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1.
Photosynthetic activities of a thermophilic blue-green alga   总被引:5,自引:1,他引:4  
Photosynthetic activities of a thermophilic blue-green alga,a species of Synechococcus, were studied with special referenceto its growth at high temperatures. A rapid algal growth occurredin the temperature range between 50 and 60?C, showing the maximumrate, six doublings per day, at about 57?C. Photosynthetic oxygenevolution and methyl viologen photoreduction in the cells werealso active at high temperatures and the optimum temperaturesfor these activities agreed with that of the algal growth. Thegrowth and photosynthetic activities were very low at room temperatureand irreversibly inactivated at temperatures above 60?C. The thylakoid membranes isolated from the alga were also photochemicallyactive at high temperatures. The membranes mediated ferricyanidephotoreduction coupled with a stoichiometric oxygen evolutionat a rate comparable to that of photosynthetic oxygen evolutionin the cells. The optimum temperature for the reaction was ashigh as 50?C. The membranes also showed a photosystem I-mediatedreaction at high temperatures. These observations indicate thatthe thylakoid membranes are intrinsically thermophilic in thisorganism. Thus the growth of the alga at high temperatures canbe well correlated to thermophilic properties of the photosyntheticapparatus. (Received February 20, 1978; )  相似文献   

2.
Light-dependent inhibition of photosynthetic electron transport by zinc   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The effects of zinc concentrations up to 400 μ M were examined on three photosynthetic electron transport reactions of thylakoids isolated from Pisum sativum L. cv. Meteor. Zinc (400 μ M ) had no effect on photosystem I mediated electron transport from reduced N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl- p -phenylenediamine to methyl viologen, but inhibited uncoupled electron flow from water to methyl viologen by ca 50% and to 2,6-dichlorophenol-indophenol (DCPIP) by ca 30% at saturating light levels. Zinc inhibition of DCPIP photoreduction was independent of the light intensity to which thylakoids were exposed. Decreasing the photon flux density below 400 μmol m−2 s−1 produced a logarithmic reduction in the zinc-induced inhibition of methyl viologen photoceduction; a stimulation of this reaction was observed below 80 μmol photons m−2 s−1. Increasing light intensity decreased the amount of zinc tightly bound to the thylakoid membranes, but increased the weakly associated zinc which could be removed by washing the membranes with buffer containing Mg2. The results suggest that zinc acts on the photosynthetic electron transport system at two sites. Site 1 is on the oxidizing side of photosystem 2 and the inhibition by zinc is independent of the light intensity. Site 2 is between photosystems 1 and 2 and the electron flow can be positively or negatively affected by zinc depending on the light intensity.  相似文献   

3.
We investigated the effect of growth light intensity on the photosynthetic apparatus of pea (Pisum sativum) thylakoid membranes. Plants were grown either in a growth chamber at light intensities that ranged from 8 to 1050 microeinsteins per square meter per second, or outside under natural sunlight. In thylakoid membranes we determined: the amounts of active and inactive photosystem II, photosystem I, cytochrome b/f, and high potential cytochrome b559, the rate of uncoupled electron transport, and the ratio of chlorophyll a to b. In leaves we determined: the amounts of the photosynthetic components per leaf area, the fresh weight per leaf area, the rate of electron transport, and the light compensation point. To minimize factors other than growth light intensity that may alter the photosynthetic apparatus, we focused on peas grown above the light compensation point (20-40 microeinsteins per square meter per second), and harvested only the unshaded leaves at the top of the plant. The maximum difference in the concentrations of the photosynthetic components was about 30% in thylakoids isolated from plants grown over a 10-fold range in light intensity, 100 to 1050 microeinsteins per square meter per second. Plants grown under natural sunlight were virtually indistinguishable from plants grown in growth chambers at the higher light intensities. On a leaf area basis, over the same growth light regime, the maximum difference in the concentration of the photosynthetic components was also about 30%. For peas grown at 1050 microeinsteins per square meter per second we found the concentrations of active photosystem II, photosystem I, and cytochrome b/f were about 2.1 millimoles per mol chlorophyll. There were an additional 20 to 33% of photosystem II complexes that were inactive. Over 90% of the heme-containing cytochrome f detected in the thylakoid membranes was active in linear electron transport. Based on these data, we do not find convincing evidence that the stoichiometries of the electron transport components in the thylakoid membrane, the size of the light-harvesting system serving the reaction centers, or the concentration of the photosynthetic components per leaf area, are regulated in response to different growth light intensities. The concept that emerges from this work is of a relatively fixed photosynthetic apparatus in thylakoid membranes of peas grown above the light compensation point.  相似文献   

