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Control of photosynthesis in barley leaves with reduced activities of glutamine synthetase or glutamate synthase.

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Control of photosynthesis in barley leaves with reduced activities of glutamine synthetase or glutamate synthase. / Häusler, Rainer E.; Blackwell, Ray D.; Lea, Peter J. et al.
In: Planta, Vol. 194, No. 3, 08.1994, p. 406-417.

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Häusler RE, Blackwell RD, Lea PJ, Leegood RC. Control of photosynthesis in barley leaves with reduced activities of glutamine synthetase or glutamate synthase. Planta. 1994 Aug;194(3):406-417. doi: 10.1007/BF00197542

Author

Häusler, Rainer E. ; Blackwell, Ray D. ; Lea, Peter J. et al. / Control of photosynthesis in barley leaves with reduced activities of glutamine synthetase or glutamate synthase. In: Planta. 1994 ; Vol. 194, No. 3. pp. 406-417.

Bibtex

@article{57a4831c8716422d9d478f7396ea9772,
title = "Control of photosynthesis in barley leaves with reduced activities of glutamine synthetase or glutamate synthase.",
abstract = "Wild-type and mutant plants of barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Maris Mink) lacking activities of chloroplastic glutamine synthetase (GS) and of ferredox-in-dependent glutamate synthase (Fd-GOGAT) were crossed to generate heterozygous plants. Crosses of the F2 generation containing GS activities between 47 and 97 of the wild-type and Fd-GOGAT activities down to 63 of the wild-type have been selected to study the control of both enzymes on photorespiratory carbon and nitrogen metabolism. There were no major pleiotropic effects. Decreased GS had a small impact on leaf protein and the total activity of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase (Rubisco). The activation state of Rubisco was unaffected in air, but a decrease in GS influenced the activation state of Rubisco in low CO2. In illuminated leaves, the amino-acid content decreased with decreasing GS, while the content of ammonium rose, showing that even small reductions in GS limit ammonium re-assimilation and may bring about a loss of nitrogen from the plants, and hence a reduction in protein and Rubisco. Leaf amino-acid contents were restored, and ammonium and nitrate contents decreased, by leaving plants in the dark for 24 h. The ratios of serine to glycine decreased with a decrease in GS when plants were kept at moderate photon flux densities in air, suggesting a possible feedback on glycine decarboxylation. This effect was absent in high light and low CO2. Under these conditions ammonium contents exhibited an optimum and amino-acid contents a minimum at a GS activity of 65 of the wild-type, suggesting an inhibition of ammonium release in mutants with less than 65 GS. The leaf contents of glutamate, glutamine, aspartate, asparagine, and alanine largely followed changes in the total amino-acid contents determined under different environmental conditions. Decreased Fd-GOGAT resulted in a decrease in leaf protein, chlorophyll, Rubisco and nitrate contents. Chlorophyll a/b ratios and specific leaf fresh weight were lower than in the wild-type. Leaf ammonium contents were similar to the wild-type and total leaf amino-acid contents were only affected in low CO2 at high photon flux densities, but mutants with decreased Fd-GOGAT accumulated glutamine and contained less glutamate.",
keywords = "Amino acid metabolism - Glutamine synthetase - Glutamate synthase - Hordeum (photorespiration) - Photorespiration - Photorespiratory mutants (barley)",
author = "H{\"a}usler, {Rainer E.} and Blackwell, {Ray D.} and Lea, {Peter J.} and Leegood, {Richard C.}",
year = "1994",
month = aug,
doi = "10.1007/BF00197542",
language = "English",
volume = "194",
pages = "406--417",
journal = "Planta",
issn = "1432-2048",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Control of photosynthesis in barley leaves with reduced activities of glutamine synthetase or glutamate synthase.

AU - Häusler, Rainer E.

AU - Blackwell, Ray D.

AU - Lea, Peter J.

AU - Leegood, Richard C.

