via the Calvin cycle. The pathway by which all photosynthetic eukaryotic organisms ultimately incorporate CO2 into carbohydrate is known as carbon fixation or the photosynthetic carbon reduction cycle. Mapping the complex sequence of reactions involving the formation of organic carbon and it is conversion to complex carbohydrates represented a major advance in plant biochemistry. For his efforts and those of his associates, Calvin was awarded the Nobel Prize for chemistry in 1961. Calvin and his associates worked out this cycle of reactions by illuminating green algae in the presence of radioactive carbon-14 (C14) dioxide for a couple of seconds and them immersing the cell in boiling water to prevent further reaction. They then found which metabolites first became radioactively labelled using chromatography. Fig. 2.9. Metabolism and translocation of photosynthetic products formed by Calvin cycle (from Mohr et Schopfer 1995). 2.4.1. Calvin cycle The Calvin cycle (Figure 2.9.) begins with the carboxylation and cleavage of ribulose1,5-bisphosphate (RUBP) to form two molecules of three carbon acid, 3-phosphoglycerate (3-PGA). Thus 3-PGA appeared to be the first stable product of photosynthesis. The carboxylation reaction is catalyzed by the enzyme ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase, or Rubisco. Rubisco activity is light regulated. Its activity declines rapidly to zero when the light is turned off and is regained only slowly when the light is once again turned on. Rubisco is without doubt the most abundant protein in the world, accounting for approximately 50 percent of the soluble protein in the most leaves. The enzyme also has a high affinity for CO2 that, together with is high concentration in the chloroplast stroma, ensures rapid carboxylation in the normally low atmospheric concentrations of CO2. Others sugars that accumulated the label later in time were probably derived from 3-PGA. Because Calvin’s group determined that the first product was a three-carbon molecule, the PCR cycle is commonly referred to as the C3 cycle. Plants that incorporate carbon solely through the PCR (or Calvin cycle) are generally known as C3 plants. The second step is the reduction of 3-PGA. The 3-PGA is removed by reduction to the triose phosphate, glyceraldehyd-3phosphate (G3P). The resulting triose sugar-phosphate, G3P, is available for export to the cytoplasm, probably after conversion to dihydroxyacetone phosphate (DHAP). Once in the cytoplasm, the triose molecules can easily be joined to synthesize hexose sugars, fructosephosphate and glucose-phosphate. These two hexose-phosphates then combine to form sucrose phosphate. The glucose is subsequently converted to starch, cellulose, and other polysaccharides. The acceptor molecule, RUBP is then regenerated by a complex series of reactions involving 4-, 5- 6-, and 7-carbon sugar phosphates. 2.4.1.1. Energetic of the Calvin cycle The reduction of each molecule of CO2 requires 2 molecules of NADPH and 3 molecules of ATP. This total presents energy input of 529 kJ mol-1. Oxidation of one mole of hexose would yield like about 2817 kJ, or 469 kJ mol-1 of CO2. This represents an energy storage efficiency of about 88 percent. 2.4.1.2. Photorespiration of C3 plants The respiratory metabolism of green plants is not independent of light, but for most autotrophic plants, respiration (CO2 release and O2 uptake) is much higher in the light than in dark. This is substantiated by the observation that, for example, increase release of CO2 can be measured for several minutes after illuminated leaves have been suddenly darkened. This light-dependent CO2 evolution is called photorespiration. This process directly associated with photosynthetic metabolism and involves the reoxidation of products just previously assimilated in photosynthesis. It differs from dark respiration in that it does not occur in the mitochondria and is not coupled to oxidative phosphorylation. The rate of CO2 release by photorespiration in C3 plants can be three to five times greater than that released by dark respiration. Since the process does not generate ATP it appears to be extremely wasteful. It has been estimated that photosynthetic efficiency could be improved by 30-50 percent if photorespiration were inhibited. Why photorespiration? It is because the Rubisco possesses a dual function, carboxylation and oxygenation. As the concentration of O2 declines in air, the relative level of carboxylation increases until, at zero O2, photorespiration is also zero. On the other hand, an increase in the relative level of O2 (or decrease in CO2) shifts the balance in favour of oxygenation. An increase in temperature will also favour oxygenation, since as the temperature increases the solubility of gasses in water declines, but O2 solubility is less affected than CO2. Thus O2 will inhibit photosynthesis, measured by net CO2 reduction, in plants that photorespire. Fig. 2.10. The photorespiration pathway (from Hopkins 1995.) The photorespiration pathway (Figure 2.10.) involves the activities of at least three different cellular organelles (the chloroplast, the peroxisome, and the mitochondrion) and, because CO2 is evolved, results in a net loss of carbon from the cell. The photorespiration begins with oxidation of RUBP to 3PGA and phosphoglycolate (P- glycolate). The 3-PGA is available for further metabolism by the PCR cycle, but the P-glycolate is rapidly dephosphorylated to glycolate in the chloroplast. The glycolate is exported from the chloroplast and diffuses to the peroxisome. Taken up by the peroxisome, the glycolate is oxidized to glycolate and hydrogen peroxide. The peroxide is broken down by catalase and the glyoxylate