4.8 Article

Characteristics of C4 photosynthesis in stems and petioles of C3 flowering plants

Journal

NATURE
Volume 415, Issue 6870, Pages 451-454

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/415451a

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Most plants are known as C-3 plants because the first product of photosynthetic CO2 fixation is a three-carbon compound(1). C-4 plants, which use an alternative pathway in which the first product is a four-carbon compound, have evolved independently many times and are found in at least 18 families(2,3). In addition to differences in their biochemistry, photosynthetic organs of C-4 plants show alterations in their anatomy and ultrastructure(4). Little is known about whether the biochemical or anatomical characteristics of C-4 photosynthesis evolved first. Here we report that tobacco, a typical C-3 plant, shows characteristics of C-4 photosynthesis in cells of stems and petioles that surround the xylem and phloem, and that these cells are supplied with carbon for photosynthesis from the vascular system and not from stomata. These photosynthetic cells possess high activities of enzymes characteristic of C-4 photosynthesis, which allow the decarboxylation of four-carbon organic acids from the xylem and phloem, thus releasing CO2 for photosynthesis. These biochemical characteristics of C-4 photosynthesis in cells around the vascular bundles of stems of C-3 plants might explain why C-4 photosynthesis has evolved independently many times.

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