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1.
Cold-acclimation (CA) of the halotolerant alga Dunaliella was inhibited by light and by high salt. CA was associated with enhanced resistance to freezing in saline growth solutions, as manifested by protection of photosynthetic oxygen evolution and by reduced permeabilisation of the plasma membrane. Oxygen evolution activity in isolated chloroplasts was not affected by freezing, but was inhibited by high salt and the inhibition could be reversed or protected by glycerol. The activity of chloroplasts from cold-acclimated cells was more resistant to salt than of non-acclimated cells. Electron transport measurements in chloroplasts indicated that high salt inhibited PS-II, but not PS-I electron transport. High salt also inhibited PS-II thermoluminescence (TL) activity in chloroplasts. Similar inhibition of PS-II TL was observed by freezing intact cells in saline solutions. Chloroplasts from cold-acclimated cells had enhanced resistance to inhibition of PS-II electron transport and of PS-II TL by high salt. These results suggest that inhibition of oxygen evolution upon freezing Dunaliella cells may result from inactivation of PS-II due to massive influx of salt and loss of glycerol. The enhanced freeze-resistance of cold-acclimated cells to inhibition of oxygen evolution can be accounted for partly by protection of PS-II against high salt.  相似文献   

2.
New fluorescence parameters for monitoring photosynthesis in plants   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Chlorophyll fluorescence measurements have a wide range of applications from basic understanding of photosynthesis functioning to plant environmental stress responses and direct assessments of plant health. The measured signal is the fluorescence intensity (expressed in relative units) and the most meaningful data are derived from the time dependent increase in fluorescence intensity achieved upon application of continuous bright light to a previously dark adapted sample. The fluorescence response changes over time and is termed the Kautsky curve or chlorophyll fluorescence transient. Recently, Strasser and Strasser (1995) formulated a group of fluorescence parameters, called the JIP-test, that quantify the stepwise flow of energy through Photosystem II, using input data from the fluorescence transient. The purpose of this study was to establish relationships between the biochemical reactions occurring in PS II and specific JIP-test parameters. This was approached using isolated systems that facilitated the addition of modifying agents, a PS II electron transport inhibitor, an electron acceptor and an uncoupler, whose effects on PS II activity are well documented in the literature. The alteration to PS II activity caused by each of these compounds could then be monitored through the JIP-test parameters and compared and contrasted with the literature. The known alteration in PS II activity of Chenopodium album atrazine resistant and sensitive biotypes was also used to gauge the effectiveness and sensitivity of the JIP-test. The information gained from the in vitro study was successfully applied to an in situ study. This is the first in a series of four papers. It shows that the trapping parameters of the JIP-test were most affected by illumination and that the reduction in trapping had a run-on effect to inhibit electron transport. When irradiance exposure proceeded to photoinhibition, the electron transport probability parameter was greatly reduced and dissipation significantly increased. These results illustrate the advantage of monitoring a number of fluorescence parameters over the use of just one, which is often the case when the FV/FM ratio is used. This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

3.
Sulfur deprivation of algal cultures selectively and partially inactivates photosystem II (PSII)-catalyzed O2 evolution, induces anaerobiosis and hydrogenase expression, and results in sustained H2 photoproduction for several days. We show that re-addition of limiting amounts of sulfate (1–10 μM final concentration) to the cultures during the H2-production phase temporarily reactivates PSII photochemical and O2-evolution activity and re-establishes higher rates of electron transport through the photosynthetic electron transport chain. The reactivation of PSII occurs by de novo D1 protein synthesis, but does not result in the re-establishment of aerobic conditions in the reactor, detectable by dissolved-O2 sensors. However, concomitant H2 photoproduction is inhibited, possibly due to excessive intra-cellular levels of photosynthetically-evolved O2. The partial recovery of electron transport rates correlates with the re-oxidation of the plastoquinone (PQ) pool, as observed by pulse-amplitude modulated (PAM) and fluorescence-induction measurements. These results show that the presence of a more oxidized PQ pool releases some of the down-regulation of electron transport caused by the anaerobic conditions.  相似文献   