undergoes a transamination reaction to form the amino acid glycine. Glycine is then transferred to a mitochondrion where two molecules of glycine (4 carbons) are converted to one molecule of serine (3 carbons) plus one CO2. Glycine is thus the immediate source of photorespired CO2. The serine then leaves the mitochondrion, returning to the peroxisome where the amino group is given up in a transamination reaction and the product, hydroxypyruvate, is reduced to glycerate. Finally, glycerate is returned to the chloroplast where it is phosphorylated to 3-PGA. 2.4.2. C4 syndrome Other groups of plants, known as C4 plants, posses the ability to reduce greatly photorespiration by an additional extremely effective mechanism for CO2 fixation. In such plants exists an alternative form of carbon dioxide fixation. The first product of CO2 fixation is not the three-carbon phosphoglyceric acid but the four-carbon oxaloacetate. These C4 plants exhibit a number of specific anatomical, physiological and biochemical characteristics that constitute C4 syndrome. One particular anatomical feature characteristics of most C4 leaves is the presence of two distinct photosynthetic tissues. In C4 leaves the vascular bundles are quite close together and each bundle is surrounded by a tightly fitted layer of cells called the bundle sheath. Between the vascular bundles and adjacent to the air spaces of the leaf are more loosely arranged mesophyll cells. This distinction between mesophyll and bundle sheath photosynthetic cells, called Kranz anatomy, plays a major role in the C4 syndrome. The alternative C4 form of CO2 fixation was confirmed by M. D. Hatch and C. R. Slack in 1966 and is known as Hatch-Slack pathway (Figure 2.11.). Fig. 2.11. The Hatch-Slack pathway (from Mohr et Schopfer). 2.4.2.1. Hatch-Slack pathway The key to C4 cycle is the enzyme phosphoenol pyruvate carboxylase (PEPcase) which catalyses the carboxylation of phosphoenol pyruvate (PEP) using the bicarbonate ion HCO3as the substrate (rather than CO2). The product of the PEPcase reaction, oxaloacetate (OAA), is moderately unstable and is quickly reduced to a more stable C4 acid-either malate or aspartate-which is transported out of the mesophyll cell into an adjacent bundle-sheath cell situated around the leaf veins. Once in the bundle-sheath cell, the acid undergoes a decarboxylation to form CO2 and pyruvate. The resulting CO2 so released reacts with ribulose1,5-bisphosphate to form two molecules triose sugars 3-phosphoglycerate via the Calvin cycle in the bundle-sheath chloroplast. The pyruvate is returned to the mesophyll cells where it is converted to PEP with concomitant formation of a molecule of AMP from ATP. This step, which uses up two high-energy phosphate bonds, is the reason why, overall, C4 plants require 30 molecules of ATP for each molecule of glucose synthesized whereas C3 plants only require 18. Under optimal conditions, C4 crop species can assimilate CO2 at rates two to three times that of C3 species. All this productivity does not, however, come “free”. There is an energy cost to building to the CO2 concentration in the bundle-sheath cells. For every CO2 assimilated, two ATP must be expended in the regeneration of PEP. This is an addition to the ATP and NADPH required in the PCR cycle. Thus the net energy requirement for assimilation of CO2 by the C4 cycle is five ATP and two NADPH. C4 plants are generally of tropical or subtropical origin representing nearly 1,500 species spread through at least 18 different angiosperm families (3 monocots, 15 dicots). Interestingly, no one family has been found to express the C4 syndrome exclusively-all 18 families contain both C3 and C4 representatives. This suggests that the C4 cycle has arisen rather recently in evolution of angiosperms and in a number of diverse taxon at different times. Under conditions of high fluence rates and high temperature (30° to 40°C) the photosynthetic rate of C4 species may be two to three times greater than that of C3 species. They appear to be better equipped to withstand drought and are able to maintain active photosynthesis under conditions of water stress that would lead to stomatal closure and consequent reduction of CO2 uptake by C3 species. All of these features appear to be a consequence of the CO2-concetrating capacity of C4 plants and the resulting suppression of photorespiratory CO2 loss. 2.4.2.2. Photorespiration of C4 plants In C4 plants photorespiration is hardly detectable, possibly because synthesis of glycolate, the substrate for photorespiration, is much lower in C4 plants (about 10% of that of C3 plants). This could be because the concentration of CO2 in the bundle sheath cells is so high that oxidation (instead of carboxylation) of ribulose bisphosphate is prevented. 2.5. The structural, physiological and ecological differences between C3 and C4 plants Unlike C3 plants, photosynthesis of C4 plants is not inhibited by O2, and they have a very low CO2 compensation concentration. The CO2 compensation concentration is the ambient carbon dioxide concentration at which the rate of CO2 uptake (for photosynthesis) is balanced by the rate of CO2 evolution (by respiration). For C3 plants, values fall into the range of 20 to 100 μl CO2 per litre. Comparable values for C4 plants are in the range of 0 to 5 μl CO2 per litre. The C4 plants are particularly well suited to exploit, for active photosynthetic metabolism, the naturally low CO2 concentration of air at high light fluxes and high temperatures. This can be observed very well in C4 plants like maize and sugar cane. Especially in plants of arid habitants, the C4 cycle is used as a mechanism to reduce water loss by stomatal transpiration, which