4.
Cell-free extracts that show activity in photosynthetic electron flow have been prepared from the unicellular dinoflagellate, Gonyaulax polyedra. Electron flow, as O2 uptake, was measured through both photo-system I and II from water to methyl viologen, through photosystem I alone from reduced 2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol to methyl viologen which does not include the plastoquinone pool or from duroquinol to methyl viologen which includes the plastoquinone pool. Electron flow principally through photosystem II was measured from water to diaminodurene and ferricyanide, as O2 evolution. Cultures of Gonyaulax were grown on a 12-hour light:12 hour dark cycle to late log phase, then transferred to constant light at the beginning of a light period. After 3 days, measurements of electron flow were made at the maximum and minimum of the photosynthetic rhythm, as determined from measurements of the rhythm of bioluminescence. Photosynthesis was also measured in whole cells, either as 14C fixation or O2 evolution. Electron flow through both photosystems and through photosystem II alone were clearly rhythmic, while electron flow through photosystem I, including or excluding the plastoquinone pool, was constant with time in the circadian cycle. Thus, only changes in photosystem II account for the photosynthesis rhythm in Gonyaulax.  相似文献   

5.
A procedure has been developed for use of metronidazole (2-methyl-5-nitroimidazole-1-ethanol) as an enrichment agent during the isolation of temperature-sensitive, photosynthetic mutants in the cyanobacteriumSynechococcus cedrorum. The protocol includes incubation with this drug following mutagenesis withN-methyl-N-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine. Incubation of photosynthetically activeS. cedrorum cells with 1 mM metronidazole causes a light-dependent reduction of cell viability. Maximum reduction in cell viability occurred following 6 h of incubation. Cessation of electron transport reduced the impact of the drug by five orders of magnitude. Yet during the time of incubation, metronidazole did not influence the electron transport capacities of theS. cedrorum cells, suggesting that the thylakoid membrane was not the target of the toxic effects of this drug. In addition, this drug was found to be an effective electron acceptor to photosystem I although high concentrations were required to observe maximum rates of electron transfer. Metronidazole interacted in a noncompetitive manner with methyl viologen, which suggested that those two acceptors to photosystem I have unique reduction sites on theS. cedrorum thylakoid membrane. The temperature-sensitive strains that were isolated using the procedure presented here were assessed for photosynthetic electron transport and chlorophyll fluorescence (induction kinetics and low-temperature emission spectra) characteristics. Approximately one-half of the temperature-sensitive mutants isolated possessed abnormal photosynthetic properties when shifted to the restrictive temperature (40°C). A total of 31 strains have been characterized and initially classified, showing abnormalities throughout the photosynthetic electron-transport chain.  相似文献   

6.
Mannan RM  Bose S 《Plant physiology》1986,80(1):264-268
When Triticum vulgare cv HD 2189 seedlings were grown in the presence of 125 micromolar BASF 13.338 (4-chloro-5-dimethylamino-2-phenyl-3(2H)pyridazinone), the rate of electron transport (H2O → methyl viologen) in chloroplast thylakoids isolated from the treated seedlings was higher (by 50%) as compared to the control at assay temperatures above 30°C. Below 30°C, however, the rate with the treated seedlings was lower than the control rate. The temperature dependence of the rate of photosystem I electron transport (2-6-dichlorophenol indophenol-reduced → methyl viologen) in the treated system was similar to that in the control. At high temperatures (>30°C), with diphenyl carabazide as electron donor, the rates of electron transfer (diphenyl carbazide → methyl viologen) were similar in the treated and in the control thylakoids. Direct addition of BASF 13.338 to the assay mixture for the measurement of rate of electron transport (H2O → methyl viologen) in the thylakoids isolated from the control plants did not cause any change in the temperature dependence of photosynthetic electron transport. These results suggested that the donor side of photosystem II became tolerant to heat in the treated plants. Chlorophyll a fluorescence emission was monitored continuously in the leaves of control and BASF 13.338 treated wheat seedlings during continuous increase in temperature (1°C per minute). The fluorescence-temperature profile showed a decrease in the fluorescence yield above 55°C; this decrease was biphasic in the control and monophasic in the treated plants.  相似文献   

