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1.
Filtrate from pre- and post-digested plant material was exposed to 355-nm pulsed laser light and the subsequent laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) was recorded. Similarities and differences among spectra from 20 materials are discussed. Each material was replicated once, dried, ground, and exposed to chloroform (CHCl3) for 24 h. The material represented aged (1 to 18 years old) plants from different herbaceous (grasses and forbs) and woody plant life forms. Mean peak fluorescence recorded among materials differed (P < 0.0001) in both wavelength and peak amplitude (counts) across the spectral range (387 to 788 nm). Peak fluorescence was evaluated within each of three arbitrary color categories, blue near 455 nm and red near 674 nm, while only 16 of the materials produced a green peak near 528 nm. In general, the blue and green fluorescence peaks were broad while the red peak was narrow. Mean peak counts were largest in the red range. Varying amounts of laser beam absorption occurred among the materials evaluated due to different concentrations of filtrate and different absorption efficiencies; therefore, amplitude data (counts) were not used to determine statistical differences among materials. To overcome difficulties attributed to the raw count data, red/blue, red/green and blue/green count ratios within replicates were calculated. Using all three count ratios in a multivariate analysis of variance, the 16 materials could be separated into nine different (P < 0.05) material groupings. The LIF technique may provide a reliable means to separate ground pre- and post-digested plant materials following further research into determining what fluorophores are producing the spectral signatures and how sample preparation affect peak wavelengths.  相似文献   

2.
Intensity, spectral characteristics and localization of the UV-laser (337 nm) induced blue-green and red fluorescence emission of green, etiolated and white primary leaves of wheat seedlings were studied in a combined fluorospectral and fluoromicroscopic investigation. The blue-green fluorescence of the green leaf was characterized by a maximum near 450 nm (blue region) and a shoulder near 530 nm (green region), whereas the red chlorophyll fluorescence exhibited maxima in the near-red (F690) and far-red (F735). The etiolated leaf with some carotenoids and traces of chlorophyll a, in turn, showed a higher intensity of the blue-green fluorescence with a shoulder in the green region and a strong red fluorescence peak near 684 to 690 nm, the far-red chlorophyll fluorescence maximum (F735) was, however, absent. The norfluorazone-treated white leaf, free of chlorophylls and carotenoids, only exhibited blue-green fluorescence of a very high intensity. In green and etiolated leaves the blue-green fluorescence primarily derived from the cell walls of the epidermis and the red fluorescence from the chlorophyll a of the mesophyll cells. In white leaves the blue-green fluorescence emanated from all cell walls of epidermis, mesophyll and leaf vein bundles. The shape and intensity of the blue-green and red fluorescence emission is determined by the reabsorption properties of chlorophylls and carotenoids in the mesophyll, thus giving rise to quite different values of the various fluorescence ratios F450/F690, F450/F530, F450/F735 and F690/F735 in green and etiolated leaves.  相似文献   

3.
The blue, green and red fluorescence emission of green wheat ( Triticum aestivum L. var. Rector) and soybean leaves ( Glycine max L. var. Maple Arrow) as induced by UV light (nitrogen laser: 337 nm) was determined in a phytochamber and in plants grown in the field. The fluorescence emission spectra show a blue maximum near 450 nm, a green shoulder near 530 nm and the two red chlorophyll fluorescence maxima near 690 and 735 nm. The ratio of blue to red fluorescence, F450/F690, exhibited a clear correlation to the irradiance applied during the growth of the plants. In contrast, the chlorophyll fluorescence ratio, F690/F735, and the ratio of blue to green fluorescence, F450/F530, seem not to be or are only slightly influenced by the irradiance applied during plant growth. The blue fluorescence F450 only slightly decreased, whereas the red chlorophyll fluorescence decreased with increasing irradiance applied during growth of the plants. This, in turn, resulted in greatly increased values of the ratio, F450/F690, from 0.5 – 1.5 to 6.4 – 8.0. The decrease in the chlorophyll fluorescence with increasing irradiance seems to be caused by the accumulation of UV light absorbing substances in the epidermal layer which considerably reduces the UV laser light which passes through the epidermis and excites the chlorophyll fluorescence of the chloroplasts in the subepidermal mesophyll cells.  相似文献   

