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http://hdl.handle.net/10553/1185
Title: | Light control of the respiration of exogenous glycerol in the red macroalga Grateloupia doryphora | Authors: | Robaina, R. R. García-Jiménez, P. Brito, Isidro Luque-Escalona, Angel |
Keywords: | Algas rojas | Issue Date: | 1995 | Journal: | European Journal of Phycology | Abstract: | Heterotrophic activity in macroalgae has been little studied, but the red macroalga Grateloupia doryphora is known to grow in light at a higher rate in a glycerol-containing medium than in seawater. The effects of 0.1 IM exogenous glycerol in seawater (SW90-gly) on the respiration rate of G. doryphora and the role played by light were investigated The algae pretreated for 2h in the light and in SW90-gly evolved oxygen and fixed carbon dioxide ((HCO3-)-C-14), but also evolved radioactive (CO2)-C-14 from [C-14]glycerol. The rate of oxygen evolution was lower than that of samples in seawater, due to a high respiration rate and/or a partial inhibition of photosynthesis induced by glycerol. In contrast, the rate of inorganic carbon fixation was higher in SW90-gly than in control samples in seawater, suggesting that non-photosynthetic patterns were operating. In darkness, after pretreatment in the light in SW90-gly, samples showed a high oxygen uptake rate just after the light was turned off. Twenty minutes of darkness were enough to decrease this high respiration rate to that of samples in seawater. The oxygen uptake observed in all experiments with glycerol was mitochondrial as it was inhibited by potassium cyanide and salicylhydroxamic acid (SHAM). Pretreatment of samples in the light in SW90-gly with the photosynthetic inhibitor DCMU did not inhibit ensuing dark respiration, thus providing evidence for a non-photosynthetic effect of the light. The highest dark respiration rate was observed after the samples were pretreated in monochromatic blue light in glycerol-containing media. | URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10553/1185 | ISSN: | 0967-0262 | DOI: | 10.1080/09670269500650841 | Source: | European Journal of Phycology[ISSN 0967-0262],v. 30, p. 81-86 |
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