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1.
In intact, uncoupled type B chloroplasts from spinach, added ATP causes a slow light-induced decline (t12 ≈ 3 min) of chlorophyll a fluorescence at room temperature. Fluorescence spectra were recorded after fast cooling to 77 K and normalized with fluorescein as an internal standard. Related to the fluorescence quenching at room temperature, an increase in Photosystem (PS) I fluorescence (F735) and a decrease in PS II fluorescence (F695) were observed in the low-temperature spectra. The change in the F735F695 ratio was abolished by the presence of methyl viologen. Fluorescence induction at 77 K of chloroplasts frozen in the quenched state showed lowered variable (Fv) and initial (F0) fluorescence at 690 nm and an increase in F0 at 735 nm. The results are interpreted as indicating an ATP-dependent change of the initial distribution of excitation energy in favor of PS I, which is controlled by the redox state of the electron-transport chain and, according to current theories, is caused by phosphorylation of the light-harvesting complex.  相似文献   

2.
The nature of the light-induced ΔpH-dependent decline of chlorophyll a fluorescence in intact and broken spinach chloroplasts was investigated. Fluorescence spectra at 77 K of chloroplasts frozen in the low-fluorescent (high ΔpH) state showed increased ratios of the band peak at 735 nm (Photosystem (PS) I fluorescence) to the peak at 695 nm (PS II fluorescence). The increase in the F735F695 ratio at 77 K was related to the extent of fluorescence quenching at room temperature. Normalization of low-temperature spectra with fluorescein as an internal standard revealed a lowering of F695 that was not accompanied by an increase in F735: preillumination before freezing decreased both F695 and, to a lesser extent, F735 in the spectra recorded at 77 K. Fluorescence induction of chloroplasts frozen in the low-fluorescent state showed a markedly decreased variable fluorescence (Fv) of PS II, but no concomitant increase in initial fluorescence (F0) of PS I. Thus, the buildup of a proton gradient at the thylakoid membrane, as reflected by fluorescence quenching at room temperature, affects low-temperature fluorecence emission in a manner entirely different from the effect of removal of Mg2+, which is thought to alter the distribution of excitation energy in favor of PS I. The ΔpH-dependent quenching therefore cannot be caused by such change in energy distribution and is suggested to reflect increased thermal deactivation.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of Mg2+ concentration and phosphorylation of light-harvesting chlorophyll ab-protein on various chlorophyll fluorescence induction parameters of isolated pea thylakoids has been studied. (1) Lowering the Mg2+ concentration from 3 to 0.4 mM decreases only the variable fluorescence (Fv) and the area above the induction curve while at the same time increasing the slow exponential component of the rise (βmax). (2) A further decrease in Mg2+ concentration from 0.4 to 0 mM decreases the initial (F0) fluorescence level such that the ratio FvFm increases slightly as does the area above the induction curve and βmax. (3) Thylakoid membranes, phosphorylated at 5 mM Mg2+, show an equal decrease in Fv and F0, no change in the area above the induction curve and an increase in βmax. At 2 mM Mg2+, however, phosphorylation induced a more extensive quenching of Fv so that the FvFm ratio was lowered and the area above the induction curve decreased while βmax increased. (4) When phosphorylated membranes were subsequently suspended in an Mg2+-free medium the effect on F0 due to phosphorylation was found to be additive to that due to the absence of Mg2+. The effect of membrane phosphorylation on fluorescence is discussed in relation to the control of excitation energy distribution and shows that different mechanisms operate depending on the background Mg2+ levels. At high Mg2+ the phosphorylation seems to affect the absorption cross-section of Photosystem II while at lower Mg2+ levels there is an additional effect of increased spillover from Photosystem II to I.  相似文献   

