首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
2.
The distribution of protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) and NADPH-Pchlideoxidoreductase (POR) was characterized in the epicotyls androots of wild-type pea (Pisum sativum L. cv. Alaska) and lip1,a mutant with light-independent photomorphogenesis caused bya mutation in the COP1 locus. The upper part of the dark-grownlip1 mutant epicotyls had a high Pchlide content that decreaseddownward the organ. The elevated Pchlide level in lip1 seedlingswas a result of the differentiation of more proplastids intoPchlide-containing plastids. The cortex cells in the lip1 epicotylwere filled with such plastids in contrast to the cortex cellsof wild-type seedlings. The mutant also developed Pchlide-containingplastids in the roots, indicating the suppressing effect ofthe COP1 locus on development of plastids in the correspondingtissues in dark-grown wild-type plants. The distribution ofPchlide-containing plastids in dark-grown lip1 mutant stem androot was similar to the distribution of chloroplasts in irradiatedwild-type plants. Both wild-type and lip1 epicotyls containedmostly short wavelength Pchlide fluorescing at 631 nm withonly a small shoulder at 654 nm, which was transformedto a minute amount of chlorophyllide (Chlide) by flash irradiation.In contrast, with continuous irradiation a considerable amountof Chlide was formed especially in the lip1 epicotyls. Immunoblotsindicated the presence of POR, as a 36 kDa band, in epicotylsof both dark-grown wild-type and lip1 mutant seedlings. However,lip1 stem tissue had a higher content of POR than the wild-typepea. The high content of POR was unexpected as lip1 lacked boththe 654 nm fluorescing Pchlide form and the regular PLBs.In light, a significant amount of chlorophyll was formed alsoin the roots of the lip1 seedlings. 3 Corresponding author: E-mail, mahdi.seyedi@molbio.gu.se; Fax,+46-31-773-2626.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of leaf developmental age on the protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) spectral forms and the expression of messenger RNA (mRNA) encoding NADPH‐protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase (POR) were investigated. Four plant species, maize, wheat, pea and the lip1 mutant of pea, known to have different composition of the spectral forms of Pchlide, were used. In very young plants short‐wavelength Pchlide with a fluorescence emission at 631 nm was dominating. Long‐wavelength Pchlide fluorescing mainly around 655 nm increased during development, which led to a relative decrease of the short‐wavelength forms. During ageing of the leaves, the short‐wavelength forms slightly increased again. The different proportions of short‐ and long‐wavelength Pchlide spectral forms were, however, found to vary with the developmental stage in a species specific pattern. The steady‐state level of POR mRNA and the amount of the POR protein were similar in species dominated by short‐wavelength forms and in species dominated with long‐wavelength forms. Even if POR is necessary for the formation of the long‐wavelength Pchlide form it is not the only limiting factor for formation of long‐wavelength Pchlide forms in mature plants.  相似文献   

4.
Artificial formation of flash-photoactive oligomeric protochlorophyllide complexes was found in etiolated pea (Pisum sativum L. cv. Zsuzsi) epicotyl homogenates containing glycerol (40% v/v) and sucrose (40% m/v). The 77 K fluorescence emission spectra indicated that the ratio of the 644 and 655 nm emitting forms to the 636 nm form increased during 3 to 5-day incubation in the dark at -14 degrees C. Electron micrographs showed the presence of well-organized prolamellar bodies in the homogenates. The same phenomena were found when the homogenates were frozen into liquid nitrogen and thawed to room temperature in several cycles. Similar treatments of intact epicotyl pieces caused significant membrane destructions. In homogenates, the in vitro produced 644 and 655 nm emitting protochlorophyllide forms were flash-photoactive; the extent of phototransformation increased compared to that in native epicotyls. The newly appeared 692 nm chlorophyllide band showed a blue shift (similar to the Shibata shift in leaves), however this process took place only partially due to the effect of the isolation medium. These results prove that the in vitro accumulated 644 and 655 nm protochlorophyllide forms were produced from the flash-photoactive 636 nm emitting monomeric NADPH:protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase units via aggregation, in connection with structure stabilization properties of glycerol and sucrose.  相似文献   