7.
Diethylhydroxylamine, when added to beet spinach thylakoid membranes in the reaction mixture enhanced both photosystem II mediated dichlorophenolindophenol photoreduction and whole chain electron transport supported by methyl viologen. Diethylhydroxylamine supports dichlorophenolindophenol photoreduction when oxygen evolving complex is inactivated by hydroxylamine washings. All the electron transport assays were found to be highly sensitive to diuron, indicating that diethylhydroxylamine donates electrons to the photosystem II before the herbicide binding site. The stimulation of the photochemical activity by diethylhydroxylamine is not solely due to its action as an uncoupler. It was also observed that the action of diethylhydroxylamine was not altered by preincubations of thylakoids in light in the presence of diethylhydroxylamine. Also, thylakoid membranes did not lose their benzoquinone Hill activity by the pre-incubations with diethylhydroxylamine either in light or in dark. Thus, unlike the photosystem II electron donor, hydroxylamine, diethylhydroxylamine was found to donate electrons without the inactivations of oxygen evolving complex. It is suggested that diethylhydroxylamine is a useful electron donor to the photosystem II.  相似文献   

8.
A Mg2+-induced decrease of the rate of photosystem I (PS I) electron transport (DCIPH2 → methyl viologen) in thylakoids under saturated light intensities has been reported earlier (S. Bose, J. E. Mullet, G. E. Hoch, and C. J. Arntzen, 1981, Photobiochem. Photobiophys.2, 45–52). A similar effect is observed with Na+, although the concentration required for half-maximal inhibition was higher by about two orders of magnitude. The cation effect was gradually abolished as the thylakoids were aged by incubation at 30 °C for 6 h. The loss of cation effect on PS I electron transport rate during aging was parallel to the corresponding loss of cation effect on thylakoid stacking. The cation concentration required for thylakoid stacking and the degree of inhibition as a function of cation concentration correlated strongly with the degree of thylakoid stacking. These observations indicated that the inhibition of the rate of PS I electron transport by cations is a consequence of cation-induced stacking of thylakoid membranes. The observed inhibition of the rate of PS I electron transport is discussed in terms of two hypotheses: (i) a fraction (20–30%) of the PS I complexes is trapped in the appressed region of grana and becomes unavailable to the electron donor (DCIPH2) and (ii) the membrane structure is altered by the cations in such a manner that the rate constant of electron donation by the donor to the electron transport chain in the thylakoid is decreased.  相似文献   

9.
Taka-Aki Ono  Norio Murata 《BBA》1978,502(3):477-485
Thylakoid membranes were prepared from the blue-green alga, Anacystis nidulans with lysozyme treatment and a short period of sonic oscillation. The thylakoid membrane preparation was highly active in the electron transport reactions such as the Hill reactions with ferricyanide and with 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol, the Mehler reaction mediated by methyl viologen and the system 1 reaction with methyl viologen as an electron acceptor and 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol and ascorbate as an electron donor system. The Hill reaction with ferricyanide and the system 1 reaction was stimulated by the phosphorylating conditions. The cyclic and non-cyclic phosphorylation was also active.These findings suggest that the preparation of thylakoid membranes retained the electron transport system from H2O to reaction center 1, and that the phosphorylation reaction was coupled to the Hill reaction and the system 1 reaction.  相似文献   

