
Overview of C4 carbon fixation
'C4 carbon fixation' is one of three methods, along with
C3 and
CAM photosynthesis, used by land
plants to "fix"
carbon dioxide (binding the gaseous molecules to dissolved compounds inside the plant) for
sugar production through
photosynthesis. Along with CAM photosynthesis, C4 fixation is an improvement over the simpler and more ancient C3 carbon fixation strategy used by most plants. Both methods overcome the tendency of
RuBisCO (the first enzyme in the
Calvin cycle) to
photorespire, or waste energy by using oxygen to break down carbon compounds to CO
2. C4 plants separate rubisco from atmospheric oxygen, fixing carbon in the
mesophyll cells and using
oxaloacetate and
malate to ferry the fixed carbon to rubisco and the rest of the Calvin cycle enzymes isolated in the bundle-sheath cells. The intermediate compounds both contain four carbon atoms, hence the name C4.
The pathway
The C4 pathway was discovered by
M. D. Hatch and C. R. Slack, two Australian researchers, in 1966, so it is sometimes called the Hatch-Slack pathway.
In
C3 plants, the first step in the
light-independent reactions of photosynthesis involves the fixation of CO
2 by the enzyme
RuBisCo into
3-phosphoglycerate. However, due to the dual
carboxylase /
oxygenase activity of
RuBisCo, an amount of the substrate is oxidized rather than carboxylated resulting in loss of substrate and consumption of energy, in what is known as
photorespiration.
In order to bypass the
photorespiration pathway , C
4 plants have developed a mechanism to efficiently deliver CO
2 to the
RuBisCO enzyme. They utilize their specific leaf anatomy where chloroplasts exist not only in the
mesophyll cells in the outer part of their leaves but in the
bundle sheath cells as well. Instead of direct fixation in the
calvin cycle, CO
2 is converted to a 4-carbon
organic acid which has the ability to regenerate CO
2 in the chloroplasts of the bundle sheath cells. Bundle sheath cells can then utilize this CO
2 to generate carbohydrates by the conventional
C3 pathway.
The first step in the pathway is the fixation of CO
2 by the enzyme
phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase which exists in the mesophyll cells:
:PEP carboxylase + PEP + CO
2 → oxaloacetate
PEP carboxylase has a lower
Km for CO
2—and hence higher affinity—than Rubisco. Furthermore, O
2 is a very poor substrate for this enzyme. Thus, at relatively low concentrations of CO
2, most CO
2 will be fixed by this pathway.
The product is usually converted to
malate, a simple
organic compound that is transported to the bundle-sheath cells surrounding a nearby
vein, where it is decarboxylated to release CO
2, which enters
Calvin cycle. The decarboxylation leaves
pyruvate, which is transported back to the
mesophyll and
phosphorylated, in a reaction catalysed by
pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase (PPDK), to regenerate
PEP at the cost of a
phosphorus group and one
ATP molecule.
Since every CO
2 molecule has to be fixed twice, the C
4 pathway is more energy-consuming than the C
3 pathway. The C
3 pathway requires 18 ATP for the synthesis of one molecule of glucose while the C
4 pathway requires 30 ATP. But since otherwise tropical plants lose more than half of photosynthetic carbon in
photorespiration, the C
4 pathway is an adaptive mechanism for minimizing the loss.
There are several variants of this pathway:
#The 4-carbon acid transported from mesophyll cells may be malate as above, or may be
aspartate.
#The 3-carbon acid transported back from bundle-sheath cells may be pyruvate as above, or
alanine.
#The enzyme which catalyses decarboxylation in bundle-sheath cells differs. In maize and sugarcane, the enzyme is NADP-malic enzyme, in millet, it is NAD-malic enzyme, and in ''
Panicum maximum'' it is PEP carboxykinase.
C4 Leaf Anatomy
The C4 plants possess a characteristic
leaf anatomy. Their vascular bundles are surrounded by two rings of cells. The inner ring, called Bundle Sheath Cells, contain
starch-rich
chloroplasts 'lacking grana' which differ from those in
mesophyll cells present as the outer ring. Hence, the chloroplasts are called dimorphic. This peculiar anatomy is called
Kranz Anatomy (Kranz-Crown/Halo). The primary function of the Kranz is to provide a site in which carbon dioxide can be concentrated around rubisco, thus reducing photorespiration. In order to facilitate the maintenance of a significantly higher carbon dioxide concentration in the bundle sheath compared to the mesophyll, the boundary layer of the Kranz has a low conductance to carbon dioxide, a property which may be enhanced by the presence of suberin.
Although most C4 plants exhibit Kranz anatomy, there are a number of species which operate a limited c4 cycle without any distinct bundle sheath tissue. ''Suaeda aralocaspica'' (formerly known as ''Borszczowia aralocaspica''), ''Bienertia cycloptera'' ''and Bienertia sinuspersici'' are terrestrial plants which inhabit dry, salty depressions in the deserts of south-east Asia. These plants have been shown to operate single-cell c4 carbon dioxide concentrating mechanisms which are unique amongst the known c4 mechanisms. Although the cytology of both species differ slightly, the basic principle is that fluid filled vacuoles are employed to separate the cell into to separate areas. Carboxylation enzymes in the cytosol can therefore be kept separate from decarboxylase enzymes and rubisco in the chloroplasts, and a diffusive barrier can be established between the chloroplasts (which contain rubisco) and the cytosol. This enables a bundle-sheath type area and a mesophyll type area to be established within a single cell. Although this does allow a limited c4 cycle to operate, it is relatively inefficient, with much leakage of CO2 from around rubisco occurring. There is also evidence for the non-Kranz aquatic macrophyte Hydrilla verticillata exhibiting inducible c4 photosynthesis under warm conditions, although the mechanism by which CO2 leakage from around rubisco is minimised is currently uncertain.
The Evolution and Advantages of the C4 Pathway
C4 plants have a competitive advantage over plants possessing the more common
C3 carbon fixation pathway under conditions of
drought, high
temperatures and
nitrogen or
carbon dioxide limitation. C4 carbon fixation has
evolved on at least 18 independent occasions in different groups of plants, so is an example of
convergent evolution. Plants which use C4 metabolism include
sugarcane,
maize,
sorghum,
finger millet,
amaranth, and
switchgrass. C4 plants arose during the
Cenozoic Era and did not become common until the
Miocene Period. Today they represent about 5% of Earth's plant biomass and 1% of its known plant species. These species are concentrated in the tropics where the high air temperature contributes to higher possible levels of oxygenase activity by Rubisco, which increases rates of photorespiration in C3 plants.
See also
★
C3 carbon fixation
★
CAM Photosynthesis