Abstract

Regulation of light harvesting in response to changes in light intensity, CO(2) and O(2) concentration was studied in C(4) species representing three different metabolic subtypes: Sorghum bicolor (NADP-malic enzyme), Amaranthus edulis (NAD-malic enzyme), and Panicum texanum (PEP-carboxykinase). Several photosynthetic parameters were measured on the intact leaf level including CO(2) assimilation rates, O(2) evolution, photosystem II activities, thylakoid proton circuit and dissipation of excitation energy. Gross rates of O(2) evolution (J(O)₂'), measured by analysis of chlorophyll fluorescence), net rates of O(2) evolution and CO(2) assimilation responded in parallel to changes in light and CO(2) levels. The C(4) subtypes had similar energy requirements for photosynthesis since there were no significant differences in maximal quantum efficiencies for gross rates of O(2) evolution (average value = 0.072 O(2)/quanta absorbed, approximately 14 quanta per O(2) evolved). At saturating actinic light intensities, when photosynthesis was suppressed by decreasing CO(2), ATP synthase proton conductivity (g (H) (+)) responded strongly to changes in electron flow, decreasing linearly with J(O)₂', which was previously observed in C(3) plants. It is proposed that g (H) (+) is controlled at the substrate level by inorganic phosphate availability. The results suggest development of nonphotochemical quenching in C(4) plants is controlled by a decrease in g (H) (+), which causes an increase in proton motive force by restricting proton efflux from the lumen, rather than by cyclic or pseudocyclic electron flow.

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