4.
Illumination of the chlorophyll ab light-harvesting complex in the presence of p-nitrothio[14C]phenol caused quenching of fluorescence emission at 685 nm (77 K) relative to 695 nm and covalent modification of light-harvesting complex polypeptides. Fluorescence quenching saturated with one p-nitrothiophenol bound per light-harvesting complex polypeptide (10–13 chlorophylls); 12 maximal quenching occurred with one p-nitrothiophenol bound per light-harvesting complex polypeptides (190–247 chlorophylls). This result provides direct evidence for excitation energy transfer between light-harvesting complex subunits which contain 4–6 polypeptides plus 40–78 chlorophylls per complex.Illumination of chloroplasts or Photosystem II (PS II) particles in the presence of p-nitrothio[14C]phenol caused inhibition of PS II activity and labeling of several polypeptides including those of 42–48 kilodaltons previously identified as PS II reaction center polypeptides. In chloroplasts, inhibition of oxygen evolution accelerated p-nitrothiophenol modification reactions; DCMU or donors to PS II decreased p-nitrothiophenol modification. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that accumulation of oxidizing equivalents on the donor side of PS II creates a ‘reactive state’ in which polypeptides of PS II are susceptible to p-nitrothiophenol modification.  相似文献   

5.
W.S. Chow  R.C. Ford  J. Barber 《BBA》1981,635(2):317-326
Salt-induced chlorophyll fluorescence and spillover changes in control and briefly sonicated chloroplasts have been studied under conditions where Photosystem II traps are closed. In a low-salt medium containing 10 mM KCl, control envelope-free chloroplasts exhibited good spillover, as measured by low chlorophyll fluorescence yield at room temperature, a high ratio of the fluorescence peaks F735F685 at 77 K, and increased Photosystem I activity in the presence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea and Photosystem II light. In contrast, when stacked chloroplasts were briefly sonicated and subsequently diluted into a low-salt medium, a high fluorescence yield at room temperature and a low ratio of F735F685 at 77 K persisted. When unstacked chloroplasts were sonicated and then diluted into a high-salt medium, the room temperature fluorescence yield remained low. The results are interpreted in terms of a model relating the changes in chlorophyll fluoresecence with the lateral diffusion of Photosystem I and Photosystem II chlorophyll-protein complexes in the plane of the thylakoid membrane creating randomized or segregated domains, depending on the degree of electrostatic screening of surface charges (Barber, J. (1980) FEBS Lett. 188, 1–10). It is argued that brief sonication of stacked chloroplasts separates stromal membranes from granal stacks, thus limiting the inter-mixing of the photosystems via lateral diffusion even when the ionic composition of the medium is varied. Consequently energy transfer from Photosystem II to Photosystem I is relatively poor and chlorophyll fluorescence from Photosystem II is enhanced. The loss of the salt effect on sonicated unstacked membranes can also be accommodated by the model. In this case it seems that the generation of small membrane fragments does not allow the normal salt-induced phase separation of the pigment-protein complexes to occur.  相似文献   

6.
Fractions enriched in either Photosystem I or Photosystem II activity have been isolated from the blue-green alga, Synechococcus cedrorum after digitonin treatment. Sedimentation of this homogenate on a 10–30% sucrose gradient yielded three green bands: the upper band was enriched in Photosystem II, the lowest band was enriched in Photosystem I, while the middle band contained both activities. Large quantities of both particles were isolated by zonal centrifugation, and the material was then further purified by chromatography on DEAE-cellulose.The resulting Photosystem II particles carried out light-induced electron transport from semicarbizide to ferricyanide of over 2000 μmol/mg Chlorophyll per h (which was sensitive to 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea), and was nearly devoid of Photosystem I activity. This particle contains β-carotene, very little phycocyanin, has a chlorophyll absorption maximum at 675 nm, and a liquid N2 fluorescence maximum at 685 nm. The purest Photosystem II particles have a chlorophyll to cytochrome b-559 ratio of 50 : 1. The Photosystem I particle is highly enriched in P-700, with a chlorophyll to P-700 ratio of 40 : 1. The physical structure of the two Photosystem particles has also been studied by gel electrophoresis and electron microscopy. These results indicate that the size and protein composition of the two particles are distinctly different.  相似文献   

