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1.
It is well known that two photosystems, I and II, are needed to transfer electrons from H2O to NADP+ in oxygenic photosynthesis. Each photosystem consists of several components: (a) the light-harvesting antenna (L-HA) system, (b) the reaction center (RC) complex, and (c) the polypeptides and other co-factors involved in electron and proton transport. First, we present a mini review on the heterogeneity which has been identified with the electron acceptor side of Photosystem II (PS II) including (a) L-HA system: the PS II and PS II units, (b) RC complex containing electron acceptor Q1 or Q2; and (c) electron acceptor complex: QA (having two different redox potentials QL and QH) and QB (QB-type; Q'B type; and non-QB type); additional components such as iron (Q-400), U (Em,7=–450 mV) and Q-318 (or Aq) are also mentioned. Furthermore, we summarize the current ideas on the so-called inactive (those that transfer electrons to the plastoquinone pool rather slowly) and active reaction centers. Second, we discuss the bearing of the first section on the ratio of the PS II reaction center (RC-II) and the PS I reaction center (RC-I). Third, we review recent results that relate the inactive and active RC-II, obtained by the use of quinones DMQ and DCBQ, with the fluorescence transient at room temperature and in heated spinach and soybean thylakoids. These data show that inactive RC-II can be easily monitored by the OID phase of fluorescence transient and that heating converts active into inactive centers.Abbreviations DCBQ 2,5 or 2,6 dichloro-p-benzoquinone - DMQ dimethylquinone - QA primary plastoquinone electron acceptor of photosystem II - QB secondary plastoquinone electron acceptor of photosystem II - IODP successive fluorescence levels during time course of chlorophyll a fluorescence: O for origin, I for inflection, D for dip or plateau, and P for peak  相似文献   

2.
3.
A detailed quantitative study of the kinetics of photochemical and non-photochemical quenching was achieved by a linear analysis of the yields of chlorophyll fluorescence and of oxygen evolution (as measured by the photoacoustic effect) by their responses to sinusoidal changes of actinic light. The results of this analysis were given in terms of the parameters of the kinetic phases obtained as a response to a step function change in the light intensity from a previous steady-state. Thus, it was possible to split the responses to a change in light intensity into six components which could be assigned to 6 time-constants (60 ms, 1.8 s, 2.5 s, 8 s, 150 s and 400 s). The comparison of the kinetics of responses induced by blue-light (approx. 400–500 nm) and by far-red (720 nm) light led to the assignment of the 1.8-s time-constant to the loading and discharge of the plastoquinone pool and of the 400-s time-constant to the state-transition controller which could be shown to be involved also in the adaptation to changes in light intensity and not only to changes in light quality (wavelength). The time-constant of 8 s, also occurring in 532-nm light-scattering was assigned to the high-energy state quenching (qE) of fluorescence. qE was paralleled by a decrease of the photoacoustic signal, demonstrating an high-energy state quenching of oxygen evolution as well. The 60-ms time-constant is suggested to be related to the redox state of the primary quinone acceptor of PS II, whereas the other two time-constants could not be identified. The calculation of the relative contributions of the photo-chemical and of the non-photochemical quenching in the individual components revealed that both quenching-mechanisms occur in all components except in the assumed fastest one.Abbreviations pa-signal photoacoustic signal - PS photosystem  相似文献   

4.
Strasser  Bruno J  Dau  Holger  Heinze  Ilona  Senger  Horst 《Photosynthesis research》1999,60(2-3):217-227
Changes in the photosynthetic apparatus occurring during the synchronous cell cycle of the green alga Scenedesmus obliquus are compared to the adaptational response induced by light intensity variations. To investigate and compare these two phenomena, we analyze the polyphasic rise of the chlorophyll fluorescence yield exhibited by plants and cyanobacteria when exposed to high intensity actinic light. Four fluorescence parameters are calculated which are closely related to Photosystem II (PS II) structure and function: ABS/RC, the antenna size of PS II; PO, the quantum yield for reduction of the primary PS II quinone acceptor; qPQ, related to the size of the plastoquinone pool; qEmax, the capacity for pH dependent non-photochemical quenching. The capacity for non-photochemical quenching changes in response to light intensity variations, but it is not affected by the developmental changes occurring during the cell cycle. In contras t, for ABS/RC, PO and qPQ, we observe light induced as well as cell cycle dependent variations. We discuss the relations of the four fluorescence parameters to the molecular organization of the photosynthetic apparatus and its cell cycle and light dependent changes.  相似文献   

