作者
Jan Zarzycki, Seth D Axen, James N Kinney, Cheryl A Kerfeld
发表日期
2013/1/1
来源
Journal of experimental botany
卷号
64
期号
3
页码范围
787-798
出版商
Oxford University Press
简介
Plants rely on the Calvin–Benson (CB) cycle for CO2 fixation. The key carboxylase of the CB cycle is ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RubisCO). Efforts to enhance carbon fixation in plants have traditionally focused on RubisCO or on approaches that can help to remedy RubisCO’s undesirable traits: its low catalytic efficiency and photorespiration. Towards reaching the goal of improving plant photosynthesis, cyanobacteria may be instrumental. Because of their evolutionary relationship to chloroplasts, they represent ideal model organisms for photosynthesis research. Furthermore, the molecular understanding of cyanobacterial carbon fixation provides a rich source of strategies that can be exploited for the bioengineering of chloroplasts. These strategies include the cyanobacterial carbon concentrating mechanism (CCM), which consists of active and passive transporter systems for inorganic …
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学术搜索中的文章
J Zarzycki, SD Axen, JN Kinney, CA Kerfeld - Journal of experimental botany, 2013