4.
Jin  Ming-Xian  Mi  Hualing 《Photosynthetica》2002,40(2):161-164
Kinetics of non-photochemical reduction of the photosynthetic intersystem electron transport chain by exogenous NADPH was examined in osmotically lysed spinach chloroplasts by chlorophyll (Chl) fluorescence measurements under anaerobic condition. Upon the addition of NADPH, the apparent F0 increased sigmoidally, and the value of the maximal slope was calculated to give the reduction rate of plastoquinone (PQ) pool. Application of 5 µM antimycin A lowered significantly both the ceiling and the rate of the NADPH-induced Chl fluorescence increase, while the suppressive effect of 10 µM rotenone was slighter. This indicated that dark reduction of the PQ pool by NADPH in spinach chloroplasts under O2-limitation condition could be attributed mainly to the pathway catalysed sequentially by ferredoxin-NADP+ oxidoreductase (FNR) and ferredoxin-plastoquinone reductase (FQR), rather than that mediated by NAD(P)H dehydro- genase (NDH).  相似文献   

5.
This study aimed to examine the involvement of oxidative damage in amphotericin B (AmB) activity against Candida albicans using the superoxide (O2-) generator paraquat (PQ). The effects of PQ on AmB activities against growth, viability, membrane permeability and respiration were examined in a wild-type parent strain (K) and a respiration-deficient mutant (KRD-19) since PQ-induced superoxide generation depends on respiration. In the parent strain, the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) of AmB, 0.25 microg/ml, tested with a liquid culture was lowered to 0.025 microg/ml by 1 mM PQ. Such a PQ-induced decrease in the MIC value of AmB was minimal in the mutant. Similar PQ-induced enhancement of AmB activity toward the parent strain was also observed with growth on an agar medium. In viability tests, when candidal cells were exposed to AmB (0.1 microg/ml) for I h, the lethality of AmB was enhanced by 1 mM PQ only in the parent strain. Exogenous superoxide dismutase and catalase failed to diminish the enhancing effect of PQ on the growth inhibitory activity of AmB in the parent strain, suggesting an interaction between superoxide and AmB in candidal cells. The enhancement of AmB activity by PQ, observed preferentially in the wild-type strain, can be explained by extensive superoxide generation depending on respiration. These results suggest that oxidative damage induced by superoxide is involved in AmB activity against C. albicans.  相似文献   

6.
Characteristics of thermoluminescence glow curves were compared in three types of Euglena cells: (i) strictly autotrophic, Cramer and Myers cells; (ii) photoheterotrophic cells sampled from an exponentially growing culture containing lactate as substrate repressing the photosynthetic activity; (iii) semiautotrophic cells, sampled when the lactate being totally exhausted, the photosynthesis was enhanced.In autotrophic and semiautotrophic cells, composite curves were observed after series of two or more actinic flashes fired at –10°C, which can be deconvoluted into a large band peaking in the range 12–22°C and a smaller one near 40°C, This second band presents the characteristics of a typical B band (due to S2/3QB - recombination), whereas the first one resembled the band, shifted by -15–20°C, which is observed in herbicide resistant plants. The amplitude of this major band, which was in all cases very low after one flash, exhibited oscillations of period four but rapidly damping, with maxima after two and six flashes. In contrast, photoheterotrophic Euglena displayed single, non-oscillating curves with maxima in the range 5–10°C.In autotrophic and semiautotrophic cells, oxidizing pretreatments by either a preillumination with one or more (up to twenty-five) flashes, or a far-red preillumination in the presence of methylviologen, followed by a short dark period, induced thermoluminescence bands almost single and shifted by +3–5°C, or +12°C, respectively. In autotrophic cells, far-red light plus methyl viologen treatment induced a band peaking at 31°C, as in isolated thylakoids from Euglena or higher plants, while it had barely any effect in photoheterotrophic cells.Due to metabolic activities in dark-adapted cells, a reduction of redox groups at the donor and acceptor sides of PS II dark-adapted cells is supposed to occur. Two different explanations can be proposed to explain such a shift in the position of the main band in dark-adapted autotrophic control. The first explanation would be that in these reducing conditions a decreasing value of the equilibrium constant for the reaction: SnQA -QBSnQAQB -, would determine the shift of the main TL band towards low temperatures, as observed in herbicide resistant material. The second explanation would be that the main band would correspond to peak III already observed in vivo and assigned to S2/3QB 2- recombinations.Abbreviations CM Cramer and Myers - D1 a 32 kDa protein component of the PS II reaction center, psbA.gene product - D2 a 34 kDa protein component of the PS II reaction center, psbD gene product - FR lar-red illumination - Lexpo and Lstat cells from lactate culture samples at exponential and stationary phase of growth - MV methylviologen - pBQ parabenzoquinone - PQ plastoquinone - PS II photosystem II - QA primary quinone electron acceptor - QB secondary quinone electron acceptor - TL thermoluminescence  相似文献   

