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Rubisco catalytic properties and temperature response in crops

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Rubisco catalytic properties and temperature response in crops. / Hermida-Carrera, C.; Kapralov, M.V.; Galmés, J.
In: Plant Physiology, Vol. 171, No. 4, 01.08.2016, p. 2549-2561.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Hermida-Carrera, C, Kapralov, MV & Galmés, J 2016, 'Rubisco catalytic properties and temperature response in crops', Plant Physiology, vol. 171, no. 4, pp. 2549-2561. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.16.01846

APA

Hermida-Carrera, C., Kapralov, M. V., & Galmés, J. (2016). Rubisco catalytic properties and temperature response in crops. Plant Physiology, 171(4), 2549-2561. https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.16.01846

Vancouver

Hermida-Carrera C, Kapralov MV, Galmés J. Rubisco catalytic properties and temperature response in crops. Plant Physiology. 2016 Aug 1;171(4):2549-2561. Epub 2016 Jun 21. doi: 10.1104/pp.16.01846

Author

Hermida-Carrera, C. ; Kapralov, M.V. ; Galmés, J. / Rubisco catalytic properties and temperature response in crops. In: Plant Physiology. 2016 ; Vol. 171, No. 4. pp. 2549-2561.

Bibtex

@article{c66d3790b05249768b499e6fe01f0d32,
title = "Rubisco catalytic properties and temperature response in crops",
abstract = "Rubisco catalytic traits and their thermal dependence are two major factors limiting the CO2 assimilation potential of plants. In this study, we present the profile of Rubisco kinetics for 20 crop species at three different temperatures. The results largely confirmed the existence of significant variation in the Rubisco kinetics among species. Although some of the species tended to present Rubisco with higher thermal sensitivity (e.g. Oryza sativa) than others (e.g. Lactuca sativa), interspecific differences depended on the kinetic parameter. Comparing the temperature response of the different kinetic parameters, the Rubisco K m for CO2 presented higher energy of activation than the maximum carboxylation rate and the CO2 compensation point in the absence of mitochondrial respiration. The analysis of the Rubisco large subunit sequence revealed the existence of some sites under adaptive evolution in branches with specific kinetic traits. Because Rubisco kinetics and their temperature dependency were species specific, they largely affected the assimilation potential of Rubisco from the different crops, especially under those conditions (i.e. low CO2 availability at the site of carboxylation and high temperature) inducing Rubisco-limited photosynthesis. As an example, at 25°C, Rubisco from Hordeum vulgare and Glycine max presented, respectively, the highest and lowest potential for CO2 assimilation at both high and low chloroplastic CO2 concentrations. In our opinion, this information is relevant to improve photosynthesis models and should be considered in future attempts to design more efficient Rubiscos.",
author = "C. Hermida-Carrera and M.V. Kapralov and J. Galm{\'e}s",
year = "2016",
month = aug,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1104/pp.16.01846",
language = "English",
volume = "171",
pages = "2549--2561",
journal = "Plant Physiology",
issn = "0032-0889",
publisher = "American Society of Plant Biologists",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Rubisco catalytic properties and temperature response in crops

AU - Hermida-Carrera, C.

AU - Kapralov, M.V.

AU - Galmés, J.

PY - 2016/8/1

Y1 - 2016/8/1

N2 - Rubisco catalytic traits and their thermal dependence are two major factors limiting the CO2 assimilation potential of plants. In this study, we present the profile of Rubisco kinetics for 20 crop species at three different temperatures. The results largely confirmed the existence of significant variation in the Rubisco kinetics among species. Although some of the species tended to present Rubisco with higher thermal sensitivity (e.g. Oryza sativa) than others (e.g. Lactuca sativa), interspecific differences depended on the kinetic parameter. Comparing the temperature response of the different kinetic parameters, the Rubisco K m for CO2 presented higher energy of activation than the maximum carboxylation rate and the CO2 compensation point in the absence of mitochondrial respiration. The analysis of the Rubisco large subunit sequence revealed the existence of some sites under adaptive evolution in branches with specific kinetic traits. Because Rubisco kinetics and their temperature dependency were species specific, they largely affected the assimilation potential of Rubisco from the different crops, especially under those conditions (i.e. low CO2 availability at the site of carboxylation and high temperature) inducing Rubisco-limited photosynthesis. As an example, at 25°C, Rubisco from Hordeum vulgare and Glycine max presented, respectively, the highest and lowest potential for CO2 assimilation at both high and low chloroplastic CO2 concentrations. In our opinion, this information is relevant to improve photosynthesis models and should be considered in future attempts to design more efficient Rubiscos.

AB - Rubisco catalytic traits and their thermal dependence are two major factors limiting the CO2 assimilation potential of plants. In this study, we present the profile of Rubisco kinetics for 20 crop species at three different temperatures. The results largely confirmed the existence of significant variation in the Rubisco kinetics among species. Although some of the species tended to present Rubisco with higher thermal sensitivity (e.g. Oryza sativa) than others (e.g. Lactuca sativa), interspecific differences depended on the kinetic parameter. Comparing the temperature response of the different kinetic parameters, the Rubisco K m for CO2 presented higher energy of activation than the maximum carboxylation rate and the CO2 compensation point in the absence of mitochondrial respiration. The analysis of the Rubisco large subunit sequence revealed the existence of some sites under adaptive evolution in branches with specific kinetic traits. Because Rubisco kinetics and their temperature dependency were species specific, they largely affected the assimilation potential of Rubisco from the different crops, especially under those conditions (i.e. low CO2 availability at the site of carboxylation and high temperature) inducing Rubisco-limited photosynthesis. As an example, at 25°C, Rubisco from Hordeum vulgare and Glycine max presented, respectively, the highest and lowest potential for CO2 assimilation at both high and low chloroplastic CO2 concentrations. In our opinion, this information is relevant to improve photosynthesis models and should be considered in future attempts to design more efficient Rubiscos.

U2 - 10.1104/pp.16.01846

DO - 10.1104/pp.16.01846

M3 - Journal article

VL - 171

SP - 2549

EP - 2561

JO - Plant Physiology

JF - Plant Physiology

SN - 0032-0889

IS - 4

ER -