4.
Summary The UV-B radiation (e.g. 337 nm) induced blue fluorescence (BF) and red chlorophyll fluorescence spectra (RF) of green leaves from plants with different leaf structure were determined and the possible nature and candidates of the blue fluorescence emission investigated. The blue fluorescence BF is characterized by a main maximum in the 450 nm region and in most cases by a second maximum/shoulder in the 530 nm region. The latter has been termed green fluorescence GF. The red chlorophyll fluorescence RF, in turn, exhibits two maxima in the 690 and 730 nm region. In general, the intensity of BF, GF and RF emission is significantly higher in the lower than the upper leaf side. The ratio of BF to RF emission (F450/F690) seems to vary from plant species to plant species. BF and GF emission spectra appear to be a mixed signal composed of the fluorescence emission of several substances of the plant vacuole and cell wall, which may primarily arise in the epidermis. Leaves with removed epidermis and chlorophyll-free leaves, however, still exhibit a BF and GF emission. Candidates for the blue fluorescence emission ( max near 450 nm) are phenolic substances such as chlorogenic acid, caffeic acid, coumarins (aesculetin, scopoletin), stilbenes (t-stilbene, rhaponticin), the spectra of which are shown. GF emission ( max near 530 nm) seems to be caused by substances like the alkaloid berberine and quercetin. Riboflavine, NADPH and phyllohydroquinoneK 1 seem to contribute little to the BF and GF emission as compared to the other plant compounds. Purified natural-carotene does not exhibit any blue fluorescence.  相似文献   

5.
The UV light (337 nm) induced blue-green fluorescence emission of green leaves is characterized at room temperature (298 K) by a maximum near 450 nm (blue region) and a shoulder near 525 nm (green region) and was here also studied at 77 K. At liquid nitrogen temperature (77 K) the blue (F450) and green fluorescence (F525) are much enhanced as is the red chlorophyll fluorescence near 735 nm. During development of green tobacco leaves the blue fluorescence F450 (77 K) is shifted towards longer wavelengths from about 410 nm to 450 nm. The isolated leaf epidermis of tobacco showed only slight fluorescence emission with a maximum near 410 nm. The green fluorescence F525 was found to mainly originate from the mesophyll of the leaf, its intensity increased when the epidermis was removed. The red chlorophyll fluorescence emission was also enhanced when the epidermis was stripped off; this considerably changed the blue/red fluorescence ratios F450/F690 and F450/F735. The epidermis, with its cell wall and UV-light-absorbing substances in its vacuole, plays the role of a barrier for the exciting UV-light. In contrast to intact and homogenized leaves, isolated intact chloroplasts and thylakoid membranes did not exhibit a blue-green fluorescence emission.  相似文献   

