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The possible evolution and future of CO2-concentrating mechanisms

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
Volume 68, Issue 14, Pages 3701-3716

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jxb/erx110

Keywords

Algae; cyanobacteria; CO2-concentrating mechanisms; CO2 diffusion; evolution; Rubisco

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Funding

  1. Royal Society Dorothy Hodgkin Fellowship

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CO2-concentrating mechanisms (CCMs), based either on active transport of inorganic carbon (biophysical CCMs) or on biochemistry involving supplementary carbon fixation into C-4 acids (C-4 and CAM), play a major role in global primary productivity. However, the ubiquitous CO2-fixing enzyme in autotrophs, Rubisco, evolved at a time when atmospheric CO2 levels were very much higher than today and O-2 was very low and, as CO2 and O-2 approached (by no means monotonically), today's levels, at some time subsequently many organisms evolved a CCM that increased the supply of CO2 and decreased Rubisco oxygenase activity. Given that CO2 levels and other environmental factors have altered considerably between when autotrophs evolved and the present day, and are predicted to continue to change into the future, we here examine the drivers for, and possible timing of, evolution of CCMs. CCMs probably evolved when CO2 fell to 2-16 times the present atmospheric level, depending on Rubisco kinetics. We also assess the effects of other key environmental factors such as temperature and nutrient levels on CCM activity and examine the evidence for evolutionary changes in CCM activity and related cellular processes as well as limitations on continuity of CCMs through environmental variations.

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