Emerging roles for carbonic anhydrase in mesophyll conductance and photosynthesis
Autor: | Shannon C. S. Bell, Mina Momayyezi, Robert D. Guy, Athena D. McKown |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
0106 biological sciences
0301 basic medicine Aquaporin Plant Science Photosynthesis 01 natural sciences 03 medical and health sciences Carbonic anhydrase Genetics Cellular localization Carbonic Anhydrases Plant Proteins biology RuBisCO Cell Biology Carbon Dioxide Subcellular localization Photosynthetic capacity Chloroplast Populus 030104 developmental biology Multigene Family Biophysics biology.protein Mesophyll Cells 010606 plant biology & botany |
Zdroj: | The Plant Journal. 101:831-844 |
ISSN: | 1365-313X 0960-7412 |
Popis: | Carbonic anhydrase (CA) is an abundant protein in most photosynthesizing organisms and higher plants. This review paper considers the physiological importance of the more abundant CA isoforms in photosynthesis, through their effects on CO2 diffusion and other processes in photosynthetic organisms. In plants, CA has multiple isoforms in three different families (α, β and γ) and is mainly known to catalyze the CO2 ↔ HCO 3 - equilibrium. This reversible conversion has a clear role in photosynthesis, primarily through sustaining the CO2 concentration at the site of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco). Despite showing the same major reaction mechanism, the three main CA families are evolutionarily distinct. For different CA isoforms, cellular localization and total gene expression as a function of developmental stage are predicted to determine the role of each family in relation to the net assimilation rate. Reaction-diffusion modeling and observational evidence support a role for CA activity in reducing resistance to CO2 diffusion inside mesophyll cells by facilitating CO2 transfer in both gas and liquid phases. In addition, physical and/or biochemical interactions between CAs and other membrane-bound compartments, for example aquaporins, are suggested to trigger a CO2 -sensing response by stomatal movement. In response to environmental stresses, changes in the expression level of CAs and/or stimulated deactivation of CAs may correspond with lower photosynthetic capacity. We suggest that further studies should focus on the dynamics of the relationship between the activity of CAs (with different subcellular localization, abundance and gene expression) and limitations due to CO2 diffusivity through the mesophyll and supply of CO2 to photosynthetic reactions. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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