6.
Laser-induced fluorescence images of the leaf of an aurea mutant of Nicotiana tabacum were recorded for the blue and green fluorescence at 440 and 520 nm and the red chlorophyll fluorescence at 690 and 735 nm. The results obtained were compared with direct measurements of the fluorescence emission spectra of leaves using a conventional spectrofluorometer. The highest emission of blue (F440) and green fluorescence (F520) within the leaf was found in the leaf veins, particularly the main leaf vein. In contrast, the intercostal fields of leaves, which exhibited the highest chlorophyll content, showed only a very low blue and green fluorescence emission, which was much lower than the red and far-red chlorophyll fluorescence emission bands (F690 and F735). Correspondingly, the ratio of blue to red leaf fluorescence F440/F690 of upper and lower leaf side was much higher in the leaf veins (values 1.2 to 1.5) than in intercostal fields (values of 0.6 to 0.7). The results also demonstrated that in the intercostal fields the major part of the blue-green fluorescence was reabsorbed by chlorophylls and carotenoids. A partial reabsorption of the red fluorescence band near 690 nm by leaf chlorophyll took place, but did not affect the far-red fluorescence band near F735. As a consequence the chlorophyll fluorescence ratio F690/F735 exhibited significantly higher values in the chlorophyll-poor leaf vein regions (1.7 to 1.8) than in the chlorophyll-rich intercostal fields (0.8 to 1.3). Imaging spectroscopy of leaves was shown to be much more precise than the screening of fluorescence signatures by conventional fluorometers. It clearly demonstrated that the blue-green fluorescence and the red chlorophyll fluorescence of leaves exhibit an inverse contrast to each other. The advantage of the fluorescence imaging spectroscopy, which allows the simultaneous screening of the whole leaf surface and distinct parts of it, and its possible application in the detection of stress effects or local damage by insects and pathogens, is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Buschmann  C.  Langsdorf  G.  Lichtenthaler  H.K. 《Photosynthetica》2000,38(4):483-491
An overview is given on the fluorescence imaging of plants. Emphasis is laid upon multispectral fluorescence imaging in the maxima of the fluorescence emission bands of leaves, i.e., in the blue (440 nm), green (520 nm), red (690 nm), and far-red (740 nm) spectral regions. Details on the origin of these four fluorescence bands are presented including emitting substances and emitting sites within a leaf tissue. Blue-green fluorescence derives from ferulic acids covalently bound to cell walls, and the red and far-red fluorescence comes from chlorophyll (Chl) a in the chloroplasts of green mesophyll cells. The fluorescence intensities are influenced (1) by changes in the concentration of the emitting substances, (2) by the internal optics of leaves determining the penetration of excitation radiation and partial re-absorption of the emitted fluorescence, and (3) by the energy distribution between photosynthesis, heat production, and emission of Chl fluorescence. The set-up of the Karlsruhe multispectral fluorescence imaging system (FIS) is described from excitation with UV-pulses to the detection with an intensified CCD-camera. The possibilities of image processing (e.g., formation of fluorescence ratio images) are presented, and the ways of extraction of physiological and stress information from the ratio images are outlined. Examples for the interpretation of fluorescence images are given by demonstrating the information available for the detection of different developmental stages of plant material, of strain and stress of plants, and of herbicide treatment. This novel technique can be applied for near-distance screening or remote sensing.  相似文献   

8.
Galland P  Tölle N 《Planta》2003,217(6):971-982
Light-induced fluorescence changes (LIFCs) were detected in sporangiophores of the blue-light-sensitive fungus Phycomyces blakesleeanus (Burgeff). The LIFCs can be utilized as a spectrophotometric assay for blue-light photoreceptors and for the in vivo characterization of their photochemical primary reactions. Blue-light irradiation of sporangiophores elicited a transient decrease and subsequent regeneration of flavin-like fluorescence emission at 525 nm. The signals recovered in darkness in about 120 min. In contrast to blue light, near-UV (370 nm) caused an increase in the fluorescence emission at 525 nm. Because the LIFCs were altered in a light-insensitive madC mutant with a defective photoreceptor, the fluorescence changes must be associated with early photochemical events of the transduction chain. Action spectra for the fluorescence changes at 525 nm showed major peaks near 470 and 600 nm. Double-pulse experiments involving two consecutive pulses of either blue and near-UV, blue and red, or near-UV and red showed that the responses depended on the sequence in which the different wavelengths were applied. The results indicate a blue-light receptor with intermediates in the near-UV, blue and red spectral regions. We explain the results in the framework of a general model, in which the three redox states of the flavin photoreceptor, the oxidized flavin (Fl), the flavo-semiquinone (FlH·), and the flavo-hydroquinone (FlH2) are each acting as chromophores with their own characteristic photochemical primary reactions. These consist of the photoreduction of the oxidized flavin generating semiquinone, the photoreduction of the semiquinone generating hydroquinone, and the photooxidation of the flavo-hydroquinone regenerating the pool of oxidized flavins. The proposed mechanism represents a photocycle in which two antagonistic photoreceptor forms, Fl and FlH2, determine the pool size of the biological effector molecule, the flavo-semiquinone. The redox changes that are associated with the photocycle are maintained by redox partners, pterins, that function in the near-UV as secondary chromophores.Abbreviations FAD flavin adenine dinucleotide - Fl oxidized flavin - FlH flavo-semiquinone radical - FlH2 flavo-hydroquinone - LIAC light-induced absorbance change - LIFC light-induced fluorescence change - Pt oxidized pterin - PtH2 dihydro-pterin - PtH4 tetrahydro-pterin  相似文献   