5.
A comparison was performed of the tetrapyrrole transformations that occur upon irradiation of epicotyl or leaves of dark-grown Pisum sativum L. (var. Zsuzsi, Hungary). High performance liquid chromatography analysis after continuous or flash-irradiation showed that the biosynthetic pathway from protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) to chlorophyll (Chl) a was markedly slowed down at the step of the reduction of geranylgeranyl(gg)-Chl to dihydrogeranylgeranyl (dhgg)-Chl in epicotyls, whereas phytyl-Chl was synthesized in leaves subjected to the same light treatments. Quantitative pigment analysis during continuous irradiations of different intensities also showed that significant Pchlide photodestruction occurred in epicotyls even under weak light. When both Pchlide and chlorophyllide and/or chlorophylls were present in epicotyls, Pchlide photodestruction was faster under 630-nm light than under 670-nm light, which indicates that this process is most efficiently promoted by Pchlide excitation. Pre-incubation of epicotyl segments with 10 m M ascorbate partly alleviated pigment photodestruction in white light. It is concluded that formation of photoactive Pchlide–Pchlide oxidoreductase complexes is important to prevent fast pigment photooxidation after Pchlide accumulation in the dark.  相似文献   

6.
The etioplast plastid type of dark-grown angiosperms is defined by the accumulation of the chlorophyll (Chl) precursor protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) and the presence of the paracrystalline prolamellar body (PLB) membrane. Both features correlate with the presence of NADPH:Pchlide oxidoreductase (POR), a light-dependent enzyme that reduces photoactive Pchlide-F655 to chlorophyllide and plays a key role in chloroplast differentiation during greening. Two differentially expressed and regulated POR enzymes, PORA and PORB, have recently been discovered in angiosperms. To investigate the hypothesis that etioplast differentiation requires PORA, we have constitutively overexpressed PORA and PORB in the Arabidopsis wild type and in the constitutive photomorphogenic cop1-18 (previously det340) mutant, which is deficient in the PLB and Pchlide-F655. In both genetic backgrounds, POR overexpression increased PLB size, the ratio of Pchlide-F655 to nonphotoactive Pchl[ide]-F632, and the amount of Pchlide-F655. Dramatically, restoration of either PORA or PORB to the cop1 mutant led to the formation of etioplasts containing an extensive PLB and large amounts of photoactive Pchlide-F655.  相似文献   

7.
The pigments of etiolated leaves of barley ( Hordeum vulgare L.) were analysed during dark periods after flash illumination, and the results were compared with in vivo spectroscopy of the leaves. Pretreatment of the leaves with kinetin slightly stimulated and pretreatment with NaF and anaerobiosis inhibited the esterification of chlorophyllide a (Chlide) at 10–40 min after the flash, whereas the rapid esterification within 30 s after the flash remained unchanged. Irrespective of pretreatment, the amount of esterified pigment was, at any time, identical with the amount of pigment that had shifted its absorption from 684 to 672 nm (Shibata shift). Cycloheximide (CHI) had only a small inhibitory effect on esterification, but drastically inhibited the hydrogenation of geranylgeraniol to phytol, bound to Chlide. The regeneration of long-wavelength protochlorophyllide a (Pchlide650) was stimulated by kinetin and inhibited by CHI and NaF. During the rapid phase (0–30 s after the flash), the esterification was faster than the regeneration of Pchlide650, and this, in turn, was faster than the formation of photoactive Pchlide. The kinetics changed after pretreatment with 5-aminolaevulinic acid: regeneration of Pchlide650 was the fastest reaction and the Shibata shift preceded the esterification of Chlide. The results are discussed as pigment exchange reactions at NADPH:protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase (POR; EC 1.6.99.1).  相似文献   