7.
Michel Havaux  Dominique Rumeau 《BBA》2005,1709(3):203-213
Far-red illumination of plant leaves for a few seconds induces a delayed luminescence rise, or afterglow, that can be measured with the thermoluminescence technique as a sharp band peaking at around 40-45 °C. The afterglow band is attributable to a heat-induced electron flow from the stroma to the plastoquinone pool and the PSII centers. Using various Arabidopsis and tobacco mutants, we show here that the electron fluxes reflected by the afterglow luminescence follow the pathways of cyclic electron transport around PSI. In tobacco, the afterglow signal relied mainly on the ferredoxin-quinone oxidoreductase (FQR) activity while the predominant pathway responsible for the afterglow in Arabidopsis involved the NAD(P)H dehydrogenase (NDH) complex. The peak temperature Tm of the afterglow band varied markedly with the light conditions prevailing before the TL measurements, from around 30 °C to 45 °C in Arabidopsis. These photoinduced changes in Tm followed the same kinetics and responded to the same light stimuli as the state 1-state 2 transitions. PSII-exciting light (leading to state 2) induced a downward shift while preillumination with far-red light (inducing state 1) caused an upward shift. However, the light-induced downshift was strongly inhibited in NDH-deficient Arabidopsis mutants and the upward shift was cancelled in plants durably acclimated to high light, which can perform normal state transitions. Taken together, our results suggest that the peak temperature of the afterglow band is indicative of regulatory processes affecting electron donation to the PQ pool which could involve phosphorylation of NDH. The afterglow thermoluminescence band provides a new and simple tool to investigate the cyclic electron transfer pathways and to study their regulation in vivo.  相似文献   

8.
The water-water cycle which may be helpful for dissipating the excitation pressure over electron transport chain and minimizing the risk of photoinhibition and photodamage was investigated in rice after 10-d P-deficient treatment. Net photosynthetic rate decreased under P-deficiency, thus the absorption of photon energy exceeded the energy required for CO2 assimilation. A more sensitive response of effective quantum yield of photosystem 2 (ΦPS2) to O2 concentration was observed in plants that suffered P starvation, indicating that more electrons were transported to O2 in the P-deficient leaves. The electron transport rate through photosystem 2 (PS 2) (Jf) was stable, and the fraction of electron transport rate required to sustain CO2 assimilation and photorespiration (Jg/Jf) was significantly decreased accompanied by an increase in the alternative electron transport (Ja/Jf), indicating that a considerable electron amount had been transported to O2 during the water-water cycle in the P-deficient leaves. However, the fraction of electron transport to photorespiration (Jo/Jf) was also increased in the P-deficient leaves and it was less sensitive than that of water-water cycle. Therefore, water-water cycle could serve as an efficient electron sink. The higher non-photochemical fluorescence quenching (qN) in the P-deficient leaves depended on O2 concentration, suggesting that the water-water cycle might also contribute to non-radiative energy dissipation. Hence, the enhanced activity of the water-water cycle is important for protecting photosynthetic apparatus under P-deficiency in rice.  相似文献   

