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REDUCTION OF CARBON DIOXIDE COUPLED WITH THE OXYHYDROGEN REACTION IN ALGAE
1. Unicellular algae possessing a hydrogenase system (Scenedesmus and other species), and having been adapted by anaerobic incubation to the hydrogen metabolism, reduce oxygen to water according to the equation O(2) + 2H(2) → 2H(2)O. 2. The oxyhydrogen reaction proceeds undisturbed only in the prese...
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Formato: | Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
The Rockefeller University Press
1942
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Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2142057/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19873340 |
Sumario: | 1. Unicellular algae possessing a hydrogenase system (Scenedesmus and other species), and having been adapted by anaerobic incubation to the hydrogen metabolism, reduce oxygen to water according to the equation O(2) + 2H(2) → 2H(2)O. 2. The oxyhydrogen reaction proceeds undisturbed only in the presence of carbon dioxide, which simultaneously is reduced according to the equation CO(2) + 2H(2) → H(2)O + (CH(2)O) = (carbohydrate). 3. The maximum yield of the induced reduction is one-half molecule of carbon dioxide reduced for each molecule of oxygen absorbed. 4. Partial reactions are recognizable in the course of the formation of water and it is with the absorption of the second equivalent of hydrogen that the carbon dioxide reduction appears to be coupled. 5. The velocity of the reaction increases in proportion to the partial pressure of oxygen, but only up to a certain point where any excess of oxygen causes the inactivation of the hydrogenase system. The reaction then ends prematurely. 6. During the oxyhydrogen reaction little or no oxygen is consumed for normal respiratory processes. 7. Small concentrations of cyanide, affecting neither photosynthesis nor photoreduction in the same cells, first inhibit the induced reduction of carbon dioxide and then lead to a complete inactivation of the hydrogenase system. 8. Hydroxylamine, added after adaptation, has either no inhibitory effect at all, or prevents solely the induced reduction of carbon dioxide without inactivating the hydrogenase system. 9. Dinitrophenol prevents the dark reduction of carbon dioxide while the reduction of oxygen continues to the formation of water. 10. Glucose diminishes the absorption of hydrogen, probably in its capacity as a competing hydrogen donor. 11. The induced reduction of carbon dioxide can be described as an oxido-reduction similar to that produced photochemically in the same cells. |
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