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1.
The afterglow (AG) band of thermoluminescence (TL) has been investigated in leaves of Arabidopsis thaliana. Excitation of dark-adapted leaves with two saturating single turn-over flashes induced the appearance of a complex TL glow curve that could be well simulated by three components: the two components, B1 and B2, of the usually called B-band, peaking at 18 and 26 °C, respectively, and a band with tmax at 41 °C, which we attributed to an AG emission. Illumination of dark-adapted leaves with 720 nm monochromatic and FR lights generated the emission of a sharp single band peaking also around at 41 °C, that it is usually assigned to an AG emission band. Dark-incubation of whole plants increased the intensity of AG-band in TL curves induced by two flashes and, in parallel, decreased B-bands. Selective illumination of leaves with light mostly absorbed by PS II (650 nm light) completely abolished the AG-band induced by two flashes, B-band being the only TL band observed. The single AG-band induced by 720 nm light was abolished if leaves were also illuminated with 650 nm light. On the other hand, AG-band could be restored if 650 nm illuminated leaves were afterwards illuminated with 720 nm light. The changes in the intensity of B and AG bands induced by selective illuminations seem to be related to alterations in the redox state of QB and plastoquinone pool.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
Changes in characteristics of flash-induced thermoluminescence (TL) glow curves in thylakoids of lettuce following incubation of the organelles with ATP, under illumination or in the dark, were investigated. TL bands were induced by 1 or 2 flashes fired at –10°C or 1°C in thylakoids: TL curves in control thylakoids which were dark-adapted or submitted to an illumination without ATP, can be deconvoluted as the sum of one single B band and minor contributions. In thylakoids incubated for 90 s with 0.5 mM ATP, either under light or in the dark (after a 90 s preillumination), bands presented complex shapes; after deconvolution, they appeared composed of a B band with a low Ea (activation energy): 0.6 e.v. as compared to 0.75 in control, and a supplementary band peaking at about 10°C. The band at low temperature was suppressed by low concentrations (10–20 nM) of valinomycin, nigericin or FCCP as well as by 10 mM ammonium chloride, leaving B bands with the same characteristics as in control material. Finally with higher nigericin concentrations, the bands became single B bands with high Ea (0.9 e.v.). These characteristics would define 3 different energized states (in the form of a transmembrane electrochemical potential) for thylakoids based upon the presence of the 10°C band and the value of the activation energy for the B band component. The presence of a large 10°C band was also correlated to the existence of a larger transmembrane pH gradient, in the dark, after an ATP-treatment, than in controls. The 10°C band was specifically suppressed by the action of low concentrations of alkaline phosphatase with minor changes in characteristics of the remaining B band suggesting that phosphorylation of PS II proteins is also involved in the appearance of this low temperature band. The main mechanism at the origin of the low temperature band would be a destabilization of S2/3QB charge pairs in energized membranes.  相似文献   

4.
We investigated the influence of CO2/HCO3 -depletion and of the presence of acetate and formate on the in vivo photosynthetic electron transport in the two green algae Chlamydobotrys stellata and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii by means of thermoluminescence technique and mathematical glow curve analysis. The main effects of the removal of CO2 from the algal cultures was: (1) A shift of the glow curve peak position to lower temperatures resulting from a decrease of the B band and an increase of the Q band. (2) Treatment of CO2-deficient Chl. stellata with DCMU yielded two thermoluminescence bands in the Q band region peaking at around +12°C and +5°C; in case of Chl. reinhardtii DCMU treatment induced only one band with an emission maximum at +5°C. The presence of acetate or formate in CO2-depleted algal cultures lowered the intensities of all of the individual TL bands but that of a HT band (TL+37). The effects of CO2-depletion and of the presence of anions were fully reversible.Abbreviations DCMU 3-(3,4)-dichlorophenyl-1,1-dimethylurea - HT band high temperature TL band - P680 reaction center chlorophyll of PS II - QA and QB primary and secondary quinone acceptors of PS II, respectively - PS II Photosystem II - S2/3 redox states of the oxygen evolving complex of PS II - TL thermoluminescence  相似文献   