9.
Respiration in cyanobacterial thylakoid membranes is interwoven with photosynthetic processes. We have constructed a range of mutants that are impaired in several combinations of respiratory and photosynthetic electron transport complexes and have examined the relative effects on the redox state of the plastoquinone (PQ) pool by using a quinone electrode. Succinate dehydrogenase has a major effect on the PQ redox poise, as mutants lacking this enzyme showed a much more oxidized PQ pool. Mutants lacking type I and II NAD(P)H dehydrogenases also had more oxidized PQ pools. However, in the mutant lacking type I NADPH dehydrogenase, succinate was essentially absent and effective respiratory electron donation to the PQ pool could be established after addition of 1 mM succinate. Therefore, lack of the type I NADPH dehydrogenase had an indirect effect on the PQ pool redox state. The electron donation capacity of succinate dehydrogenase was found to be an order of magnitude larger than that of type I and II NAD(P)H dehydrogenases. The reason for the oxidized PQ pool upon inactivation of type II NADH dehydrogenase may be related to the facts that the NAD pool in the cell is much smaller than that of NADP and that the NAD pool is fully reduced in the mutant without type II NADH dehydrogenase, thus causing regulatory inhibition. The results indicate that succinate dehydrogenase is the main respiratory electron transfer pathway into the PQ pool and that type I and II NAD(P)H dehydrogenases regulate the reduction level of NADP and NAD, which, in turn, affects respiratory electron flow through succinate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

10.
Illumination of the dark-incubated cells of Synechocystis PCC6803 caused recovery of both respiratory activity of oxygen uptake and PS I-cyclic electron flow, which was monitored by the dark reduction of P700+ in the presence of DCMU after a 50 ms pulse light (MT) under background far-red light, but the effects were much smaller in those of the mutant M55, which has an ndh-B defective gene. Activity of an NADPH-NBT oxidoreductase with a higher molecular mass (around 380 kDa), which was only found in wild type but not in M55, became evident after the dark-incubated cells were exposed to the light. Immuno-blotting analysis indicated that the NADPH-NBT oxidoreductase contains the NdhB subunit of NDH. The expression of NdhB decreased in dark-incubated cells and increased upon transfer of the cells back to light. These results indicate that an NADPH-specific NDH participates in the light-regulated cyclic electron transport around Photosystem I as well as in respiratory electron transport to the intersystem chain in Synechocystis 6803. This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

11.
In this work, we summarize results of computer simulation of electron and proton transport processes coupled to ATP synthesis in chloroplasts performed within the frames of a mathematical model developed as a system of differential equations for concentrations of electron carriers and hydrogen ion inside and outside the granal and stromal thylakoids. The model takes into account topological peculiarities and lateral heterogeneity of the chloroplast lamellar system. This allowed us to analyze the influence of restricted diffusion of protons inside small compartments of a chloroplast (e.g., in the narrow inter-thylakoid gap) on electron transport processes. The model adequately describes two modes of pH-dependent feedback control of electron transport associated with: (i) the acidification of the thylakoid lumen, which causes the slowing down of plastoquinol oxidation and stimulates an increase in dissipation of excess energy in PS2, and (ii) the alkalization of stroma, inducing the activation of the BBC (Bassham-Benson-Calvin) cycle and intensified consumption of ATP and NADPH. The influence of ATP on electron transport is mediated by modulation of the thylakoid membrane conductivity to protons through the ATP synthase complexes. We also analyze the contribution of alternative electron transport pathways to the maintenance of optimal balance between the energy donating and energy consuming stages of the light-induced photosynthetic processes.  相似文献   

12.
Three Synechocystis PCC 6803 strains with different levels of phycobilisome antenna-deficiency have been investigated for their impact on photosynthetic electron transport and response to environmental factors (i.e. light-quality, -quantity and composition of growth media). Oxygen yield and P700 reduction kinetic measurements showed enhanced linear electron transport rates—especially under photoautotrophic conditions—with impaired antenna-size, starting from wild type (WT) (full antenna) over ΔapcE- (phycobilisomes functionally dissociated) and Olive (lacking phycocyanin) up to the PAL mutant (lacking the whole phycobilisome). In contrast to mixotrophic conditions (up to 80% contribution), cyclic electron transport plays only a minor role (below 10%) under photoautotrophic conditions for all the strains, while linear electron transport increased up to 5.5-fold from WT to PAL mutant. The minor contribution of the cyclic electron transport was proportionally increased with the linear one in the ΔapcE and Olive mutant, but was not altered in the PAL mutant, indicating that upregulation of the linear route does not have to be correlated with downregulation of the cyclic electron transport. Antenna-deficiency involves higher linear electron transport rates by tuning the PS2/PS1 ratio from 1:5 in WT up to 1:1 in the PAL mutant. While state transitions were observed only in the WT and Olive mutant, a further ~30% increase in the PS2/PS1 ratio was achieved in all the strains by long-term adaptation to far red light (720 nm). These results are discussed in the context of using these cells for future H2 production in direct combination with the photosynthetic electron transport and suggest both Olive and PAL as potential candidates for future manipulations toward this goal. In conclusion, the highest rates can be expected if mutants deficient in phycobilisome antennas are grown under photoautotrophic conditions in combination with uncoupling of electron transport and an illumination which excites preferably PS1.  相似文献   