inevitably is coupled to the CO2 uptake into the leaf. Photosynthesis in most situations is limited by available CO2 and water. In C3 plants, even moderate water stress will initiate closure of the stomata and reduce the available supply of CO2. The low CO2 compensation concentration of C4 plants means that they can maintain higher rates of photosynthesis at lower CO2 levels .Thus C4 plants gain an advantage over C3 plants when the stomata are partially closed to conserve water during a period of water stress. An effective measure of this advantage is the value of the transpiration ratio. The transpiration ratio relates the uptake of CO2 to the loss of water by transpiration from the leaf. Transpiration ratios for C4 plants are typically in the range of 200 to 350 (grams of the loss of water by transpiration in order to produce 1 g dry matter), while for C3 plants value in the range of 500 to 1000 are often cited. The low transpiration ratio for C4 plants reflects their capacity to maintain high rates of photosynthesis while effectively conserving water. The most C4 plants tend to have a higher temperature optimum (30-40°C) than C3 plants (20-25°C). This difference is due at least in part to the higher temperature stability of some of the C4 cycle enzymes. Maximal activity of PEPcase, for example, is in the range of 30 to 35°C compared with 20 to 25°C for Rubisco. Another interesting feature of C4 plants is their general low-temperature sensitivity. Maize, for example, will not grow at temperatures below 12 to 15°C. This lower limit for growth is probably set by the enzyme pyruvate, phosphate dikinase, which is cold labile and experiences a substantial loss of activity below 12°C. Although C4 plants are not competitive in all situations-some C3 plants may even equal or exceed C4 plants in productivity-given the right combination of high temperature, high light and low water, the C4 confers a definite advantage. This advantage is reflected in the observation that many of more aggressive weeds are C4 species. These include crabgrass (Digitaria sanguinalis), Russian thistle (Salsoa kali), and several species of pigweed (Amaranthus) that often take over during the hot, dry months in the middle of summer. Many of the more highly productive crop species also fall within the C4 group, including sugarcane (Saccharum officinarum), sorghum (Sorghum bicolor), maize (Zea mays), and millet (Panicum miliaceum). Amongst the xerophytic plants of arid, semi-arid or saline habitats there is a group of plants which are striking in the remarkable structural and functional adaptations of their photosynthetic apparatus to the special demands of the environment. These plants are able to fix CO2 and synthesise organic substances at different times of the day. The mechanism is known as Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM). 2.6. Crassulacean acid metabolism, an alternative to C4 photosynthesis The CAM (Figure 2.12.) was so named because it was originally studied most extensively in the family Crassulaceae. This specialised pattern of photosynthesis has now been found in some 23 different families of flowering plants (including the Asteraceae, Cactaceae, Crassulaceae, Euphorbiaceae and Liliaceae), one family of ferns (the Polypodiaceae), and in the primitive plant Welwitschia. The CAM plants keep their stomata closed during the day to reduce water loss by transpiration. Carbon dioxide can therefore only enter at night using the carboxylating part of the C4 cycle when, it combines with the three-carbon compound phosphoenol pyruvate (PEP) to give the four-carbon oxaloacetate (OAA). As in the C4 plants, the enzyme PEP carboxylase is central to CAM operation. The oxaloacetate is rapidly reduced by NAD-dependent malatedehydrogenase to malate, which can be stored in the cell vacuoles. During the daylight hours, malate is retrieved from the vacuole, decarboxylated and the CO2 diffuses into the chloroplast where is converted to triose phosphates by the C3 PCR (Calvin) cycle. Fig. 2.12. The mechanism of CO2 fixation in CAM plants (from Mohr et Schopfer 1995). 2.6.1. Ecological significance of CAM The CAM represents a particularly significant adaptation to exceptionally dry habitats. Many CAM plants are true desert plants, growing in shallow, sandy soils with little available water. Nocturnal opening of the stomata allows for CO2 uptake during periods when conditions leading to evaporative water loss are at a minimum. Then, during the daylight hours when the stomata are closed to reduce water loss, photosynthetic can proceed by using reservoir of stored CO2. This interpretation is supported by the transpiration ratio for CAM plants, in the range of 50 to 100, which is substantially lower than that for either C3 or C4 plants. There is a price to be paid, however. Rates for daily carbon assimilation by CAM plants are only about one-half that of C3 plants and one-third that of C4 plants. The CAM plants can be expected to grow more slowly under conditions of adequate moisture. While some species, in particular the cacti, are obligatory CAM plants, many other succulent exhibit a facultative approach to CAM. Under conditions of abundant water supply, assimilates carbon as a typical C3 plant-there is no significant uptake of CO2 at night and no diurnal variation in leaf cell acidity. Under conditions of limited water availability or high salt concentration in the soil, CAM metabolism is switched on. Although carbon assimilation by CAM is slower than with conventional C3 photosynthesis, its higher water use efficiency permits photosynthesis to continue in times of water stress and the plant is better able to complete its reproductive development.