Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/48288
Title: Effect of inhibitors of carbonic anhydrase activity on photosynthesis in the red alga Soliera filiformis (Gigartinales: Rhodophyta)
Authors: Gómez-Pinchetti, J. L. 
Ramazanov, Z.
García-Reina, Guillermo 
UNESCO Clasification: 251004 Botánica marina
241707 Algología (ficología)
Keywords: Photosynthesis
HCO3
Macroalgae
Inorganic Carbon
Canary Island
Issue Date: 1992
Publisher: 0025-3162
Journal: Marine Biology 
Abstract: The effect of light intensity, pH and carbonic anhydrase (CA) inhibitors on photosynthesis of the red marine macroalgae Solieria filiformis (Kützing) Gabrielson, collected from Taliarte (Gran Canaria, Canary Islands) in 1991, has been investigated. Plants taken from the sea (“wild phenotype”) developed spherical morphology (“ball phenotype”) after 2 mo culture in aerated tanks. The photosynthetic oxygen evolution in the wild phenotype was saturated at 100 μmol photons m-2s-1, while the “ball” phenotype displayed saturation at 200 μmol photons m-2s-1. The inhibitors of total CA activity (6-ethoxizolamide) and extracellular CA activity (dextran-bound sulfonamide) inhibited photosynthesis at pH 8.2, to 90 and 50% respectively, in both phenotypes. No inhibition of the photosynthetic oxygen evolution was detected at pH 6.5. CA activity was associated with both supernatant and pellet fractions of crude extracts of S. filiformis. The rate of alkalization of the medium by the algae was dependent on light intensity. We suggest that carbon dioxide is the general form of inorganic carbon transported across the plasmamembrane in S. filiformis. HCO3 transport into the cell takes place simultaneously by an “indirect” mechanism (dehydration to CO2 catalyzed by CAext) and by direct uptake. Extracellular (CAext) and intracellular (CAint) CAs are involved in the mechanisms of inorganic carbon assimilation by S. filiformis.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/48288
ISSN: 0025-3162
DOI: 10.1007/BF00349536
Source: Marine Biology [ISSN 0025-3162], v. 114, p. 335-339
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