9.
A new fluorescence imaging system for monitoring the uptake of the PSII-herbicide diuron (OCMU) was tested in tobacco leaves. UV-laser-induced (Λexc = 355 nm) fluorescence images were collected for blue fluorescence F440 (Λem = 440 nm), green fluorescence F520 (Λem = 520 nm), red chlorophyll fluorescence F690 (Λem = 690 nm) and for far-red chlorophyll fluorescence F740 (Λem = 740 nm). Diuron-treated leaf parts exhibited a higher red and far-red chlorophyll fluorescence emission (F690 and F740) than untreated leaf halves, whereas the blue and green fluorescence, F440 and F520, remained unaffected. As a consequence, the fluorescence ratios blue/red (F440/F690) and blue/far-red (F440/F740) significantly decreased in diuron-treated leaf parts. The time course of diuron uptake into the leaf could be followed by fluorescence images taken 10 and 30 min after diuron application. The novel high resolution fluorescence imaging method supplies information on the herbicide uptake of each point of the leaf area. Its great advantage as compared to the point data fluorescence measurements applied so far is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Autofluorescence (primary fluorescence (AF)) of fruiting bodies and stems of the fungus Morchella conica var. rigida was studied by fluorescence microscopy including sporangia and ascospores. The ascospores were characterized by a weak green–yellow AF at blue excitation. Using a green excitation, no AF was observed. The hyphae located under the layer of asci with ascospores exhibited a higher primary fluorescence, namely their walls that had green-yellow color at blue excitation. Also, their red AF observed when a green excitation was used was significant. Similarly, the hyphae located in the fungal stem exhibited a significant AF, especially their walls when the blue light was used for excitation. In addition, large, yellow-to-yellow/green, oval-to-round bodies with strong fluorescence were detected whose morphological equivalents were not clearly visible in the white halogen light. The AF of the fungus M. conica var. rigida was lower compared with the other higher fungi studied so far.  相似文献   

11.
The aim of this study was to measure changes in the fluorescence of Fusobacterium nucleatum interacting with Porphyromonas gingivalis for excitation with blue light at 405-nm. P. gingivalis was mono- and co-cultivated in close proximity with F. nucleatum. The fluorescence of the bacterial colonies was photographed using a QLF-D (Quantitative Light-induced Fluorescence-Digital) Biluminator camera system with a 405 nm light source and a specific filter. The red, green and blue intensities of fluorescence images were analyzed using the image analysis software. A fluorescence spectrometer was used to detect porphyrin synthesized by each bacterium. F. nucleatum, which emitted green fluorescence in single cultures, showed intense red fluorescence when it was grown in close proximity with P. gingivalis. F. nucleatum co-cultivated with P. gingivalis showed the same pattern of fluorescence peaks as for protoporphyrin IX in the red part of the spectrum. We conclude that the green fluorescence of F. nucleatum can change to red fluorescence in the presence of adjacent co-cultured with P. gingivalis, indicating that the fluorescence character of each bacterium might depend on the presence of other bacteria.  相似文献   

12.
The effects of different spectral region of excitation and detection of chlorophyll (Chl) a fluorescence at room temperature on the estimation of excitation energy utilization within photosystem (PS) 2 were studied in wild-type barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Bonus) and its Chl b-less mutant chlorina f2 grown under low and high irradiances [100 and 1 000 μmol(photon) m−2 s−1]. Three measuring spectral regimes were applied using a PAM 101 fluorometer: (1) excitation in the red region (maximum at the wavelength of 649 nm) and detection in the far-red region beyond 710 nm, (2) excitation in the blue region (maximum at the wavelength of 461 nm) and detection beyond 710 nm, and (3) excitation in the blue region and detection in the red region (660– 710 nm). Non-photochemical quenching of maximal (NPQ) and minimal fluorescence (SV0), determined by detecting Chl a fluorescence beyond 710 nm, were significantly higher for blue excitation as compared to red excitation. We suggest that this results from higher non-radiative dissipation of absorbed excitation energy within light-harvesting complexes of PS2 (LHC2) due to preferential excitation of LHC2 by blue radiation and from the lower contribution of PS1 emission to the detected fluorescence in the case of blue excitation. Detection of Chl a fluorescence originating preferentially from PS2 (i.e. in the range of 660–710 nm) led to pronounced increase of NPQ, SV0, and the PS2 photochemical efficiencies (FV/FM and FV′/FM′), indicating considerable underestimation of these parameters using the standard set-up of PAM 101. Hence PS1 contribution to the minimal fluorescence level in the irradiance-adapted state may reach up to about 80 %.  相似文献   

