Abstract
Potential competition between CO2 and NO2 photoassimilation for photogenerated reductant (e.g. reduced ferredoxin and NADPH) was examined employing isolates of mesophyll cells and intact chloroplasts derived from mature `source' spinach leaves. Variations in the magnitude of incident light energy were used to manipulate the supply of reductant in situ within chloroplasts. Leaf cell and plastid isolates were fed with saturating CO2 and/or NO2 to produce the highest demand for reductant by CO2 and/or NO2 assimilatory processes (enzymes). Even in the presence of CO2 fixation, NO2 reduction in intact leaf cell isolates as well as plastid isolates was maximal at light energies as low as 50 to 200 microeinsteins per second per square meter. Simultaneously, 500 to 800 microeinsteins per second per square meter were required to support maximal CO2 assimilation. Regardless of the magnitude of the incident light energy, CO2 assimilation did not repress NO2 reduction, nor were these two processes mutually repressed. These observations have been interpreted to mean that reduced ferredoxin levels in situ in the plastids of mature source leaf mesophyll cells were adequate to supply the concurrent maximal demands exerted by enzymes associated with CO2 as well as with inorganic nitrogen photoassimilation.