8.
The fast (1 min) regeneration process of the photoactive Pchlide forms after a light flash was studied in etiolated wheat leaves, and this process was simulated in vitro by incubating etioplast inner membranes of wheat with excess NADPH or NADP+. The 77 K fluorescence spectra were recorded after flash illumination, dark incubation and a subsequent flash illumination of the samples. A non-photoactive Pchlide form with an emission maximum at 650 nm was transiently detected in leaves during regeneration of a photoactive Pchlide form with an emission maximum at 654 nm. Gaussian deconvolution of fluorescence spectra of isolated membranes showed that this 650 nm form appeared in conditions of excess NADP+, as suggested in previous studies. Additionally a Pchlide form emitting at 638.5 nm was detected in the same conditions. The analysis of the spectra of leaves at different times after a flash indicated that these two non-photoactive forms are involved as intermediates in the regeneration of photoactive Pchlide. This regeneration is in correlation with the production of the Chlide form emitting at 676 nm. The results demonstrate that, in vivo, part of the NADPH:protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase is reloading with nonphotoactive Pchlide on a fast time-scale and that the 676 nm Chlide form is the released product of the phototransformation in this process.  相似文献   

9.
Dark-grown leaves of three different species, maize, wheat, pea and a pea mutant (lip1) have been used to study protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) spectral forms. As a comparison also pea epicotyls were used. Different native forms of Pchlide were identified using the variation in the spectral properties of the plant material and the second derivatives of the 77 K fluorescence excitation and emission spectra. The spectral forms were further characterised by Gaussian deconvolution. In addition to short-wavelength and long-wavelength forms the area between 660 and 730 nm was shown to contain, together with some vibrational bands, five far-red Pchlide forms. They had pairs of excitation and emission peaks at 658 and 666 nm, 668 and 680 nm, 677 and 690 nm, 686 and 698 as well as 696 and 728 nm, respectively. The presence of several far-red Pchlide forms in dark-grown leaves gave evidence for additional aggregated states of Pchlide under native conditions.  相似文献   

10.
Annamária Kósa 《BBA》2006,1757(7):811-820
Artificial formation of flash-photoactive oligomeric protochlorophyllide complexes was found in etiolated pea (Pisum sativum L. cv. Zsuzsi) epicotyl homogenates containing glycerol (40% v/v) and sucrose (40% m/v). The 77 K fluorescence emission spectra indicated that the ratio of the 644 and 655 nm emitting forms to the 636 nm form increased during 3 to 5-day incubation in the dark at −14 °C. Electron micrographs showed the presence of well-organized prolamellar bodies in the homogenates. The same phenomena were found when the homogenates were frozen into liquid nitrogen and thawed to room temperature in several cycles. Similar treatments of intact epicotyl pieces caused significant membrane destructions. In homogenates, the in vitro produced 644 and 655 nm emitting protochlorophyllide forms were flash-photoactive; the extent of phototransformation increased compared to that in native epicotyls. The newly appeared 692 nm chlorophyllide band showed a blue shift (similar to the Shibata shift in leaves), however this process took place only partially due to the effect of the isolation medium.These results prove that the in vitro accumulated 644 and 655 nm protochlorophyllide forms were produced from the flash-photoactive 636 nm emitting monomeric NADPH:protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase units via aggregation, in connection with structure stabilization properties of glycerol and sucrose.  相似文献   

11.
During illumination of dark-grown plants protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) is continuously transformed to chlorophyllide (Chlide). Different dark-grown plants, maize ( Zea mays cv. Sundance), wheat ( Triticum aestivum cv. Kosack), pea ( Pisum sativum cv. Kelwedon wonder), the lip1 mutant of pea, and the aurea mutant of tomato ( Solanum lycopersicum ), have various ratios of spectral Pchlide forms in darkness. When the plants were illuminated and then returned to darkness Pchlide re-accumulated. The proportions of different Pchlide forms within the pool of re-accumulated Pchlide were followed by low temperature fluorescence emission and excitation spectra in green and greening leaves. After 1 h of illumination the spectral characteristics of regenerated Pchlide forms mirrored those of Pchlide in dark-grown plants and were thus species dependent. After a prolonged illumination period (24 h) as well as in fully green leaves energy transfer to chlorophyll (Chl) masked the presence of long-wavelength Pchlide in the fluorescence emission spectra. However, excitation spectra showed Pchlide absorption around 650 nm and its flash-induced disappearance confirmed its nature of phototransformable Pchlide. In fact the excitation spectra showed that the proportions of different Pchlide forms in green leaves highly resembled the proportions of Pchlide forms in dark-grown leaves and were specific for the plant variety. Thus Chl formation in both dark-grown and light-grown leaves can occur in a similar way through the main photoactive long-wavelength form of Pchlide.  相似文献   

