Author:
Colman Brian,Huertas I. Emma,Bhatti Shabana,Dason Jeffrey S.
Abstract
Eukaryotic microalgae have developed CO2concentrating
mechanisms to maximise the concentration of CO2 at the
active site of Rubisco in response to the low CO2
concentrations in the external aquatic medium. In these organisms, the modes
of inorganic carbon (Ci) uptake are diverse, ranging from diffusive
CO2 uptake to the active transport of
HCO3 -and
CO2 and many have an external carbonic anhydrase to
facilitate HCO3- use. There is
unequivocal evidence for the mechanisms of Ci uptake in only about 25 species
of microalgae of the chlorophyte, haptophyte, rhodophyte, diatom, and
eustigmatophyte groups. Most of these species take up both
CO2 and
HCO3-, but the rates of uptake of
each of these substrates varies with the algal species. A few species take up
only one of the two forms of Ci, an adaptation that is not necessarily
correlated with their ecological distribution. Evidence is presented for the
active uptake of HCO3- and
CO2 in two marine
haptophytes,Isochrysis galbana Parke and
Dicrateria inornata Parke, and for active transport of
CO2 but lack of
HCO3- uptake in two marine
dinoflagellates, Amphidinium carteraeHulburt and
Heterocapsa oceanica Stein.
Subject
Plant Science,Agronomy and Crop Science
Cited by
150 articles.
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