
The response of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate levels and CO(2) fixation rates in isolated, intact spinach chloroplasts to pyrophosphate, triose phosphates, dl-glyceraldehyde, O(2), catalase, and irradiance during photosynthesis has been studied. Within 1 minute in the light, a rapid accumulation of ribulose bisphosphate was measured in most preparations of intact chloroplasts, and this subsequently dropped as CO(2) fixation increased. Pyrophosphate, triose phosphates, and catalase increased CO(2) fixation and also the levels of ribulose bisphosphate. CO(2) fixation was inhibited by dl-glyceraldehyde and O(2) with corresponding decreases in ribulose bisphosphate. When the rate of photosynthesis decreased at limiting irradiances (low light), the level of ribulose bisphosphate in the chloroplast did not always decrease, suggesting that ribulose bisphosphate was not limiting CO(2) fixation under these conditions. When triose phosphates (fructose bisphosphate plus aldolase) were added to suspensions of chloroplasts at low irradiances, ribulose bisphosphate increased while CO(2) fixation decreased. These observations provide considerable evidence that high ribulose bisphosphate levels clearly are not solely sufficient to permit rapid rates of CO(2) fixation, but that factors other than ribulose bisphosphate concentration are overriding the control of photosynthesis.Isolated chloroplasts are capable of using carbon reserves to produce considerable ribulose bisphosphate. Upon illumination in the absence of CO(2) and O(2), intact chloroplasts produced up to 13 millimolar ribulose bisphosphate.
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