12.
Lenti  K.  Fodor  F.  Böddi  B. 《Photosynthetica》2002,40(1):145-151
The effect of Hg++ was studied on the arrangement and photoactivity of NADPH:protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase (POR) in homogenates of dark-grown wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) leaves. 77 K fluorescence emission spectra of the homogenates were recorded before and after the irradiation of the homogenates and the spectra were deconvoluted into Gaussian components. The mercury treatment caused a precipitation of the membrane particles, which was followed by a remarkable decrease of the fluorescence yield. 10-3 M Hg++ decreased the ratio of the 655 nm-emitting protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) form to the 633 nm-emitting form. 10-2 M Hg++ shifted the short wavelength band to 629–630 nm and a 655 nm form was observed which was inactive on irradiation. This inhibition may be caused by serious alteration of the enzyme structure resulting in the trans-localisation of NADPH within the active site of POR.  相似文献   

13.
Light-dependent NADPH:protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase (POR), a nuclear-encoded plastid-localized enzyme, catalyzes the photoreduction of protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) to chlorophyllide in higher plants, algae and cyanobacteria. Angiosperms require light for chlorophyll (Chl) biosynthesis and have recently been shown to contain two POR-encoding genes, PorA and PorB , that are differentially regulated by light and developmental state. PorA expression rapidly becomes undetectable after illumination of etiolated seedlings, whereas PorB expression persists throughout greening and in adult plants. In order to study the in vivo functions of Arabidopsis POR A and POR B we have abolished the expression of PorA through the use of the phytochrome A-mediated far-red high irradiance response. Wild-type seedlings grown in continuous far-red light (cFR) display the morphology of white light (WL)-grown seedlings, but contain only traces of Chl and do not green upon transfer to WL. This cFR-induced greening defect correlates with the absence of PorA mRNA, the putative POR A protein, phototransformable Pchlide-F655, and with strongly reduced POR enzymatic activity in plant extracts. In contrast, a cFR-grown phyA mutant expresses the PorA gene, accumulates Chl and visibly greens in WL. Furthermore, constitutive overexpression of POR A in cFR-grown transgenic Arabidopsis wild-type seedlings restores Chl accumulation and WL-induced greening. These data demonstrate that POR A is required for greening and that the availability of POR A limits Chl accumulation during growth in cFR. POR B apparently provides a means to sustain light-dependent Chl biosynthesis in fully greened, mature plants in the absence of phototransformable Pchlide-F655.  相似文献   

14.
The reduction of protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) is a key regulatory step in the biosynthesis of chlorophyll in phototrophic organisms. Two distinct enzymes catalyze this reduction; a light-dependent NADPH:protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase (POR) and light-independent Pchlide reductase (DPOR). Both enzymes are widely distributed among phototrophic organisms with the exception that only POR is found in angiosperms and only DPOR in anoxygenic photosynthetic bacteria. Consequently, angiosperms become etiolated in the absence of light, since the reduction of Pchlide in angiosperms is solely dependent on POR. In eukaryotic phototrophs, POR is a nuclear-encoded single polypeptide and post-translationally imported into plastids. POR possesses unique features, its light-dependent catalytic activity, accumulation in plastids of dark-grown angiosperms (etioplasts) via binding to its substrate, Pchlide, and cofactor, NADPH, resulting in the formation of prolamellar bodies (PLBs), and rapid degradation after catalysis under subsequent illumination. During the last decade, considerable progress has been made in the study of the gene organization, catalytic mechanism, membrane association, regulation of the gene expression, and physiological function of POR. In this review, we provide a brief overview of DPOR and then summarize the current state of knowledge on the biochemistry and molecular biology of POR mainly in angiosperms. The physiological and evolutional implications of POR are also discussed.  相似文献   

