A mathematical model is presented, which describes the distribution of inorganic carbon (Ci) between the species CaCO3, CaHCO + 3 , CO 2 - 3 , HCO - 3 and CO2 in the cytosol of a high CO2-requiring mutant of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC 6803, which lacks carboxysomes. The model assumes that
Uptake and utilization of inorganic carbon by cyanobacteria
โ Scribed by John Pierce; Tatsuo Omata
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1988
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 837 KB
- Volume
- 16
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0166-8595
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โฆ Synopsis
In the cyanobacteria, mechanisms exist that allow photosynthetic CO 2 reduction to proceed efficiently even at very low levels of inorganic carbon. These inducible, active transport mechanisms enable the cyanobacteria to accumulate large internal concentrations of inorganic carbon that may be up to 1000-fold higher than the external concentration. As a result, the external concentration of inorganic carbon required to saturate cyanobacterial photosynthesis in vivo is orders of magnitude lower than that required to saturate the principal enzyme (ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase) involved in the fixation reactions. Since CO2 is the substrate for carbon fixation, the cyanobacteria somehow perform the neat trick of concentrating this small, membrane permeable molecule at the site of CO 2 fixation. In this review, we will describe the biochemical and physiological experiments that have outlined the phenomenon of inorganic carbon accumulation, relate more recent genetic and molecular biological observations that attempt to define the constituents involved in this process, and discuss a speculative theory that suggests a unified view of inorganic carbon utilization by the cyanobacteria.
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