13.
A newly developed laboratory fluorescence imaging system was used to obtain fluorescence images (FImage) of freshly excised cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.) leaves in spectral bands centered in the blue (F450), green (F550), red (F680), and far-red (F730) spectral regions that resulted from a broad-band (300-400 nm) excitation source centered at 360 nm. Means of relative fluorescence intensities (RFI) from these spectral fluorescence images were compared with spectral fluorescence emission data obtained from excitation wavelengths at 280 nm (280EX, 300-550 nm) and 380 nm (380EX, 400-800 nm) of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) extracts from these leaves. All three fluorescence data types (FImage, 280EX, 380EX) were used to assess ultraviolet-B (UV-B, 280-320 nm) induced physiological changes and the possible use of N-[2-(2-oxo-1-imidazolidinyl) ethyl]-N′-phenylurea (EDU or ethylenediurea) as a chemical protectant against UV-B damage. Plants exhibited well known foliar growth and pigment responses to UV-B exposure (e.g., increased UV-B absorbing compounds and decreased leaf area, chlorophyll a content; and and lower chlorophyll a/b and chlorophyll/carotenoid pigment ratios). Since EDU alone had no effect on foliar variables, there was no evidence that EDU afforded protection against UV-B. Instead, EDU augmented some UV-B effects when provided in conjunction with UV-B irradiation (e.g., reductions in the chlorophyll/carotenoid ratio, total photosynthetic pigments, and chlorophyll b content).Relative fluorescence intensities (RFI) in the longer visible wavelengths (green, red, and far-red) were uncorrelated for comparisons between the FImage and 380EX data sets. However, blue and green RFI were significantly correlated (0.8r0.6; P ≤0.002) for comparisons between FImage and 280EX data sets. UV-B treatment caused an increase in blue RFI (e.g., F450) in both images and 280EX measurements. One explanation is that the UV-B excitation of both 280EX and FImage stimulates processes that produce excess blue fluorescence. The molecules that produce the excess blue fluorescence in both the 280EX and the Fimage data are different electron transfer agents that operate in parallel. For FImage, the UV excitation penetrates leaf surface layers to stimulate fluorescence from compounds in mesophyll and epidermal tissues (as occurs for the extracts of leaf discs), whereas emissions captured at longer, less energetic wavelengths, were primarily from the epidermal layer. UV-B irradiated leaves showed much greater heteorgeneity of RFI in both the green (F550FImag) and the red (F680FImag) bands than unirradiated leaves; this was true irrespective of EDU treatment.Although qualitative responses in individual bands differed between FImage and 380EX data, similar results were obtained in the detection of UV-B induced effects when the red/green and blue/far-red fluorescence ratios of these data were compared. The red/green ratio (either F680/F550FImage or F675/F525380EX) was lower for UV-B exposed plants in both images and 380EX data. UV-B exposure also significantly enhanced the blue/far-red ratio of images (F450/F740FImage) and the comparable 380EX ratio (F450/F730380EX) for the combined UV-B/EDU group. The far-red/red ratios were not useful in separating treatment effects in images or 380EX. Although comparable ratios were not available in 280EX data, the UV/blue ratio (F315/F420280EX) was substantially reduced by UV-B exposure and was inversely related to total photosynthetic pigment content. These findings suggest that the red/green ratio (FImage, 380EX) and the UV/blue ratio (280EX) may be as useful as the blue/far-red ratio (380EX) reported previously in detection of UV-B stress. Furthermore, the results support the validity of the imaging technique as a non-destructive diagnostic tool for assessing UV-B stress damage in plants.  相似文献   

