2005
DOI: 10.1016/j.envexpbot.2004.02.008
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Diurnal changes of Rubisco in response to elevated CO2, temperature and nitrogen in wheat grown under temperature gradient tunnels

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Cited by 72 publications
(85 citation statements)
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“…It is conceivable that at low nitrogen, with low Rubisco amounts and activities, RuBP may be in excess and therefore bind tightly to any uncarbamylated Rubisco sites. Consistent with studies relating down-regulation of Rubisco in elevated CO 2 to a low plant nitrogen status (Riviere-Rolland et al 1996;Nakano et al 1997;Farage et al 1998;Geiger et al 1999;Ellsworth et al 2004;Pérez et al 2005), the loss of Rubisco amount in elevated CO 2 was part of a general decrease in soluble protein, although after anthesis there was a preferential loss of Rubisco.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 80%
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“…It is conceivable that at low nitrogen, with low Rubisco amounts and activities, RuBP may be in excess and therefore bind tightly to any uncarbamylated Rubisco sites. Consistent with studies relating down-regulation of Rubisco in elevated CO 2 to a low plant nitrogen status (Riviere-Rolland et al 1996;Nakano et al 1997;Farage et al 1998;Geiger et al 1999;Ellsworth et al 2004;Pérez et al 2005), the loss of Rubisco amount in elevated CO 2 was part of a general decrease in soluble protein, although after anthesis there was a preferential loss of Rubisco.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 80%
“…1) show that photosynthesis in plants grown in elevated CO 2 was limited by Rubisco activity up to CO 2 concentrations above those prevailing during growth. This was due, first, to the low stomatal conductance and intercellular CO 2 concentrations in the warm, dry environment of the experiments (del Pozo et al 2005), and, second, to the decrease in Rubisco activity with long-term growth in elevated CO 2 (Tables 1, 2) that has also been observed in preceding studies (Drake et al 1997;Long et al 2004;Pérez et al 2005). Accordingly, the smaller decrease in photosynthetic capacity caused by elevated CO 2 at warmer rather than ambient temperatures is attributable to changes in Rubisco-limited carboxylation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 65%
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“…Substantial efforts are made to study ecological and biological effect of climate warming and nitrogen deposition on plant growth and physiology (Nakaji et al 2001;Pérez et al 2005;Larssen et al 2006;Han et al 2009). It is generally accepted that warming always promotes plant photosynthetic capacity in cold regions (Han et al 2009).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Elevated CQ levels were reported to increase midday photosynthetic CO2 exchange rate and water use efficiency and lower transpiration and stomatal conductance (Vu, 2005), increase fine root production and mortality and turnover (Di[ustro et al, 2002), decrease the activity of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase (Rubisco) (Perez et al, 2005), and resulted in larger leaves on short shoots and more leaves per shoot length on long shoots (Hamerlynck et al, 2002).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%