10.
The hydrogen-evolving reaction of the purified soluble NAD-linked hydrogenase of Alcaligenes eutrophus was used to determine kinetic parameters of the enzyme. The H2-evolving activity with methyl viologen as electron mediator was 20-fold as compared to that with NADH. In the assay with dithionite-reduced methyl viologen (K m 0.7 mM) the hydrogenase was most active at a redox potential of –560 mV and exhibited a pH optimum of 7.0. The K m for protons, the second substrate for H2 evolution, was 6.2 nM. With electrochemically reduced methyl viologen the pH optimum was shifted to pH 6.0. Double-reciprocal plots of reaction rates versus proton concentrations intercepted at the ordinate for different methyl viologen concentrations. At different pH values such an intercept was also observed with the dye as the varied substrate. The kinetic data are diagnostic for an ordered bisubstrate mechanism where both substrates are bound before the product H2 is released. Hydrogenase coupled to thylakoid membranes resulted in a constant H2 evolution rate over 6 h. The system appeared to be limited by the capacity of the thylakoid membranes.  相似文献   

11.
Exposure of isolated chloroplasts of pea (Pisum sativum L.) to temperatures above 35° C leads to a stimulation of photosystem-I-mediated electron transport from dichlorophenolindophenol to methyl viologen. The threshold temperature for this stimulation coincides closely with that for heat-induced inhibition of photosystem-II activity in such chloroplasts. This coincidence is explained in terms of a rearrangement of the thylakoid membrane resulting in the exposure of a new set of donor sites for dichlorophenolindophenol within the cytochrome f/b 6 complex of the electron-transport chain linking the two photosystems.Abbreviations cyt cytochrome - DBMIB 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone - DCPIP (H2) 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - EDAC ethyldimethylaminopropyl-carbodiimide - MV methyl viologen - PSI, II photosystem I, II - PCy plastocyanin - PQ(H2) plastoquinone  相似文献   

12.
The effect of protein phosphorylation on electron transportactivities of thylakoids isolated from wheat leaves was investigated.Protein phosphorylation resulted in a reduction in the apparentquantum yield of whole chain and photosystem II (PSII) electrontransport but had no effect on photosystem I (PSI) activity.The affinity of the D1 reaction centre polypeptide of PSII tobind atrazine was diminished upon phosphorylation, however,this did not reduce the light-saturated rate of PSII electrontransport. Phosphorylation also produced an inhibition of thelight-saturated rate of electron transport from water or durohydroquinoneto methyl viologen with no similar effect being observed onthe light-saturated rate of either PSII or PSI alone. This suggeststhat phosphorylation produces an inhibition of electron transportat a site, possibly the cytochrome b6/f complex, between PSIIand PSI. This inhibition of whole-chain electron transport wasalso observed for thylakoids isolated from leaves grown underintermittent light which were deficient in polypeptides belongingto the light-harvesting chlorophyll-protein complex associatedwith photosystem II (LHCII). Consequently, this phenomenon isnot associated with phosphorylation of LCHII polypeptides. Apossible role for cytochrome b6/f complexes in the phosphorylation-inducedinhibition of whole chain electron transport is discussed. Key words: Electron transport, light harvesting, photosystem 2, protein phosphorylation, thylakoid membranes, wheat (Triticum aestivum)  相似文献   

13.
The photosynthetic apparatus, especially the electron transport chain imbedded in the thylakoid membrane, is one of the main targets of cold and heat stress in plants. Prompt and delayed fluorescence emission originating from photosystem II have been used, most often separately, to monitor the changes induced in the photosynthetic membranes during progressive warming or cooling of a leaf sample. Thermofluorescence of F 0 and F M informs on the effects of heat on the chlorophyll antennae and the photochemical centers, thermoluminescence on the stabilization and movements of charges and Delayed Light Emission on the permeability of the thylakoid membranes to protons and ions. Considered together and operated simultaneously, these techniques constitute a powerful tool to characterize the effect of thermal stress on intact photosynthetic systems and to understand the mechanisms of constitutive or induced tolerance to temperature stresses.  相似文献   

