Single-rooted soybean leaves were used to investigate the suppression of photosynthesis through end-product inhibition during acclimation to CO(2 )enrichment. The photosynthetic activity was greater in leaves cultured at a CO(2) partial pressure of 70 Pa (high-CO(2)) than that in the leaves cultured at 35 Pa CO(2) (control) during the initial exposure to CO(2) enrichment but then decreased rapidly with a large accumulation of starch, to well below the level of the control leaves. The response curve of photosynthesis (A) to the intercellular CO(2) concentration (Ci) in the high-CO(2) leaves cultured long-term exhibited a significantly low initial gradient. However, on exposure to darkness for 48 h, the initial gradient of the A to Ci curve and rate of photosynthesis were completely restored, and almost all of the accumulated starch was expended. The ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase (RuBPcase) content and activation ratio in the high-CO(2) leaves remained high and roughly constant during the experiment, and were unchanged by the exposure, while this enzyme was slightly inactivated or inhibited after long-term exposure to CO(2) enrichment. The lower rate of photosynthesis in the high-CO(2) leaves could be linearly increased to a rate approaching the control level by increasing the external atmospheric [CO(2)], which thereby compensated for a reduced CO(2) transfer diffusion from the intercellular space to the stroma in chloroplasts. It is consequently concluded that, during the acclimation to CO(2 )enrichment, the suppression of photosynthesis through end-product inhibition was mainly caused by a lowering of the carboxylation efficiency of RuBPcase due to hindrance of CO(2) diffusion from the intercellular space to the stroma in chloroplasts brought about by the large accumulation of starch.
Microenvironmental factors and physiological parameters (such as water potential, activity of ribulose 1,5‐bisphosphate carboxylase (RuBPcase), levels of ribulose 1,5‐bisphosphate (RuBP), 3‐phosphoglyceric acid (PGA) and sucrose in leaves) affecting photosynthetic processes of the typical vernal species Erythronium japonicum Decne. were examined on the floor of a deciduous broad‐leaved Quercus mongolica forest (Q.m. stand) and on bare land left undisturbed for 7 years after forest clearing (bare stand). Daytime solar radiation and the air and leaf temperatures at the bare stand were significantly higher than those at the Q.m. stand. The relative air humidity was very low and did not differ much between the stands, whereas the leaf–air vapor pressure difference (VPD) at the bare stand was twice as high as that at the Q.m. stand. The water potential in leaves at the bare stand was lower than two times that at the Q.m. stand. Therefore, the aboveground parts of the plants at the bare stand were subjected to much more severe heat stress than those at the Q.m. stand. When these environmental factors observed at the bare stand were reproduced in an assimilation chamber, the rate of photosynthetic CO2 uptake, stomatal conductance and water potential in leaves were significantly low in comparison with those when the factors at the Q.m. stand were simulated. The internal CO2 partial pressure in leaves at the bare stand was considerably lower than that at the Q.m. stand. Consequently, the decrease in the photosynthetic rate of the plants at the bare stand was caused mainly by a decrease in stomatal conductance through a lowering of water potential due to subjection of the aboveground parts to much more severe heat stress than that at the Q.m. stand. The possibility that an inhibition of the photosynthetic carbon fixation metabolism induced by the decrease in water potential contributes to the reduction in photosynthetic CO2 uptake in the plants at the bare stand is also discussed in light of physiological characteristics such as the activity of RuBPcase and levels of PGA, RuBP and sucrose in the leaves.
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