5.
An effect of desiccation (a decrease of relative water content from 97% to 10% within 35 h) on Photosystem II was studied in barley leaf segments (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Akcent) using chlorophyll a fluorescence and thermoluminescence (TL). The O-J-I-P fluorescence induction curve revealed a decrease of FP and a slight shift of the J step to a shorter time with no change in its height. The analysis of the fluorescence decline after a saturating light flash revealed an increased portion of slow exponential components with increasing desiccation. The TL bands obtained after excitation by continuous light were situated at about –27°C (Zv band – recombination of P680+QA ), –14 °C (A band – S3QA ), +12 °C (B band – S2/3QB ) and +45 °C (C band – TyrD+QA ). The bands related to the S-states of oxygen evolving complex (A and B) were reduced by desiccation and shifted to higher and lower temperatures, respectively. In accordance with this, the band observed at about +27 °C (S2QB ) after excitation by 1 flash fired at –10 °C and band at about +20 °C (S2/3QB ) after 2 flashes decreased with increasing water deficit and shifted to lower temperatures. A new band around 5 °C appeared in both regimes of TL excitation for a relative water content of under 42% and was attributed to the Q band (S2QA ). It is suggested that under desiccation, an inhibition of the formation of S2- and S3-states in OEC occurred simultaneously with a lowering of electron transport on the acceptor side of PS II. The temperature down-shift of the TL bands obtained after the flash excitation was induced at the initial phases of water stress, indicating a decrease of the activation energy for the S2/3QB recombination. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

6.
Thermoluminescence of intact photosynthetic organisms, leaves or algal cells, raises specific problems. The constitutive S2/3Q B ? B bands constitute major probes of the state of photosystem II in vivo. The presence of a dark-stable acidic lumen causes a temperature downshift of B bands, specially the S3 B band, providing a lumen pH indicator. This is accompanied by a broadening of the S3 B band that becomes an envelope of elementary B bands. The occasional AT, Q and C bands are briefly examined in an in vivo context. It is emphasized that freezing below the nucleation temperature is not necessary for physiological studies, but a source of artefacts, hence should be avoided. In intact photosynthetic structures, a dark-electron transfer from stroma reductants to the quinonic acceptors of photosystem II via the cyclic/chlororespiratory pathways, strongly stimulated by moderate warming, gives rise to the afterglow (AG) luminescence emission that reflects chloroplast energy status. The decomposition of complex TL signals into elementary bands is necessary to determine the maximum temperature T m and the area of each of them. A comparison of TL signals after 1 flash and 2 flashes prevents from confusing the three main bands observed in vivo, i.e. the S2 and S3 B bands and the AG band. Finally, the thermoluminescence bands arising sometimes above 50 °C are mentioned. The basic principles of (thermo)luminescence established on isolated thylakoids should not be applied directly without a careful examination of in vivo conditions.  相似文献   

7.
We have measured thermoluminescence (TL) and chlorophyll fluorescence from leaves of peas grown under an intermittent light regime (IML) and followed changes in those leaves during greening. IML peas show low variable fluorescence and a certain capacity for reversible non-photochemical quenching. It has been suggested that reversible quenching may be caused by pH-dependent release of Ca2+ from Photosystem II (PS II) (Krieger and Weis (1992) Photosynthetica 27: 89–98). Under conditions in which reversible non-photochemical quenching occurs, a TL band at around 50 °C is observed, in the presence of DCMU, in IML leaves. A band in this temperature range has previously been observed in PS II depleted of Ca2+ (Ono and Inoue (1989) Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 973: 443–449). The 50 °C band disappears upon dark adaptation. In mature leaves, no significant band is seen at 50 °C. It is concluded that, in IML leaves, reversible quenching may be related to the release of Ca2+ from Photosystem II. However, it seems that in the mature system, under most conditions, such release does not contribute significantly to quenching  相似文献   