13.
Chlorophyll a fluorescence rise (O-J-I-P transient) was in literature simulated using models describing reactions occurring solely in photosystem II (PSII) and plastoquinone (PQ) pool as well as using complex models which described, in addition to the above, also subsequent electron transport occurring beyond the PQ pool. However, there is no consistency in general approach how to formulate a kinetic model and how to describe particular reactions occurring even in PSII only. In this work, simple kinetic PSII models are considered always with the same electron carriers and same type of reactions but some reactions are approached in different ways: oxygen evolving complex is considered bound to PSII or “virtually” separated from PSII; exchange of doubly reduced secondary quinone PSII electron acceptor, QB, with PQ molecule from the PQ pool is described by one second order reaction or by two subsequent reactions; and all possible reactions or only those which follow in logical order are considered. By combining all these approaches, eight PSII models are formulated which are used for simulations of the chlorophyll a fluorescence transients. It is shown that the different approaches can lead to qualitatively different results. The approaches are compared with other models found elsewhere in the literature and therefore this work can help the readers to better understand the other models and their results.  相似文献   

14.
Chlorophyll a fluorescence rise kinetics (from 50 μs to 1 s) were used to investigate the non-photochemical reduction of the plastoquinone (PQ) pool in osmotically broken spinach chloroplasts (Spinacia oleracea L.). Incubation of the chloroplasts in the presence of exogenous NADPH or NADH resulted in significant changes in the shape of the fluorescence transient reflecting an NAD(P)H-dependent accumulation of reduced PQ in the dark, with an extent depending on the concentration of NAD(P)H and the availability of oxygen; the dark reduction of the PQ pool was saturated at lower NAD(P)H concentrations and reached a higher level when the incubation took place under anaerobic conditions than when it occurred under aerobic conditions. Under both conditions NADPH was more effective than NADH in reducing PQ, however only at sub-saturating concentrations. Neither antimycin A nor rotenone were found to alter the effect of NAD(P)H. The addition of mercury chloride to the chloroplast suspension decreased the NAD(P)H-dependent dark reduction of the PQ pool, with the full inhibition requiring higher mercury concentrations under anaerobic than under aerobic conditions. This is the first time that this inhibitory role of mercury is reported for higher plants. The results demonstrate that in the dark the redox state of the PQ pool is regulated by the reduction of PQ via a mercury-sensitive NAD(P)H-PQ oxidoreductase and the reoxidation of reduced PQ by an O2-dependent pathway, thus providing additional evidence for the existence of a chlororespiratory electron transport chain in higher plant chloroplasts. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