14.
The autofluorescence (primary fluorescence, AF) of the freshly collected fruiting bodies of the fungus Macrolepiota rhacodes was studied in a Zeiss Jenalumar fluorescence microscope at a blue and a green excitation. The strongest yellow AF at blue excitation was displayed by irregular granules on the surface of the fungal pileus. A weaker yellow-green AF was exhibited by spherical cells and hyphae in the central part of the pileus while basidiospores emitted somewhat stronger AF. At green excitation, a considerable red AF was emitted only by basidiospores, other parts of the pileus showing a very weak red AF. M. rhacodes AF is much weaker than the AF of wood-rotting fungi, such as Fomes fomentarius, Daedalea quercina, Piptoporus betulinus, Fomitopsis pinicola and others.  相似文献   

15.
Lysenko V 《Planta》2012,235(5):1023-1033
Residual chlorophyll in chlorophyll-deficient (albino) areas of variegated leaves of Ficus benjamina originates from guard cell chloroplasts. Photosynthetic features of green and albino sectors of F. benjamina were studied by imaging the distribution of the fluorescence decrease ratio Rfd within a leaf calculated from maximum (Fm) and steady-state leaf chlorophyll fluorescence (Fs) at 690 and 740 nm. Local areas of albino sectors demonstrated an abnormally high Rfd740/Rfd690 ratio. Fluorescence transients excited in albino sectors at red (640 and 690 nm) wavelengths showed an abrupt decrease of the Rfd values (0.4 and 0.1, correspondingly) as compared with those excited at blue wavelengths (1.7–2.4). This “Red Drop” was not observed for green sectors. Normal and chlorophyll-deficient leaf sectors of F. benjamina were also tested for linear and cyclic electron transport in thylakoids. The tests have been performed studying fluorescence at a steady-state phase with CO2-excess impulse feeding, photoacoustic signal generated by pulse light source at wavelengths selectively exciting PSI, fluorescence kinetics under anaerobiosis and fluorescence changes observed by dual-wavelength excitation method. The data obtained for albino sectors strongly suggest the possibility of a cyclic electron transport simultaneously occurring in guard cell thylakoids around photosystems I and II under blue light, whereas linear electron transport is absent or insufficient.  相似文献   

16.
The ultrastructure of the vegetative gametophytic cells of Porphyra leucosticta Thuret grown in red, blue and green light was studied both in ultrathin sections and in replicas of rapidly frozen cells. High activity of dictyosornes and mucilage sacs results in a dramatic decrease of the protoplasmic area and in thicker cell walls in red light in comparison with blue light and the control. There are numerous well‐formed phycobili‐somes in blue light, whereas not well‐formed ones are present in red and especially in green light. There are also many phycobilisomes in the intrapyrenoidal thylakoids in blue light, fewer in green light, but they are absent in red light and in the control. It seems that in red and especially in green light, the phycobilisomes have fewer rods than in blue light. In green light, chloroplasts bear numerous genophores in contrast to blue and red light. The spacings of neighboring parallel thylakoids are as follows: control 64.3 nm, blue light 90.6 nm, red light 41.3 nm, green light 43.7 nm. Due to the relatively small spacing of the neighboring parallel thylakoids in red (41.3 nm) and in green light (43.7 nm) and of the given height of phycobilisomes (35 nm), the alternate phycobilisomes attached to neighboring lamellae are forced to interdigitate. The density of phycobilisomes per square micrometer of thylakoid surface dramatically increases in blue light (800 μm?2) in relation to red (250 μm?2) and green light (180 μm?2). The protoplasmic fracture face of the thylakoids reveals numerous, tightly packed, but randomly distributed particles. The particle size distribution is uniform in the two types of fracture faces, with an average diameter of about 11.5 nm. In blue light, both the phycobilisomes and exoplasmic face particles are organized into rows with a spacing of 60–70 nm. The results (changes: in the protoplasmic area; in the spacing of the thylakoids; in phycobilisome arrangement; in structure, shape and size of phycobilisomes; and in the accumulation of plastoglobuli), have shown that the monochromatic light (blue, red and green) brings about marked changes in the package effect and consequently in the efficiency of light absorption. In addition, the blue light contributes to the intense production of chlorophyll a, phycoerythrin, phycocyanin and soluble proteins, while intense production of polysaccharidic material is attributed to red light.  相似文献   