7.
Jane M. Bowes  Peter Horton 《BBA》1982,680(2):127-133
Fluorescence induction curves in 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU)-inhibited Photosystem (PS) II particles isolated from the blue-green alga Phormidium laminosum have been analysed as a function of redox potential. Redox titration of the initial fluorescence indicated a single component with Em,7.5 = +30 mV (n = 1) (Bowes, J., Horton, P. and Bendall, D.S. (1981) FEBS Lett. 135, 261–264). Despite this simplified electron acceptor system and the small number of chlorophylls per reaction centre, a sigmoidal induction curve was nevertheless seen. Sigmoidicity decreased as Q was reduced potentiometrically prior to induction such that the induction was exponential when the ratio FiFm = 0.64. These particles also showed a slow (β) phase of induction which titrated with an Em value slightly more positive than that of the major quencher. It is concluded that the sigmoidal shape of the fluorescence induction curve observed in Phormidium PS II particles is not a consequence of a requirement for two photons to close the PS II reaction centre, but is generated as a result of energy transfer between photosynthetic units comprising one reaction centre per approx. 50 chlorophylls. Also, the existence of PS II heterogeneity (PS IIα, PS IIβ centres) does not require a structurally differentiated chloroplast, but may only indicate the extent of aggregation of PS II centres.  相似文献   

8.
Sally Reinman  Paul Mathis 《BBA》1981,635(2):249-258
The influence of temperature on the rate of reduction of P-680+, the primary donor of Photosystem II, has been studied in the range 5–294 K, in chloroplasts and subchloroplasts particles. P-680 was oxidized by a short laser flash. Its oxidation state was followed by the absorption level at 820 nm, and its reduction attributed to two mechanisms: electron donation from electron donor D1 and electron return from the primary plastoquinone (back-reaction).Between 294 and approx. 200 K, the rate of the back-reaction, on a logarithmic scale, is a linear function of the reciprocal of the absolute temperature, corresponding to an activation energy between 3.3 and 3.7 kcal · mol?1, in all of the materials examined (chloroplasts treated at low pH or with Tris; particles prepared with digitonin). Between approx. 200 K and 5 K the rate of the back-reaction is temperature independent, with t12 = 1.6 ms. In untreated chloroplasts we measured a t12 of 1.7 ms for the back-reaction at 77 and 5 K.The rate of electron donation from the donor D1 has been measured in darkadapted Tris-treated chloroplasts, in the range 294–260 K. This rate is strongly affected by temperature. An activation energy of 11 kcal · mol?1 was determined for this reaction.In subchloroplast particles prepared with Triton X-100 the signals due to P-680 were contaminated by absorption changes due to the triplet state of chlorophyll a. This triplet state has been examined with pure chlorophyll a in Triton X-100. An Arrhenius plot of its rate of decay shows a temperature-dependent region (292–220 K) with an activation energy of 9 kcal · mol?1, and a temperature-independent region (below 200 K) with t12 = 1.1 ms.  相似文献   

9.
R.L. Pan  S. Izawa 《BBA》1979,547(2):311-319
NH2OH-treated, non-water-splitting chloroplasts can oxidize H2O2 to O2 through Photosystem II at substantial rates (100–250 μequiv · h?1 · mg?1 chlorophyll with 5 mM H2O2) using 2,5-dimethyl-p-benzoquinone as an electron acceptor in the presence of the plastoquinone antagonist dibromothymoquinone. This H2O2 → Photosystem II → dimethylquinone reaction supports phosphorylation with a Pe2 ratio of 0.25–0.35 and proton uptake with H+e values of 0.67 (pH 8)–0.85 (pH 6). These are close to the Pe2 value of 0.3–0.38 and the H+e values of 0.7–0.93 found in parallel experiments for the H2O → Photosystem II → dimethylquinone reaction in untreated chloroplasts. Semi-quantitative data are also presented which show that the donor → Photosystem II → dibromothymoquinone (→O2) reaction can support phosphorylation when the donor used is a proton-releasing reductant (benzidine, catechol) but not when it is a non-proton carrier (I?, ferrocyanide).  相似文献   

