Abstract

The cyanobacterium Synechococcus (Anacystis nidulans strain L 1402-1) was grown at + 37 °C in 3.0 vol.% CO2. The effect of preillumination with white light on the subsequent dark 14CO2 fixation was studied under aerobic conditions at + 30 °C. The radioactive carbon first incoiporated into 3-phosphoglyceric acid was transferred during the later periods of dark 14CO2 fixation to phosphoenolpyruvate and aspartate. No labelling or a very low label in sugar monophosphates could be observed. During the dark/light transients the initial fixation product was mainly aspartate. The pattern of 14C-incorporation into photosynthetic products under steady state conditions (10 min photosynthesis) varied with the temperature during the experiments. The radioactive carbon was firstly incorporated into 3-phosphoglyceric acid. During the later periods of photosynthetic 14CO2 fixation an increased 14C-incorporation into aspartate and glutamate could be observed. Our findings were interpreted with operating of a phospho­enolpyruvate carboxylation besides the Calvin cycle.

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