PY - 1994/8

Y1 - 1994/8

N2 - Wild-type and mutant plants of barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Maris Mink) lacking activities of chloroplastic glutamine synthetase (GS) and of ferredox-in-dependent glutamate synthase (Fd-GOGAT) were crossed to generate heterozygous plants. Crosses of the F2 generation containing GS activities between 47 and 97 of the wild-type and Fd-GOGAT activities down to 63 of the wild-type have been selected to study the control of both enzymes on photorespiratory carbon and nitrogen metabolism. There were no major pleiotropic effects. Decreased GS had a small impact on leaf protein and the total activity of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase (Rubisco). The activation state of Rubisco was unaffected in air, but a decrease in GS influenced the activation state of Rubisco in low CO2. In illuminated leaves, the amino-acid content decreased with decreasing GS, while the content of ammonium rose, showing that even small reductions in GS limit ammonium re-assimilation and may bring about a loss of nitrogen from the plants, and hence a reduction in protein and Rubisco. Leaf amino-acid contents were restored, and ammonium and nitrate contents decreased, by leaving plants in the dark for 24 h. The ratios of serine to glycine decreased with a decrease in GS when plants were kept at moderate photon flux densities in air, suggesting a possible feedback on glycine decarboxylation. This effect was absent in high light and low CO2. Under these conditions ammonium contents exhibited an optimum and amino-acid contents a minimum at a GS activity of 65 of the wild-type, suggesting an inhibition of ammonium release in mutants with less than 65 GS. The leaf contents of glutamate, glutamine, aspartate, asparagine, and alanine largely followed changes in the total amino-acid contents determined under different environmental conditions. Decreased Fd-GOGAT resulted in a decrease in leaf protein, chlorophyll, Rubisco and nitrate contents. Chlorophyll a/b ratios and specific leaf fresh weight were lower than in the wild-type. Leaf ammonium contents were similar to the wild-type and total leaf amino-acid contents were only affected in low CO2 at high photon flux densities, but mutants with decreased Fd-GOGAT accumulated glutamine and contained less glutamate.

AB - Wild-type and mutant plants of barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Maris Mink) lacking activities of chloroplastic glutamine synthetase (GS) and of ferredox-in-dependent glutamate synthase (Fd-GOGAT) were crossed to generate heterozygous plants. Crosses of the F2 generation containing GS activities between 47 and 97 of the wild-type and Fd-GOGAT activities down to 63 of the wild-type have been selected to study the control of both enzymes on photorespiratory carbon and nitrogen metabolism. There were no major pleiotropic effects. Decreased GS had a small impact on leaf protein and the total activity of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase (Rubisco). The activation state of Rubisco was unaffected in air, but a decrease in GS influenced the activation state of Rubisco in low CO2. In illuminated leaves, the amino-acid content decreased with decreasing GS, while the content of ammonium rose, showing that even small reductions in GS limit ammonium re-assimilation and may bring about a loss of nitrogen from the plants, and hence a reduction in protein and Rubisco. Leaf amino-acid contents were restored, and ammonium and nitrate contents decreased, by leaving plants in the dark for 24 h. The ratios of serine to glycine decreased with a decrease in GS when plants were kept at moderate photon flux densities in air, suggesting a possible feedback on glycine decarboxylation. This effect was absent in high light and low CO2. Under these conditions ammonium contents exhibited an optimum and amino-acid contents a minimum at a GS activity of 65 of the wild-type, suggesting an inhibition of ammonium release in mutants with less than 65 GS. The leaf contents of glutamate, glutamine, aspartate, asparagine, and alanine largely followed changes in the total amino-acid contents determined under different environmental conditions. Decreased Fd-GOGAT resulted in a decrease in leaf protein, chlorophyll, Rubisco and nitrate contents. Chlorophyll a/b ratios and specific leaf fresh weight were lower than in the wild-type. Leaf ammonium contents were similar to the wild-type and total leaf amino-acid contents were only affected in low CO2 at high photon flux densities, but mutants with decreased Fd-GOGAT accumulated glutamine and contained less glutamate.

KW - Amino acid metabolism - Glutamine synthetase - Glutamate synthase - Hordeum (photorespiration) - Photorespiration - Photorespiratory mutants (barley)

U2 - 10.1007/BF00197542

DO - 10.1007/BF00197542

M3 - Journal article

VL - 194

SP - 406

EP - 417

JO - Planta

JF - Planta

SN - 1432-2048

IS - 3

ER -