10.
J. Haveman  P. Mathis 《BBA》1976,440(2):346-355
A comparative study is made, at 15 °C, of flash-induced absorption changes around 820 nm (attributed to the primary donors of Photosystems I and II) and 705 nm (Photosystem I only), in normal chloroplasts and in chloroplasts where O2 evolution was inhibited by low pH or by Tris-treatment.At pH 7.5, with untreated chloroplasts, the absorption changes around 820 nm are shown to be due to P-700 alone. Any contribution of the primary donor of Photosystem II should be in times shorter than 60 μs.When chloroplasts are inhibited at the donor side of Photosystem II by low pH, an additional absorption change at 820 nm appears with an amplitude which, at pH 4.0, is slightly higher than the signal due to oxidized P-700. This additional signal is attributed to the primary donor of Photosystem II. It decays (t12 about 180 μs) mainly by back reaction with the primary acceptor and partly by reduction by another electron donor. Acid-washed chloroplasts resuspended at pH 7.5 still present the signal due to Photosystem II (t12 about 120 μs). This shows that the acid inhibition of the first secondary donor of Photosystem II is irreversible.In Tris-treated chloroplasts, absorption changes at 820 nm due to the primary donor of Photosystem II are also observed, but to a lesser extent and only after some charge accumulation at the donor side. They decay with a half-time of 120 μs.  相似文献   

11.
An O2-evolving Photosystem II subchloroplast preparation was obtained from spinach chloroplasts, using low concentrations of digitonin and Triton X-100. The preparation showed an O2 evolution activity equivalent to 20% of the uncoupled rate of fresh broken chloroplasts, but had no significant Photosystem-I-dependent O2 uptake activity. The preparation showed a chlorophyll ab ratio of 1.9 and a P-700chlorophyll ratio of 12400. Absorption spectra at room temperature and fluorescence emission spectra of chlorophyll at 77 K suggested a significant decrease in Photosystem I antenna chlorophylls in the O2-evolving Photosystem II preparation.  相似文献   

12.
Structurally and functionally different tobacco chloroplasts were subjected to digitonin treatment and subsequent fractional centrifugation. The light-harvesting chlorophyll achlorophyll b-protein complex was found to be enriched in the most dense fraction regardless of the presence of grana in the original preparation. It is suggested that isolated thylakoid membranes and fragments thereof which contain sufficient light-harvesting protein may, under appropriate ionic conditions, form aggregates even when they originate from unstacked thylakoid systems. Comparative studies of fluorescence properties and polypeptide composition of the thylakoids suggest that the light-harvesting protein does not contribute significantly to the fluorescence spectrum of isolated chloroplasts as long as this protein is intimately associated with the Photosystem II (PS II) pigment-protein complex responsible for the 685 nm emission. While the PS II-deficient mutant chloroplasts of the variegated tobacco variety NC 95 lacked both the 685 nm fluorescence component and two or three PS II proteins, one of these proteins was found to be very prominent in our chlorophyll b-deficient mutant thylakoids which also displayed an intense 685 nm fluorescence peak. This correlation supports the contention that a 45 kdalton polypeptide is an apoprotein of pigments associated with the PS II reaction center.  相似文献   