15.
The phototransformation of protochlorophyllide forms was studied in epicotyls of dark-germinated pea (Pisum sativum L. cv. Zsuzsi) seedlings. Middle segments were illuminated with white or 632.8 nm laser flash or continuous light at room temperature and at −15°C. At low light intensities, photoreduction could be distinguished from bleaching. 77 K fluorescence emission spectra were measured, difference spectra of illuminated and non-illuminated samples were calculated and/or the spectra were deconvoluted into Gaussian components. The 629 nm-emitting protochlorophyllide form, P629 (Pxxx where xxx is the fluorescence emission maximum), was inactive. For short-period (2–100 ms) and/or low-intensity (0.75–1.5 µmol m−2 s−1) illumination, particularly with laser light, the transformation of P636 into the 678 nm-emitting chlorophyllide form, C678 (Cxxx where xxx is the fluorescence emission maximum), was characteristic. This process was also found when the samples were cooled to −15°C. The transformation of P644 into C684 usually proceeded in parallel with the process above as a result of the strong overlap of the excitation bands of P636 and P644. The Shibata shift of C684 into a short-wavelength form, C675–676, was observed. Long-period (20–600 s) and/or high-intensity (above 10 µmol m−2 s−1) illumination resulted in the parallel transformation of P655 into C692. These results demonstrate that three flash-photoactive protochlorophyllide forms function in pea epicotyls. As a part of P636 is flash photoactive, its protochlorophyllide molecule must be bound to the active site of a monomer protein unit [Böddi B, Kis-Petik K, Kaposi AD, Fidy J, Sundqvist C (1998) The two short wavelength protochlorophyllide forms in pea epicotyls are both monomeric. Biochim Biophys Acta 1365: 531–540] of the NADPH:protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase (EC 1.3.1.33). Dynamic interconversions of the protochlorophyllide forms into each other, and their regeneration, were also found, which are summarized in a scheme.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of nitrogen (N) deprivation were studied in etiolated pea plants (Pisum sativum cv. Zsuzsi) grown in shoot cultures. The average shoot lengths decreased and the stems significantly altered considering their pigment contents, 77 K fluorescence spectra and ultrastructural properties. The protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) content and the relative contribution of the 654–655 nm emitting flash‐photoactive Pchlide form significantly decreased. The etioplast inner membrane structure characteristically changed: N deprivation correlated with a decrease in the size and number of prolamellar bodies (PLBs). These results show that N deficiency directly hinders the pigment production, as well as the synthesis of other etioplast inner membrane components in etiolated pea stems.  相似文献   

17.
The enzyme catalysing the reduction of protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) to chlorophyllide (Chlide), NADPH:Pchlide oxidoreductase (POR; EC 1.6.99.1), is a nuclear-encoded protein that is post-translationally imported to the plastid. In barley and Arabidopsis thaliana , the reduction of Pchlide is controlled by two different PORs, PORA and PORB. To characterise the possible Pchlide dependency for the import reaction, radiolabelled precursor proteins of barley PORA and PORB (pPORA and pPORB, respectively) were used for in vitro assays with isolated plastids of barley and pea with different contents of Pchlide. To obtain plastids with different endogenous levels of Pchlide, several methods were used. Barley plants were grown in darkness or in greenhouse conditions for 6 days. Alternatively, greenhouse-grown pea plants were incubated for 4 days in darkness before plastid isolation, or chloroplasts isolated from greenhouse-grown plants were incubated with Δ -aminolevulinic acid (ALA), an early precursor in the Chl biosynthesis resulting in elevated Pchlide contents in the plastids. Both barley pPORA and pPORB were effectively imported into barley and pea chloroplasts isolated from the differentially treated plants, including those isolated from greenhouse-grown plants. The absence or presence of Pchlide did not significantly affect the import capacity of barley pPORA or pPORB. Assays performed on stroma-enriched fractions from chloroplasts and etioplasts of barley indicated that no post-import degradation of the proteins occurred in the stroma, irrespective of whether the incubation was performed in darkness or in light.  相似文献   