14.
Summary The photosynthetic pigments of chloroplast thylakoid membranes are complexed with specific intrinsic polypeptides which are included in three supramolecular complexes, photosystem I complex, photosystem II complex and the light-harvesting complex. There is a marked lateral heterogeneity in the distribution of these complexes along the membrane with photosystem II complex and its associated light-harvesting complex being located mainly in the stacked membranes of the grana partitions, while photosystem I complex is found mainly in unstacked thylakoids together with ATP synthetase. In contrast, the intermediate electron transport complex, the cylochrome b-f complex, is rather uniformly distributed in these two membrane regions. The consequences of this lateral heterogeneity in the location of the thylakoid complexes are considered in relation to the function and structure of chloroplasts of higher plants.  相似文献   

15.
When grown heterotrophically in the dark on enriched culture medium, the pigment-deficient strain of Scenedesmus obliquus, mutant C-6E, is uniquely characterized by a complete deficiency in carotenoids and chlorophyll b while retaining a low level of chlorophyll a which is exclusively utilized in photosystem I-type reactions. The strain lacks photosystem II activity but exhibits all PS-I reactions tested, including P700 redox reactions, photoreduction of CO2 with hydrogen as electron donor, and O2 uptake following methyl viologen reduction. The mutant contains 10 times more P700 per chlorophyll than the wild type and develops the pigment-protein complex of PS-I, CP-I. The action spectrum for methyl viologen reduction compares favorable to the low temperature absorption spectrum of whole cells. Both the chlorophyll fluorescence excitation and emission spectra of pigment-protein complexes derived from cells of C-6E show patterns typical of PS-I. The strain lacks the LHCs and CP-II as well as their respective apoproteins. The absence of carotenoids appears to prevent the development of the normal variety of pigment-protein complexes and the accumulation of Chl b. This inability is also expressed by the presence of only single stranded thylakoid membranes in the chloroplast of C-6E. When heterotrophically grown cells of this mutant are exposed to white light of 8 or 22 W m?2, 50% of its chlorophyll is lost by photooxidation within 4 or 1.5 hours, respectively.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract Moderately frost-hardy leaves of the wintergreen broadleaf woody shrubs Pyracantha coccinea and Ligustrum ovalifolium and the winter annual herb Spinacia oleracea were subjected to extended freezing stress up to 15 d at temperatures 2–8°C above the mean lethal temperature (LT50). After thawing, the fast kinetics of in vivo chlorophyll fluorescence of photosystem II (PSII) and the potential of linear photosynthetic electron transport of isolated thylakoid membranes was measured at room temperature. The lower the minimum freezing temperature and the longer the time of exposure, the greater was the suppression of the fluorescence signals of the leaves and decrease of the electron transport capacity of the thylakoid membranes. The pattern of inactivation of PSII -mediated electron flow, i.e. inhibition of photoreaction to photochemistry and/or electron donation to the photochemical reaction, during long-term freezing at temperatures somewhat above the LT50 of the leaves was similar to that observed earlier after relatively brief exposure of leaves and isolated thylakoid membranes to more severe freezing stress. As injury occurred during freezing in complete darkness, it is likely that prolonged winter stress under natural environmental conditions causes changes in the photosynthetic apparatus of moderately hardy leaves which are not due to photoinhibition.  相似文献   