13.
Using thoroughly dark-adapted thylakoids and an unmodulated Joliot-type oxygen electrode, the following results were obtained. (i) At high flash frequency (4 Hz), the oxygen yield at the fourth flash (Y4) is lower compared to Y3 than at lower flash frequency. At 4 Hz, the calculated S0 concentration after thorough dark adaptation is found to approach zero, whereas at 0.5 Hz the apparent S0(S0 + S1) ratio increases to about 0.2. This is explained by a relatively fast donation (t12 = 1.0–1.5 s) of one electron by an electron donor to S2 and S3 in 15–25% of the Photosystem II reaction chains. The one-electron donor to S2 and S3 appears to be rereduced very slowly, and may be identical to the component that, after oxidation, gives rise to ESR signal IIs. (ii) The probability for the fast one-electron donation to S2 and S3 has nearly been the same in triazine-resistant and triazine-susceptible thylakoids. However, most of the slow phase of the S2 decay becomes 10-fold faster (t12 = 5–6 s) in the triazine-resistant ones. In a small part of the Photosystem II reaction chains, the S2 decay was extremely slow. The S3 decay in the triazine-resistant thylakoids was not significantly different from that in triazine-susceptible thylakoids. This supports the hypothesis that S2 is reduced mainly by Q?A, whereas S3 is not. (iii) In the absence of CO2/HCO?A and in the presence of formate, the fast one-electron donation to S2 and S3 does not occur. Addition of HCO?3 restores the fast decay of part of S2 and S3 to almost the same extent as in control thylakoids. The slow phase of S2 and S3 decay is not influenced significantly by CO2/HCO?3. The chlorophyll a fluorescence decay kinetics in the presence of DCMU, however, monitoring the Q?A oxidation without interference of QB, were 2.3-fold slower in the absence of CO2/HCO?3 than in its presence. (iv) An almost 3-fold decrease in decay rate of S2 is observed upon lowering the pH from 7.6 to 6.0. The kinetics of chlorophyll a fluorescence decay in the presence of DCMU are slightly accelerated by a pH change from 7.6 to 6.0. This indicates that the equilibrium Q?A concentration after one flash is decreased (by about a factor of 4) upon changing the pH from 7.6 to 6.0. When direct or indirect protonation of Q?B is responsible for this shift of equilibrium Q?A concentration, these data would suggest that the pKa value for Q?B protonation is somewhat higher than 7.6, assuming that the protonated form of Q?B cannot reduce QA.  相似文献   

14.
The functional role of a chlorophyll ab complex associated with Photosystem I (PS I) has been studied. The rate constant for P-700 photooxidation, KP-700, which under light-limiting conditions is directly proportional to the size of the functional light-harvesting antenna, has been measured in two PS I preparations, one of which contains the chlorophyll ab complex and the other lacking the complex. KP-700 for the former preparation is half of that of the preparation which has the chlorophyll ab complex present. This difference reflects a decrease in the functional light-harvesting antenna in the PS I complex devoid of the chlorophyll ab complex. Experiments involving reconstitution of the chlorophyll ab complex with the antenna-depleted PS I preparation indicate a substantial recovery of the KP-700 rate. These results demonstrate that the chlorophyll ab complex functions as a light-harvesting antenna in PS I.  相似文献   

15.
16.
J.A. Van Best  P. Mathis 《BBA》1978,503(1):178-188
Absorption changes (ΔA) at 820 nm, following laser flash excitation of spinach chloroplasts and Chlorella cells, were studied in order to obtain information on the reduction time of the photooxidized primary donor of Photosystem II at physiological temperatures.In the microsecond time range the difference spectrum of ΔA between 750 and 900 nm represents a peak at 820 nm, attributable to a radical-cation of chlorophyll a. In untreated dark-adapted material the signal can be attributed solely to P+?700; it decays in a polyphasic manner with half-times of 17 μs, 210 μs and over 1 ms. The oxidized primary donor of Photosystem II (P+II) is not detected with a time resolution of 3 μs. After treatment with 3–10 mM hydroxylamine, which inhibits the donor side of Photosystem II, P+II is observed and decays biphasically (a major phase with t12 = 20–40 μs, and a minor phase with t12 ? 200 μs), probably by reduction by an accessory electron donor.In the nanosecond range, which was made accessible by a new fast-response flash photometer operating at 820 nm, it was found the P+II is reduced with a half-time of 25–45 ns in untreated dark-adapted chloroplasts. It is assumed that the normal secondary electron donor is responsible for this fast reduction.  相似文献   