18.
To study if etiolation symptoms exist in plants grown under natural illumination conditions, under‐soil epicotyl segments of light‐grown pea (Pisum sativum) plants were examined and compared to those of hydroponically dark‐grown plants. Light‐, fluorescence‐ and electron microscopy, 77 K fluorescence spectroscopy, pigment extraction and pigment content determination methods were used. Etioplasts with prolamellar bodies and/or prothylakoids, protochlorophyll (Pchl) and protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) forms (including the flash‐photoactive 655 nm emitting form) were found in the (pro)chlorenchyma of epicotyl segments under 3 cm soil depth; their spectral properties were similar to those of hydroponically grown seedlings. However, differences were found in etioplast sizes and Pchlide:Pchl molar ratios, which indicate differences in the developmental rates of the under‐soil and of hydroponically developed cells. Tissue regions closer to the soil surface showed gradual accumulation of chlorophyll, and in parallel, decrease of Pchl and Pchlide. These results proved that etioplasts and Pchlide exist in soil‐covered parts of seedlings even if they have a 3–4‐cm long photosynthetically active shoot above the soil surface. This underlines that etiolation symptoms do develop under natural growing conditions, so they are not merely artificial, laboratory phenomena. Consequently, dark‐grown laboratory plants are good models to study the early stages of etioplast differentiation and the Pchlide–chlorophyllide phototransformation.  相似文献   

19.
The homologous import and membrane association of a key enzyme for chlorophyll biosynthesis, the NADPH:protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) oxidoreductase (POR, EC 1.6.99.1) into pea chloroplasts was investigated in vitro. The co-factor, NADPH, decreased binding of the precursor protein (pPOR) to the envelope membranes in the presence of ATP. The decrease of the binding reaction with NADPH was not observed with the precursor of the small subunit of Rubisco (pSS).
To investigate possible substrate-dependency for the import reaction, internal Pchlide concentrations in the plastids were raised by either an addition of δ -aminolevulinic acid to isolated plastids or etiolation of the seedlings prior to plastid isolation. Increased amounts of plastid-bound Pchlide gave no observable differences in POR import.
The capacity of POR and 11 different POR mutants, carrying charged-to-alanine scanning substitutions, to form a catalytically active POR-Pchlide-NADPH complex and to associate with the thylakoid membranes in a protease-resistant way were tested. Wild-type POR, as well as the mutants with charge substitutions in the N-terminal region of the protein, exhibited higher catalytic activity than the POR mutants carrying substitutions in the C-terminal region. Formation of a catalytically active complex did not, however, increase the association efficiency onto the thylakoids. We can, therefore, postulate that the import of pea POR into pea chloroplasts was not substrate-dependent, nor did formation of catalytically active complexes stimulate or inhibit the membrane association reaction of POR.  相似文献   

20.
The etioplast of dark-grown angiosperms is characterized by the prolamellar body (PLB) inner membrane, the absence of chlorophyll, and the accumulation of divinyl and monovinyl derivatives of protochlorophyll(ide) a [Pchl(ide) a]. Either of two structurally related, but differentially expressed light-dependent NADPH:Pchlide oxidoreductases (PORs), PORA and PORB, can assemble the PLB and form dark-stable ternary complexes containing enzymatically photoactive Pchlide-F655. Here we have examined in detail whether these polypeptides play redundant roles in etioplast differentiation by manipulating the total POR content and the PORA-to-PORB ratio of etiolated Arabidopsis seedlings using antisense and overexpression approaches. POR content correlates closely with PLB formation, the amounts, spectroscopic properties, and photoreduction kinetics of photoactive Pchlide, the ratio of photoactive Pchlide-F655 to non-photoactive Pchl(ide)-F632, and the ratio of divinyl- to monovinyl-Pchl(ide). This last result defines POR as the first endogenous protein factor demonstrated to influence the chemical heterogeneity of Pchl(ide) in angiosperms. It is intriguing that excitation energy transfer between different spectroscopic forms of Pchl(ide) in etiolated cotyledons remains largely independent of POR content. We therefore propose that the PLB contains a minimal structural unit with defined pigment stoichiometries, within which a small amount of non-photoactive Pchl(ide) transfers excitation energy to a large excess of photoactive Pchlide-F655. In addition, our data suggests that POR may bind not only stoichiometric amounts of photoactive Pchlide, but also substoichiometric amounts of non-photoactive Pchl(ide). We conclude that the typical characteristics of etioplasts are closely related to total POR content, but not obviously to the specific presence of PORA or PORB.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号