Abstract
Oxygen uptake in the light (photorespiration) by the nitrogen-fixing blue-green alga
Anabaena cylindrica
may be up to twenty times the dark respiration rate. The rate of uptake in the light increases linearly with increasing
p
O
2
while dark respiration is saturated at a
p
O
2
near 0.05 atm. Photorespiration is inhibited rapidly and completely by DCMU (3 x 10
-5
m) but KCN (10
-4
m) has little effect. Exogenously supplied hydroxyethane sulphonate (10
-5
m), an inhibitor of glycollate oxidase activity, and glycollate do not affect respiration, although
14
C-labelled glycollate is assimilated in the light and in the dark. Photorespiration is highly sensitive to
p
CO
2
and to NaHCO
3
concentration and approaches true photosynthetic oxygen production at the CO
2
compensation point of 10 parts/10
6
. A CO
2
concentration of 0.02 atm completely inhibits photorespiration whereas true photosynthesis is scarcely affected. Conditions which stimulate photorespiration (low
p
CO
2
and high
p
O
2
) progressively inhibit acetylene reduction. In short-term studies DCMU inhibits acetylene reduction under conditions which stimulate photorespiration but has little effect under conditions which inhibit photorespiration. The results suggest that photorespiration and nitrogenase activity compete indirectly for reducing power and that at least one mechanism of oxygen inhibition of nitrogenase activity is via a stimulation of photorespiration.
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