17.
The autofluorescence (primary fluorescence, AF) of agar cultures of the brown-rot fungus Piptoporus betulinus was investigated in Zeiss Jenalumar and Nikon Eclipse 8201 fluorescence microscopes at various excitations. The strongest AF of hyphae was found in minimal medium with glucose, where the hyphae exhibited green AF at violet (450 nm) excitation and red AF at green (570 nm) excitation. Addition of metals to cultivation media led to enhanced white-blue AF in the presence of Co (at 450 nm) and yellow to yellow-brown AF at 510 nm. When cultivated with Mn and Zn, enhanced AF of intracellular content was observed. Only a weak signal was found in the presence of Cu and Fe.  相似文献   

18.
Recent studies demonstrated that titanium dioxide nanoparticles (TiO2 NPs) could significantly promote photosynthesis and plant growth, but its mechanism is still unclear. In this article, we studied the mechanism of light absorption and transfer of chloroplasts of Arabidopsis thaliana caused by TiO2 NPs treated. The results showed that TiO2 NPs could induce significant increases of light-harvesting complex II (LHCII) b gene expression and LHCII II content on the thylakoid membrane in A. thaliana, and the increases in LHCII were higher than the non-nano TiO2 (bulk-TiO2) treatment. Meanwhile, spectroscopy assays indicated that TiO2 NPs obviously increased the absorption peak intensity of the chloroplast in red and blue region, the fluorescence quantum yield near 680 nm, the excitation peak intensity near 440 and 480 nm and/or near 650 and 680 nm of the chloroplast. TiO2 NPs treatment could reduce F 480/F 440 ratio and increase F 650/F 680 ratio and accelerate the rate of whole chain electron transport and oxygen evolution of the chloroplast. However, the photosynthesis improvement of the non-nanoTiO2 treatment was far less effective than TiO2 NPs treatment. Taken together, TiO2 NPs could promote the light absorption of chloroplast, regulate the distribution of light energy from PS I to PS II by increasing LHCII and accelerate the transformation from light energy to electronic energy, water photolysis, and oxygen evolution.  相似文献   

19.
Induction of flowering of etiolated Lemna paucicostata Hegelm. T-101, a short-day plant, was inhibited by far-red (FR) or blue light (BL) applied at the beginning of a 72-h inductive dark period which was followed by two short days. In either case the inhibition was reversed by a subsequent exposure of the plants to near-ultraviolet radiation (NUV), with a peak of effectiveness near 380 nm. Inhibition by BL or FR and its reversion by NUV are repeatable, i.e., NUV is acting in these photoresponses like red light although with much lower effectiveness. Thus, it is considered that NUV acts through phytochrome and no specific BL and NUV photoreceptor is involved in photocontrol of floral induction on this plant.Abbreviations BL blue light - FR far-red light - NUV near ultraviolet radiation - P red-absorbing form of phytochrome - Pfr far-red absorbing form of phytochrome - R red light  相似文献   

20.
Blue (F 450) and green (F 530) leaf fluorescence were studied together with the red chlorophyll fluorescence (emission maxima F 690 and F 735) during light-induced chlorophyll fluorescence induction kinetics (Kautsky effect) in predarkened leaves of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) and soybean (Glycine max L.). The intensity of the red chlorophyll fluorescence decreased from maximum fluorescence Fm to steady-state fluorescence Fs, and the fluorescence ratio F 690/F 735 decreased by about 10% from Fm to Fs. However, blue and green fluorescence intensities remained constant throughout the measuring time. Consequently, the ratio of blue to red fluorescence (F 450/F 690) increased during chlorophyll fluorescence induction kinetics, whereas the ratio of blue to green fluorescence (F 450/F 530) remained unchanged within the same period. The knowledge of these ratios will be a prerequisite for the interpretation of remote sensing data from terrestrial vegetation.  相似文献   

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