8.
The temperature dependence of the rate of de-epoxidation of violaxanthin to zeaxanthin was determined in leaves of chilling-sensitive Gossypium hirsutum L. (cotton) and chilling-resistant Malva parviflora L. by measurements of the increase in absorbance at 505 nm (A 505) and in the contents of antheraxanthin and zeaxanthin that occur upon exposure of predarkened leaves to excessive light. A linear relationship between A 505 and the decrease in the epoxidation state of the xanthophyll-cycle pigment pool was obtained over the range 10–40° C. The maximal rate of de-epoxidation was strongly temperature dependent; Q10 measured around the temperature at which the leaf had developed was 2.1–2.3 in both species. In field-grown Malva the rate of de-epoxidation at any given measurement temperature was two to three times higher in leaves developed at a relatively low temperature in the early spring than in those developed in summer. Q10 measured around 15° C was in the range 2.2–2.6 in both kinds of Malva leaves, whereas it was as high as 4.6 in cotton leaves developed at a daytime temperature of 30° C. Whereas the maximum (initial) rate of de-epoxidation showed a strong decrease with decreased temperature the degree of de-epoxidation reached in cotton leaves after a 1–2 · h exposure to a constant photon flux density increased with decreased temperature as the rate of photosynthesis decrease. The zeaxanthin content rose from 2 mmol · (mol chlorophyll)–1 at 30° C to 61 mmol · (mol Chl)–1 at 10° C, corresponding to a de-epoxidation of 70% of the violaxanthin pool at 10° C. The degree of de-epoxidation at each temperature was clearly related to the amount of excessive light present at that temperature. The relationship between non-photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence and zeaxanthin formation at different temperatures was determined for both untreated control leaves and for leaves in which zeaxanthin formation was prevented by dithiothreitol treatment. The rate of development of that portion of non-photochemical quenching which was inhibited by dithiothreitol decreased with decreasing temperature and was linearly related to the rate of zeaxanthin formation over a wide temperature range. In contrast, the rate of development of the dithiothreitol-resistant portion of non-photochemical quenching was remarkably little affected by temperature. Evidently, the kinetics of the development of non-photochemical quenching upon exposure of leaves to excessive light is therefore in large part determined by the rate of zeaxanthin formation. For reasons that remain to be determined the relaxation of dithiothreitolsensitive quenching that is normally observed upon darkening of illuminated leaves was strongly inhibited at low temperatures.Abbreviations and Symbols Chl chlorophyll - DTT dithiothreitol - EPS epoxidation state - NPQ non-photochemical chlorophyll fluorescence quenching - PFD photon flux density - PSII photosystem II - F, Fm fluorescence emission at the actual, full closure of the PSII centers C.I.W.-D.P.B. Publication No. 1092We thank Connie Shih for skillful assistance in growing the plants, for conducting the HPLC analyses, and for preparing the figures. A Carnegie Institution Fellowship and a Feodor-Lynen-Fellowship by the Alexander von Humboldt-Foundation to W.B. is gratefully acknowledged. This work was supported by Grant No. 89-37-280-4902 of the Competitive Grants Program of the U.S. Department of Agriculture to O.B.  相似文献   

9.
The changes in thermoluminescence (TL) signals induced by short-term ozone exposure of leaves are characterized by a down-shift of the peak-temperature of the TLB-band and an increase of a TL band at 55°C. We investigated the relationship of these changes to photosystem 2 (PS2) photochemistry. The changes were not only detectable in the presence of ozone, but also after irradiation of dark-adapted leaves and after aging of irradiated detached leaf segments. The opposite effect on TL, an up-shift of the peak-temperature of the B-band and the decrease of the intensity of the band at 55°C were found after infiltration of leaves with nigericin, antimycin A, and diphenyleneiodonium chloride (DPI). Propyl gallate down-shifted the peak-temperature of the B-band. 2,5-dimethyl-1,4-benzoquinone up-shifted the peak-temperature of the B-band and decreased the intensity of the 55°C band. The intensity of the 55°C band did not change significantly in the presence of oxygen in comparison to that in nitrogen atmosphere. It decreased with time of dark adaptation (50% intensity was observed after 3 h of dark adaptation at room temperature), however, it was reactivated to its initial value (at 5 min of dark adaptation) after 1 single-turnover flash. The 55°C band was not significantly changed in the presence of DCMU. Thus the ozone-induced band at 55°C is assigned to charge recombination in PS2. Changes in the electron transport chain at the acceptor side of PS2, probably related to the cyclic electron transport around photosystem 1 and/or chlororespiration, could play an important role in the increase of the 55°C band and the down-shift of the B-band. The changes at the acceptor side indicated by TL can be an ex pression of a physiological regulatory mechanism functional under stress conditions.  相似文献   