15.
Variable chlorophyll a (Chl a) fluorescence is composed of a photochemical and a thermal phases of similar amplitudes. The photochemical phase can be induced by a saturating single turnover flash (STF) and reflects the reduction of the Photosystem II (PS II) QA primary electron acceptor. The thermal phase requires multiple turnover flash (MTF) and is somehow related to the reduction of the plastoquinone (PQ) molecules. This article aimed to determine the relative contributions of the QB-bound and the free oxidized PQ molecules to the thermal phase of Chl a fluorescence. We thus measured the interactive effects of exogenous PQ (PQex), of an inhibitor (DCMU) acting at the QB site of PS II and of an artificial quencher, 2-methyl-1,4-naphtoquinone, on Chl a fluorescence levels induced by STF (FF) and MTF (FM) in spinach thylakoids. We observed that: (1) the incorporation of PQex in thylakoids stimulated photosynthetic electron transport but barely affected FF and FM in the absence of DCMU; (2) DCMU significantly increased the amplitude of FF but slightly quenched FM; (3) 2-methyl-1,4-naphtoquinone quenched FM to a larger-extent than FF; (4) DCMU increased the quenching effects of PQex on FF and FM and also, of methyl-1,4-naphtoquinone on FF. These results indicate that: (1) the QB-bound and the free PQ molecules contribute to about 56% and 25%, respectively, to the thermal phase Chl a fluorescence in dark-adapted thylakoids; and (2) the thermal phase of Chl a fluorescence is more susceptible than the photochemical phase to the non-photochemical quenching effect of oxidized quinones. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

16.
We have isolated and characterized two nuclear mutations which affect plastoquinone accumulation in maize. The mutations, hcf103 and hcf114, modify the same genetic locus. Plants homozygous for either mutant allele exhibit reduced PS II electron transport activity, reduced variable chlorophyll fluorescence and reduced delayed fluorescence yield. In these ways, hcf103 and hcf114 resemble previously described PS II mutants which lack stably assembled PS II reaction center complexes. However, unlike most previously described PS II mutants, hcf103 and hcf114 possess stable membrane-associated PS II complexes. Plastoquinone (PQ-9), which performs a variety of redox functions essential to normal non-cyclic electron transport, is severely depleted in the mutants. The lack of PS II electron transport activity is attributed to the absence of PQ-9. This is the first report of mutants deficient in PQ which do not also suffer serious pleiotropic defects.Abbreviations PS II Photosystem II - PQ plastoquinone - QA and QB primary and secondary stable electron acceptors of PS II - HPLC high pressure liquid chromatography - LDS-PAGE lithium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - TLC thin layer chromatography  相似文献   

17.
In addition to linear electron transport from water to NADP+, alternative electron transport pathways are believed to regulate photosynthesis. In the two routes of photosystem I (PSI) cyclic electron transport, electrons are recycled from the stromal reducing pool to plastoquinone (PQ), generating additional ΔpH (proton gradient across thylakoid membranes). Plastid terminal oxidase (PTOX) accepts electrons from PQ and transfers them to oxygen to produce water. Although both electron transport pathways share the PQ pool, it is unclear whether they interact in vivo. To investigate the physiological link between PSI cyclic electron transport‐dependent PQ reduction and PTOX‐dependent PQ oxidation, we characterized mutants defective in both functions. Impairment of PSI cyclic electron transport suppressed leaf variegation in the Arabidopsis immutans (im) mutant, which is defective in PTOX. The im variegation was more effectively suppressed in the pgr5 mutant, which is defective in the main pathway of PSI cyclic electron transport, than in the crr2‐2 mutant, which is defective in the minor pathway. In contrast to this chloroplast development phenotype, the im defect alleviated the growth phenotype of the crr2‐2 pgr5 double mutant. This was accompanied by partial suppression of stromal over‐reduction and restricted linear electron transport. We discuss the function of the alternative electron transport pathways in both chloroplast development and photosynthesis in mature leaves.  相似文献   

