Abstract

Photosynthetic uptake of inorganic carbon and regulation of photosynthetic CO2 affinity were investigated in Skeletonema costatum (Grev.) Cleve. The pH independence of K1/2(CO2) values indicated that algae grown at either ambient (12 μmol L-1) or low (3 μmol L-1) CO2 predominantly took up CO2 from the medium. The lower pH compensation point (9.12) and insensitivity of photosynthetic rate to di-isothiocyanatostilbene disulfonic acid (DIDS) indicated that the alga had poor capacity for direct HCO3- utilisation. Photosynthetic CO2 affinity is regulated by the concentration of CO2 rather than HCO3-, CO32- or total dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) in the medium. The response of photosynthetic CO2 affinity to changes in CO2 concentration was most sensitive within the range 3-48 μmol L-1 CO2. Light was required for the induction of photosynthetic CO2 affinity, but not for its repression, when cells were shifted between high (126 μmol L-1) and ambient (12 μmol L-1) CO2. The time needed for cells grown at high CO2 (126 μmol L-1) to fully develop photosynthetic CO2 affinity at ambient CO2 was approximately 2 h, but acclimation to low or very low CO2 levels (3 and 1.3 μmol L-1, respectively) took more than 10 h. Cells grown at low CO2 (3 μmol L-1) required approximately 10 h for repression of all photosynthetic CO2 affinity when transferred to ambient or high CO2 (12 or 126 μmol L-1, respectively), and more than 10 h at very high CO2 (392 μmol L-1).

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