10.
Strawberry plants (Fragaria×ananassa Duch.) cvs. Nyoho and Toyonoka were exposed to temperatures of 20, 33, and 42 °C for 4 h, and protein patterns in leaves and flowers was analyzed by 2-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting. In leaves and flowers of both cultivars, the content of most proteins decreased, but a few new proteins appeared in response to heat stress. These heat shock proteins (Hsps) were detected in the range of 19 – 29 kDa in leaves, and 16 – 26 kDa in flowers. The intensity of a 43 kDa protein spot increased in response to heat stress in Nyoho flowers, but not in Toyonoka flowers. The peaHsp17.7 antibody recognized one band at approximately 26 kDa in leaves, and two bands at approximately 16 and 17 kDa in flowers of both cultivars. These results show that the effects of heat stress on Hsp synthesis in strawberry plants differ between plant organs and between cultivars.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
The effect of ultraviolet light on thermoluminescence, oxygen evolution and the slow component of delayed light has been investigated in chloroplasts and Pothos leaves. All peaks including peak V (48°C) were inhibited by UV. However, the peak at 48°C which was induced by DCMU was enhanced following UV irradiation of chloroplasts at ambient temperature (23°C) whereas peak II (-12°C) and peak III (10°C) which were also induced by DCMU were inhibited. Chloroplasts treated with DCMU and dark incubated for several minutes at ambient temperature prior to recording of glow curves have also shown enhancement of peak at 48°C. A slow component of delayed light and photosystem II activity of chloroplasts were inhibited by UV whereas photosystem I activity was marginally affected. These results corroborate involvement of photosystem II in generating thermoluminescence and slow components of delayed light in photosynthetic materials.Abbreviations DCIP Dichlorophenol Indophenol - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DCQ 2,6 Dichloro-p-benzoquinone - DLE delayed light emission - MOPS Morpholino propane sulfonic acid - PSI Photosystem I - PS II Photosystem II - TL thermoluminescence  相似文献   

13.
The rhythm of CO2 assimilation exhibited by leaves of Bryophyllum fedtschenkoi maintained in light and normal air occurs only at constant ambient temperatures between 10°C and 30°C. Over this range the period increases linearly with increasing temperature from the extremely low value of 15.7 h to 23.3 h, but shows a considerable degree of temperature compensation. Outside the range 10°C–30°C the rhythm is inhibited but re-starts on changing the temperature to 15°C. Prolonged exposure of leaves to high (40°C) and low (2°C) temperature inhibits the rhythm by driving the basic oscillator to fixed phase points in the cycle which differ by 180°, and which have been characterised in terms of the malate status of the leaf cells. At both temperatures loss of the circadian rhythm of CO2 assimilation is due to the inhibition of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPCase) activity, but the inhibition is apparently achieved in different ways at 40°C and 2°C. High temperature appears to inhibit directly PEPCase activity, but not the activity of the enzymes responsible for the breakdown of malate, with the result that the leaf acquires a low malate status. In contrast, low temperature does not directly inhibit PEPCase activity, but does inhibit enzymes responsible for malate breakdown, so that the malate level in the leaf increases to a high value and PEPCase is eventually allosterically inhibited. The different malate status of leaves held at these two temperatures accounts for the phases of the rhythms being reversed on returning the leaves to 15°C. After exposure to high temperature, CO2 fixation by PEPCase activity can begin immediately, whereas after exposure to low temperature, the large amount of malate accumulated in the leaves has to be decarboxylated before CO2 fixation can begin.  相似文献   

