4.8 Article

Different photorespiratory mechanisms in conifer leaves, where peroxisomes have intrinsically low catalase activity

Journal

PLANT JOURNAL
Volume 115, Issue 4, Pages 1004-1020

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/tpj.16276

Keywords

photorespiration; photosynthesis; conifer; catalase; non-enzymatic decarboxylation; peroxisome; C-1 metabolism; gymnosperm; angiosperm

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Research reveals that conifer gymnosperms have a different photorespiratory pathway compared to angiosperms, with a significant role played by the positive C-1 metabolism pathway.
Photorespiration is an essential metabolic mechanism associated with photosynthesis; however, little is known about the photorespiratory pathway of conifer gymnosperms. Metabolite analyses of the leaves of 27 tree species showed that the mean glycerate content in conifer leaves was lower than that in angiosperm leaves. We performed experiments where [C-13]-serine was fed to detached shoots of a conifer (Cryptomeria japonica), via the transpiration stream, and compared the labeling patterns of photorespiratory metabolites with those of an angiosperm tree (Populus nigra), because glycerate is produced from serine via hydroxypyruvate in peroxisomes. In P. nigra, hydroxypyruvate, glycerate and glycine were labeled with C-13, whereas in C. japonica, glycolate and a non-canonical photorespiratory metabolite, formate, were also labeled, suggesting that an H2O2-mediated non-enzymatic decarboxylation (NED) reaction occurs in C. japonica. We analyzed changes in the metabolite contents of leaves kept in the dark and leaves exposed to illuminated photorespiration-promoting conditions: a positive relationship between formate and serine levels in C. japonica implied that the active C-1-metabolism pathway synthesizes serine from formate. Leaf gas exchange analyses revealed that CO2 produced through NED was recaptured by chloroplasts. Database analysis of the peroxisomal targeting signal motifs of an H2O2-scavenging enzyme, catalase, derived from various species, including nine coniferous species, as well as analyses of peroxisomal fractions isolated from C. japonica and P. nigra leaves indicated that conifer peroxisomes had less catalase activity. These results suggest that NED and the subsequent C-1 metabolism are involved in the photorespiratory pathway of conifer leaves, where peroxisomes have intrinsically low catalase activity.

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