17.
Mesophyll protoplasts were isolated from unhardened and cold-acclimated leaves of Valerianella locusta L. and subjected to freeze-thaw treatment. To evaluate the extent and course of freezing injury, photosynthetic reactions of whole protoplasts and of free thylakoid membranes, liberated from protoplasts by osmotic lysis, were measured. In addition, the integrity of the protoplasts was determined by microscopy. The results reveal an increased frost tolerance of protoplasts isolated from acclimated leaves with respect to all parameters measured. CO2-dependent O2 evolution (representing net photosynthetic CO2 fixation of protoplasts) was the most freezing-sensitive reaction; its inhibition due to freeze-thaw treatment of protoplasts was neither correlated with disintegration of the plasma membrane, nor was it initiated by inactivation of the thylakoid membranes. The frost-induced decline of protoplast integrity was not closely correlated to thylakoid damage either. Freezing injury of the thylakoid membranes was manifested by inhibition of photosynthetic electron transport and photophosphorylation. Both photosystems were affected by freezing and thawing with strongest inhibition occurring in the water-oxidation system or at the oxidizing site of photosystem II. Photophosphorylation responded more sensitively to freezing stress than electron transport, although uncoupling (increased permeability of the thylakoid membranes to protons) was not a conspicuous effect. The data are discussed in relation to freezing injury in leaves and seem to indicate that frost damage in vivo is initiated at multiple sites.Abbreviations Chl chlorphyll - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DCIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - DPC 1,5-diphenylcarbazide - Hepes 2-[4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazinyl]-ethanesulfonic acid - MES 2-(N-morpholino)-ethanesulfonic acid - PS I photosystem I - PS II photosystem II  相似文献   

18.
Purified aconitase, an iron-sulfur protein, from either beef heart mitochondria or pig heart can be activated fully by light when combined with washed thylakoid membranes from pea (Pisum sativum L.) chloroplasts. The light activation of the enzyme does not require any other additive or cofactor and is sensitive to 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethyl urea, 2,6-dichlorophenol-indophenol, ferricyanide, and methyl viologen, indicating that the photoelectron transport system of the thylakoid membranes, and in particular, photosystem I, is involved in the process of activation. Light activation of the enzyme is also markedly inhibited when the thylakoid membranes are treated with sulfite or arsenite, and abolished totally when the membranes are treated with Zwittergent, suggesting that the light effect mediator involved in the light modulation of chloroplastic enzymes mediates the activation of purified aconitase also.  相似文献   

19.
Solubilisation of thylakoid membranes from young leaves of Pisum sativum in the presence of Triton X-100 resulted in an almost complete loss of quenching of light-harvesting chlorophyll-protein (LHCP) fluorescence, as measured at 77°K. There were concomitant changes in the kinetics of light-saturation curves of electron transport from 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol/ascorbate to methyl viologen. These effects were accompenied by a physical dissociation of LHCP polypeptides from photosystem I (PSI) and photosystem II (PSII) polypeptides, as determined by polyacrylamide gel-electrophoresis. Detergent-dialysis in the presence of exogenous purified galactolipids, about 80% of which were linoleoyl molecular species, only partially reversed these effects. However, detergent-dialysis using the phospholipids, phosphatidylglycerol and phosphatidylcholine, resulted in the substantial restoration of 77°K fluorescence quenching and the restoration of both emission spectra and electron transport kinetics of both Photosystems I and II that were typical of native membranes.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - DCPIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - DGD digalactosyldiacylglycerol - LHCP light-harvesting chlorophyll-protein - MGD monogalactosyldiacylglycerol - PCi phosphatidylcholine — Sigma grade NS - PCii -oleoyl, -palmitoyl phosphalidylcholine - PG phosphatidylglycerol - PSI photosystem I - PSII photosystem II  相似文献   

20.
A method to determine photosynthetic electron transport in thylakoid membranes is described for Gossypium barbadense (cv. Pima S-7) and G. hirsutum (cv. DP 5415). These cultivars differed markedly in tolerance to prometryn, a PS II inhibitor. The rates of photosynthetic electron transport obtained were 245 mole oxygen mg–1 chl h1. Plant age and leaf size influenced the activity of the thylakoid preparations. Thylakoids from leaves of plants 24 to 37 d and 50–70 mm in diameter had the highest activities; thylakoids from cotyledons, fully expanded leaves and young leaves had low activity. Thylakoids from both species had similar photosynthetic activities and I50's for prometryn, atrazine and diuron. Thus, tolerance to prometryn was not due to differential binding at D1 protein.Abbreviations PSII photosystem II - DAP day after planting - DQ duroquinone - DBMIB dibromothymoquinone - DMBQ 2,5-dimethyl-p-benzoquinone - I50 concentration to inhibit reaction by 50% - QA quinone A - QB quinone B  相似文献   

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