14.
Damage to primary photosynthetic reactions by drought, excess light and heat in leaves of Macroptilium atropurpureum Dc. cv. Siratro was assessed by measurements of chlorophyll fluorescence emission kinetics at 77 K (-196°C). Paraheliotropic leaf movement protected waterstressed Siratro leaves from damage by excess light (photoinhibition), by heat, and by the interactive effects of excess light and high leaf temperatures. When the leaves were restrained to a horizontal position, photoinhibition occurred and the degree of photoinhibitory damage increased with the time of exposure to high levels of solar radiation. Severe inhibition was followed by leaf death, but leaves gradually recovered from moderate damage. This drought-induced photoinhibitory damage seemed more closely related to low leaf water potential than to low leaf conductance. Exposure to leaf temperatures above 42°C caused damage to the photosynthetic system even in the dark and leaves died at 48°C. Between 42 and 48°C the degree of heat damage increased with the time of exposure, but recovery from moderate heat damage occurred over several days. The threshold temperature for direct heat damage increased with the growth temperature regime, but was unaffected by water-stress history or by current leaf water status. No direct heat damage occurred below 42°C, but in water-stressed plants photoinhibition increased with increasing leaf temperature in the range 31–42°C and with increasing photon flux density up to full sunglight values. Thus, water stress evidently predisposes the photosynthetic system to photoinhibition and high leaf temperature exacerbates this photoinhibitory damage. It seems probable that, under the climatic conditions where Siratro occurs in nature, but in the absence of paraheliotropic leaf movement, photoinhibitory damage would occur more frequently during drought than would direct heat damage.Abbreviations and symbols PFD photon flux area density - PSI, PSII photosyntem I, II - F M, F O, F V maximum, instantaneous, variable fluorescence emission - PLM paraheliotropic leaf movement; all data of parameter of variation are mean ± standard error  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Steady state millisecond delayed fluorescence (DLE) of intact leaves and cyanobacterial cells was measured continuously with a Becquerel-type phosphoroscope while cooling from the growth temperature to near 0°C or heating from the low to high temperature at about 1°C/min. The temperature of maximum DLE depended upon light intensity. In Anacystis grown at 28 and 38°C DLE maximum occurred near 15 and 23°C, respectively, which are the temperatures where thylakoid membrane lipids have been shown to pass from the liquid crystalline to the mixed solid-liquid crystalline state in these cyanobacteria. In some plants such as field mallow DLE increased continuously as the temperature decreased, whereas in others it rose to a maximum, then decreased. Chilling-sensitive plants such as tomato, sweet potato and Trichospermum, showed DLE maxima around 10–14°C while the chilling-resistant plant, oat, had a maximum near 4°C and field mallow had no maximum above 0°C.Abbreviations DLE delayed light emission CIW-DPB Publ. No. 1022.  相似文献   

17.
Detached leaves of Bryophyllum fedtschenkoi Hamet et Perrier kept in normal air show a single period of net CO2 fixation on transfer to constant darkness at temperatures in the range 0–25 °C. The duration of this initial fixation period is largely independent of temperature in the range 5–20 °C, but lengthens very markedly at temperatures below 4 °C, and is reduced at temperatures above 25 °C. The onset of net fixation of CO2 on transfer of leaves to constant darkness is immediate at low temperatures, but is delayed as the temperature is increased. The ambient temperature also determines whether or not a circadian rhythm of CO2 exchange occurs. The rhythm begins to appear at about 20 °C, is most evident at 30 °C and becomes less distinct at 35 °C. The occurrence of a distinct circadian rhythm in CO2 output at 30° C in the absence of a detectable rhythm in PEPCase kinase activity shows that the kinase rhythm is not a mandatory requirement for the rhythm of PEPCase activity. However, when it occurs, the kinase rhythm undoubtedly amplifies the PEPCase rhythm.Abbreviation PEPCase phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase We thank the Agricultural and Food Research Council for financial support for this work.  相似文献   