17.
Michael Boska  Kenneth Sauer 《BBA》1984,765(1):84-87
The risetime of EPR signal IIvf (S IIvf) has been measured in oxygen-evolving Photosystem II particles from spinach chloroplasts at pH 6.0. The EPR signal shows an instrument-limited rise upon induction (t12 ? 3 μs). These data are consistent with a model where the species Z responsible for S IIvf is the immediate electron donor to P-680+ in spinach chloroplasts. A new, faster decay component of S IIvf has also been detected in these experiments.  相似文献   

18.
Three chlorophyll-protein complexes of a Chroomonas species (Cryptophyceae) have been separated by sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The two bands at 100 and 42 kDa are Complex I (CP I) and Complex IV (CP IV), the ubiquitous chlorophyll a-proteins associated with Photosystems I and II, respectively. The third 55 kDa band, which had two peptide subunits (24 and 20 kDa), contained both chlorophyll a and chlorophyll c2 in a molar ratio of 1.4 chlorophyll a to 1 chlorophyll c2 (chlorophyll achlorophyll c2 ratio in whole cells = 4). A chlorophyll ac2 fraction with similar spectral and electrophoretic properties was isolated by digitonin-sucrose density gradient centrifugation. This fraction had no photochemical activity and contained only a single carotenoid species with absorbance maxima in methanol at 424, 448 and 476 nm. Efficient energy transfer from chlorophyll c2 to chlorophyll a occurred in the complex.  相似文献   

19.
Thylakoid membrane protein phosphorylation affects photochemical reactions of Photosystem II. Incubation of thylakoids in the light with ATP leads to: (1) an increase in the amplitude of three components (4–6, 25–45 and 280–300 μs) of delayed light emission after a single flash without any change in their kinetics; (2) a reduction of the flash-dependent binary oscillations of chlorophyll a fluorescence yield associated with electron transfer from the primary quinone acceptor, Q, to the secondary quinone acceptor, B; (3) an increase in the B?B ratio resulting from an increase in stability of the semiquinone anion during dark adaptation; and (4) no change in the redox state of the plastoquinone pool as determined by flash-induced photooxidation of the Photosystem I reaction center, P-700. All the above observations are reversible upon dephosphorylation of the thylakoid membranes. These data are explained by a protein phosphorylation-induced stabilization of the bound semiquinone anion, B?. It is proposed that this increased stability may be due to an alteration in the accessibility of an endogenous reductant to B, or to an increase in dissipative cycling of charge around Photosystem II.  相似文献   

20.
Using inside-out thylakoid membranes, it has been shown that the oxidation of water and associated reduction of dichlorophenol indophenol is partially inhibited by low concentrations of cation chelators. This inhibition correlates with a removal of two manganese ions per Photosystem II reaction centre. The chelator-induced inhibition was completely reversed by the addition of low levels of Mn2+ (C12 ≈ 20 μM) and higher levels of Mg2+ and Ca2+ (C12 ≈ 1 mM). Other cations were not effective, indicating that the ability to overcome the inhibition did not involve a general electrostatic screening process. The degree of inhibition by chelators was greater at lower light intensities and after treatment with glutaraldehyde. In the presence of glutaraldehyde the stimulatory effect of Mn2+ was lost, while pretreatment with Mn2+ prevented the glutaraldehyde effect. These results are discussed in terms of conformational changes of the electron donation chains involving cation- (preferentially Mn-) dependent coupling between the oxygen evolving and reaction-centre complexes of Photosystem II.  相似文献   

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