This article considers molecular biological to global environment
work
on inorganic carbon acquisition processes in the algae sensu lato
(i.e. including the cyanobacteria).
At least 95% of the organic C in photolithotrophic algae has been
fixed by RUBISCO, while the remaining 5% or so has involved a
range of anaplerotic carboxylases. The catalytic characteristics of RUBISCO
show substantial phylogenetic variation; for some algal
RUBISCOs (those from cyanobacteria and, possibly, Dinophyta) the
kinetics of the carboxylase and oxygenase activity are such that net
photosynthetic CO2 fixation could not occur with diffusive
CO2 entry from air-equilibrium solution. In many other algae
the kinetics of
inorganic C assimilation are at variance with in vitro RUBISCO
kinetics, and, as in cyanobacteria and Dinophyta, a CO2-concentrating
mechanism is hypothesized. In many cases, the operation of such a
mechanism can be demonstrated as a higher internal than external
CO2 level during photosynthesis. In cases where such a
CO2 concentration difference cannot be demonstrated, mechanisms
may
produce CO2 from HCO3−
in an extracellular or intracellular compartment maintained at a lower
pH
than the cytosol and stroma but, with the
exception of the acid zones on the surface of certain characeans, such
mechanisms have not been experimentally verified. Reactions
downstream of RUBISCO include the polyphyletic metabolic processes which
deal with the products of RUBISCO oxygenase activity
subsequent to phosphoglycolate phosphatase; even when a CO2-concentrating
mechanism is present there is a minor C flux through
phosphoglycolate. There are important consequences for bioenergetics, for
the allocation among solutes of the low intracellular osmolarity
of some freshwater algae, and of the occurrence of CO2-concentrating
mechanisms or of diffusive CO2 entry. Some algae today are
inorganic C-limited for photosynthesis in their natural environment under
otherwise optimal conditions; even in these organisms it is not
clear that they are C-limited in nature. The chances of C limitation in
the
past would have been greater with the low CO2 concentrations
of the last glacial maximum 18,000 years ago, but would have been less
likely
to be C limited in the pre-pleistocene past, and in the
anthropogenically CO2-enriched future, than at present. The
evaluation of inorganic C acquisition mechanisms must be viewed against
the
general decrease in CO2, and increase in O2,
over the almost 4 billion years since RUBISCO-based CO2 fixation
evolved. It is not yet
clear whether (polypheletic) CO2 concentrating mechanisms or
(polyphyletic) mechanisms of glycolate metabolism evolved first.