18.
Ulocladium atrum and Gliocladium roseum are fungal antagonists capable of suppressing sporulation of Botrytis spp. on dead plant parts. The effect of temperature (3 to 36 °C) on antagonist conidial germination and mycelial growth was assessed on agar. In addition conidial germination of U. atrum was measured on dead lily leaves. The optimum temperature of both antagonists for both conidial germination and mycelial growth was between 27 and 30 °C. U. atrum was less affected by lower temperatures than G. roseum. At optimum temperature, 50% of conidia of U. atrum and G. roseum germinated within 2.6 and 10.0 hrs, respectively. At low sub-optimal temperatures (6 °C), 50% of conidia germinated within 18 and 96 hours, respectively.In bioassays on dead onion leaves, U. atrum suppressed sporulation of B. cinerea and B. aclada at all temperatures tested (6 to 24 °C) by more than 85%. On dead cyclamen leaves, G. roseum was more efficient than U. atrum at 21 and 24 °C but, in contrast to U. atrum, showed no antagonistic activity at temperatures below 21 °C. On dead hydrangea leaves, U. atrum significantly reduced sporulation of B. cinerea at temperatures as low as 3 and 1 °C. Under Dutch growing conditions, the mean air temperature during leaf wetness periods in onion and lily fields was 15 °C with temperatures only occasionally above 20 °C. In greenhouse crops of cyclamen, the mean temperature during high humidity periods was 17 °C. It is therefore concluded that U. atrum is better adapted than G. roseum to temperatures which occur in the field, in greenhouse crops such as cyclamen, or during cold storage of plant stocks.  相似文献   

19.
Plant materials (intact leaves, chloroplasts or subchloroplast particles) pre-illuminated at a low temperature (e.g. -60 degrees C) were rapidly cooled to -196 degrees C and then the luminescence emitted from the sample on raising the temperature was measured as a function of temperature, by means of a sensitive photo-electron counting technique. Mature spinach leaves showed five luminescence bands at different temperatures which were denoted as ZV, A, B1, B2 and C bands. The A, B1, B2 and C bands appeared at constant temperatures, -10, +25, +40 and +55 degrees C, respectively, being independent of the illumination temperature, but the ZV band appeared at a variable temperature slightly higher than the illumination temperature. The B1 and B2 bands were absent in the thermoluminescence profiles of samples devoid of the oxygen-evolving activity, such as heat-treated spinach leaves, wheat leaves greened under intermittent illumination and photosystem-II particles prepared with Triton X-100. It was deduced that these luminescence bands arise from the energy stored by the electron flow in photosystem II to evolve oxygen, and other bands were ascribed to charge-separation in some other sites not related to the oxygen evolving system.  相似文献   

20.
The influence of unfavourable climatic conditions at the onset of the growth period on chilling-sensitive tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill., cv. Abunda) was studied by exposing young plants to combinations of low temperature and low light (60–100 mol quanta · m–2 · s–1) for several weeks. When the temperature did not decrease below a critical point (8 ° C) no loss of developmental capacity of the plants was detected. However, while new leaves were readily formed upon return to normal growth conditions (22/18 °C, day/night, in a greenhouse), net accumulation of biomass showed a lag phase of approximately one week. This delay was accompanied by a strong, irreversible inhibition of photosynthesis in the fully expanded leaves which had been exposed to the chilling treatment. When plants were subjected to temperatures below 8 ° C, survival rates decreased after three weeks at 6 ° C and irreversible damage of apical meristematic tissue occurred. Drought-hardening prior to chilling ensured survival at 6 ° C and protected the plants against meristem loss.Abreviation Chl chlorophyll Thanks are due to G.P. Telkamp for technical assistance. This research is financially supported by the Netherlands Technology Foundation (STW, Utrecht, The Netherlands), and is coordinated by the Foundation for Biological Research (BION, 's-Gravenhage, The Netherlands).  相似文献   

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