[No authors listed]
Cellular exchange of carbon dioxide (COâ) is of extraordinary importance for life. Despite this significance, its molecular mechanisms are still unclear and a matter of controversy. In contrast to other living organisms, plants are physiologically limited by the availability of COâ. In most plants, net photosynthesis is directly dependent on COâ diffusion from the atmosphere to the chloroplast. Thus, it is important to analyze COâ transport with regards to its effect on photosynthesis. A mutation of the Arabidopsis thaliana AtPIP1;2 gene, which was characterized as a non-water transporting but COâ transport-facilitating aquaporin in heterologous expression systems, correlated with a reduction in photosynthesis under a wide range of atmospheric COâ concentrations. Here, we could demonstrate that the effect was caused by reduced COâ conductivity in leaf tissue. It is concluded that the AtPIP1;2 gene product limits COâ diffusion and photosynthesis in leaves.
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