Abstract
The biphasic reaction course, fallover, of carboxylation catalysed by ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RuBisCO) has been known as a characteristic of the enzyme from higher land plants. Fallover consists of hysteresis in the reaction seen during the initial several minutes and a very slow suicide inhibition by inhibitors formed from the substrate ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP). This study examined the relationship between occurrence of fallover and non-catalytic RuBP-binding sites, and the putative hysteresis-inducible sites (Lys-21 and Lys-305 of the large subunit in spinach RuBisCO) amongst RuBisCOs of a wide variety of photosynthetic organisms. Fallover could be detected by following the course of the carboxylase reaction at 1 mM RuBP and the non-catalytic binding sites by alleviation of fallover at 5 mM RuBP. RuBisCO from Euglena gracilis showed the same linear reaction course at both RuBP concentrations, indicating an association between an absence of fallover and an absence of the non-catalytic binding sites. This was supported by the results of an equilibrium binding assay for this enzyme with a transition state analogue. Green macroalgae and non-green algae contained the plant-type, fallover enzyme. RuBisCOs from Conjugatae, Closterium ehrenbergii, Gonatozygon monotaenium and Netrium digitus, showed a much smaller decrease in activity at 1 mM RuBP than the spinach enzyme and the reaction courses of these enzymes at 5 mM RuBP were almost linear. RuBisCO of a primitive type Conjugatae, Mesotaenium caldariorum, showed the same linear course at both RuBP concentrations. Sequencing of rbcL of these organisms indicated that Lys-305 was changed into arginine with Lys-21 conserved.
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Uemura, K., Tokai, H., Higuchi, T., Murayama, H., Yamamoto, H., Enomoto, Y., … Yokota, A. (1998). Distribution of fallover in the carboxylase reaction and fallover-inducible sites among ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenases of photosynthetic organisms. Plant and Cell Physiology, 39(2), 212–219. https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordjournals.pcp.a029359
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