18.
Xiao-Min Gong  Tal Lev  Chanoch Carmeli 《BBA》2009,1787(2):97-104
Photosystem I (PS I) mediates light-induced electron transfer from P700 through a chlorophyll a, a quinone and a [4Fe-4S] iron-sulfur cluster FX, located on the core subunits PsaA/B to iron-sulfur clusters FA/B on subunit PsaC. Structure function relations in the native and in the mutant (psaB-C565S/D566E) of the cysteine ligand of FX cluster were studied by X-ray absorption spectroscopy (EXAFS) and transient spectroscopy. The structure of FX was determined in PS I lacking clusters FA/B by interruption of the psaC2 gene of PS I in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp PCC 6803. PsaC-deficient mutant cells assembled the core subunits of PS I which mediated electron transfer mostly to the phylloquinone. EXAFS analysis of the iron resolved a [4Fe-4S] cluster in the native PsaC-deficient PS I. Each iron had 4 sulfur and 3 iron atoms in the first and second shells with average Fe-S and Fe-Fe distances of 2.27 Å and 2.69 Å, respectively. In the C565S/D566E serine mutant, one of the irons of the cluster was ligated to three oxygen atoms with Fe-O distance of 1.81 Å. The possibility that the structural changes induced an increase in the reorganization energy that consequently decreased the rate of electron transfer from the phylloquinone to FX is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Characteristics of thermoluminescence (TL) glow curves were studied in thylakoids (isolated from pea leaves) or in intact pea leaves after an exposure to very high light for 2 min in the TL device. The inhibition of photosynthesis was detected as decreases of oxygen evolution rates and/or of variable fluorescence.In thylakoids exposed to high light, then dark adapted for 5 min, a flash regime induced TL glow curves which can be interpreted as corresponding to special B bands since: 1) they can be fitted by a single B band (leaving a residual band at –5°C) with a lower activation energy and a shift of the peak maximum by –5 to –6°C and, 2) the pattern of oscillation of their amplitudes was normal with a period of 4 and maxima on flashes 2 and 6. During a 1 h dark adaptation, no recovery of PS II activity occurred but the shift of the peak maximum was decreased to –1 to –2°C, while the activation energy of B bands increased. It is supposed that centers which remained active after the photoinhibitory treatment were subjected to reversible and probably conformational changes.Conversely, in intact leaves exposed to high light and kept only some minutes in the dark, TL bands induced by a flash regime were composite and could be deconvoluted into a special B band peaking near 30°C and a complex band with maximum at 2–5°C. In the case of charging bands by one flash, this low temperature band was largely decreased in size after a 10 min dark adaptation period; parallely, an increase of the B band type component appeared. Whatever was the flash number, bands at 2–5°C were suppressed by a short far red illumination given during the dark adaptation period and only remained a main band a 20°C; therefore, the origin of the low temperature band was tentatively ascribed to recombinations in centers blocked in state S2QA QB 2–. In vivo, the recovery of a moderately reduced state in the PQ pool, after an illumination, would be slow and under the dependence of a poising mechanism, probably involving an electron transfer between cytosol and chloroplasts or the so-called chlororespiration process.Abbreviations Ea- activation energy - FR- far-red - MV- methylviologen - pBQ- p-benzoquinone - PQ- plastoquinone - PS II- Photosystem II - QA- primary quinone electron acceptor of PS II - QB- secondary quinone electron acceptor of PS II - TL- thermoluminescence  相似文献   

20.
(1) The electron transport system of heterotrophically dark-grown Rhodobacter capsulatus was investigated using the wild-type strain MT1131 and the phototrophic non-competent (Ps-) mutant MT-GS18 carrying deletions of the genes for cytochrome c 1 and b of the bc 1 complex and for cytochrome c 2. (2) Spectroscopic and thermodynamic data demonstrate that deletion of both bc 1 complex and cyt. c 2 still leaves several haems of c- and b-type with Em7.0 of +265 mV and +354 mV at 551–542 nm, and +415 mV and +275 mV at 561–575 nm, respectively. (3) Analysis of the oxidoreduction kinetic patterns of cytochromes indicated that cyt. b 415 and cyt. b 275 are reduced by either ascorbate-diaminodurene or NADH, respectively. (4) Growth on different carbon and nitrogen sources revealed that the membrane-bound electron transport chain of both MT1131 and MT-GS18 strains undergoes functional modifications in response to the composition of the growth medium used. (5) Excitation of membrane fragments from cells grown in malate minimal medium by a train of single turnover flashes of light led to a rapid oxidation of 32% of the membrane-bound c-type haem complement. Conversely, membranes prepared from peptone/yeast extract grown cells did not show cyt. c photooxidation. These results are discussed within the framework of an electron transport chain in which alternative pathways bypassing both the cyt. c 2 and bc 1 complex might involve high-potential membrane bound haems of b- and c-type.Abbreviations AA antimycin A - CCCP carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenyl hydrazone - CN- cyanide - DAD diaminodurene - Q2H2 ubiquinol-2 - Q-pool ubiquinone-10 pool - RC photochemical reaction center  相似文献   

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