4.5 Article

The balance between RuBP carboxylation and RuBP regeneration: a mechanism underlying the interspecific variation in acclimation of photosynthesis to seasonal change in temperature

Journal

FUNCTIONAL PLANT BIOLOGY
Volume 32, Issue 10, Pages 903-910

Publisher

C S I R O PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1071/FP05024

Keywords

activation energy; interspecific variation; J(max); temperature acclimation; V-cmax

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The ratio of the capacities of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) regeneration to RuBP carboxylation (J(max)/V-cmax) ( measured at a common temperature) increases in some species when they are grown at lower temperatures, but does not increase in other species. To investigate the mechanism of interspecific difference in the response of J(max) /V-cmax to growth temperature, we analysed the temperature dependence of V-cmax and Jmax in Polygonum cuspidatum and Fagus crenata with the Arrhenius function. P. cuspidatum had a higher ratio of J(max) /V-cmax in spring and autumn than in summer, while F. crenata did not show such change. The two species had a similar activation energy for V-cmax (E-aV) across seasons, but P. cuspidatum had a higher activation energy for J(max) (E-aJ) than F. crenata. Reconstruction of the temperature response curve of photosynthesis showed that plants with an inherently higher E-aJ /E-aV (P. cuspidatum) had photosynthetic rates that were limited by RuBP regeneration at low temperatures and limited by RuBP carboxylation at high temperatures, while plants with an inherently lower E-aJ / E-aV ( F. crenata) had photosynthetic rates that were limited solely by RuBP carboxylation over the range of temperatures. These results indicate that the increase in J(max) / V-cmax at low growth temperatures relieved the limitation of RuBP regeneration on the photosynthetic rate in P. cuspidatum, but that such change in J(max) / V-cmax would not improve the photosynthetic rate in F. crenata. We suggest that whether or not the J(max) / V-cmax ratio changes with growth temperature is attributable to interspecific differences in E-aJ / E-aV between species.

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