Dark respiration rates are not determined by differences in
mitochondrial capacity, abundance and ultrastructure in
C4 leaves
Abstract
Our understanding of the regulation of respiration in C4
plants, where mitochondria play different roles in the different types
of C4 photosynthetic pathway, remains limited. We
examined how leaf dark respiration rates (Rdark),
in the presence and absence of added malate, vary in monocots
representing the three classical biochemical types of C4
photosynthesis (NADP-ME, NAD-ME and PCK) using intact leaves and
extracted bundle sheath strands. In particular, we explored to what
extent Rdark are associated with mitochondrial
number, volume and ultrastructure. We found that the respiratory
response of NAD-ME and PCK type bundle sheath strands to added malate
was associated with differences in mitochondrial number, volume, and/or
ultrastructure, while NADP-ME type bundle sheath strands did not respond
to malate addition. In general, mitochondrial traits reflected the
contributions mitochondria make to photosynthesis in the three
C4 types. However, despite the obvious differences in
mitochondrial traits, no clear correlation was observed between these
traits and Rdark. We suggest that
Rdark is primarily driven by cellular maintenance
demands and not mitochondrial composition per se, in a manner
that is somewhat independent of mitochondrial organic acid cycling in
the light.