5.
The mechanism by which state 1-state 2 transitions in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus 6301 are controlled was investigated by examining the effects of a variety of chemical and illumination treatments which modify the redox state of the plastoquinone pool. The extent to which these treatments modify excitation energy distribution was determined by 77K fluorescence emission spectroscopy. It was found that treatment which lead to the oxidation of the plastoquinone pool induce a shift towards state 1 whereas treatments which lead to the reduction of the plastoquinone pool induce a shift towards state 2. We therefore propose that state transitions in cyanobacteria are triggered by changes in the redox state of plastoquinone or a closely associated electron carrier. Alternative proposals have included control by the extent of cyclic electron transport around PS I and control by localised electrochemical gradients around PS I and PS II. Neither of these proposals is consistent with the results reported here.Abbreviations DBMIB 2,5-dibromo-3methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone - Chl chlorophyll - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DQH2 duroquinol (tetramethyl-p-hydroquinone) - LHC II light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding protein of PS II - Light 1 light predominantly exciting PS I - Light 2 light predominantly exciting PS II - M.V. methyl viologen - PS photosystem  相似文献   

6.
温州蜜柑叶片光系统反应中心光能分配的变化   总被引:8,自引:4,他引:4  
为深入了解果树光化学反应中心光能分配的状况,以柑橘为试材,采用调制荧光法对叶片光系统在高光强和低光强下的状态转换进行了研究.结果表明,光系统在100μmol·m^-2·s^-1的低光强下,由于QA的还原使PQ库处于还原状态,导致光能由PSⅡ转向PSⅠ分配,光系统处于状态2;在1000μmol·m^-2·s^-1的高光强下,PQ库无法得到电子而处于氧化状态,导致光能分配由PSⅠ转向PSⅡ,光系统处于状态1,叶片经磷酸酯酶抑制剂NaF处理后,光系统从高光强下状态2到状态1的转换受到抑制,高光强下过多的光能由PSⅠ向PSⅡ分配是导致PSⅡ光破坏的重要原因.  相似文献   

7.
The fluorescence decay of chlorophyll in spinach thylakoids was measured as a function of the degree of closure of Photosystem II reaction centers, which was set for the flowed sample by varying either the preillumination by actinic light or the exposure of the sample to the exciting pulsed laser light. Three exponential kinetic components originating in Photosystem II were fitted to the decays; a fourth component arising from Photosystem I was determined to be negligible at the emission wavelength of 685 nm at which the fluorescence decays were measured. Both the lifetimes and the amplitudes of the components vary with reaction center closure. A fast (170–330 ps) component reflects the trapping kinetics of open Photosystem II reaction centers capable of reducing the plastoquinone pool; its amplitude decreases gradually with trap closure, which is incompatible with the concept of photosynthetic unit connectivity where excitation energy which encounters a closed trap can find a different, possibly open one. For a connected system, the amplitude of the fast fluorescence component is expected to remain constant. The slow component (1.7–3.0 ns) is virtually absent when the reaction centers are open, and its growth is attributable to the appearance of closed centers. The middle component (0.4–1.7 ns) with approximately constant amplitude may originate from centers that are not functionally linked to the plastoquinone pool. To explain the continuous increase in the lifetimes of all three components upon reaction center closure, we propose that the transmembrane electric field generated by photosynthetic turnover modulates the trapping kinetics in Photosystem II and thereby affects the excited state lifetime in the antenna in the trap-limited case.Abbreviations DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - HEPES 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethane sulfonic acid - PQ plastoquinone - PSI and PSII Photosystem I and II - QA and QB primary and secondary quinone acceptor of PSII  相似文献   

8.
Based on the electron-transport properties on the reducing side of the reaction center, photosystem II (PS II) in green plants and algae occurs in two distinct forms. Centers with efficient electron-transport from QA to plastoquinone (QB-reducing) account for 75% of the total PS II in the thylakoid membrane. Centers that are photochemically competent but unable to transfer electrons from QA to QB (QB-nonreducing) account for the remaining 25% of total PS II and do not participate in plastoquinone reduction. In Dunaliella salina, the pool size of QB-nonreducing centers changes transiently when the light regime is perturbed during cell growth. In cells grown under moderate illumination intensity (500 E m-2s-1), dark incubation induces an increase (half-time 45 min) in the QB-nonreducing pool size from 25% to 35% of the total PS II. Subsequent illumination of these cells restores the steady-state concentration of QB-nonreducing centers to 25%. In cells grown under low illumination intensity (30 µE m–2s–1), dark incubation elicits no change in the relative concentration of QB-nonreducing centers. However, a transfer of low-light grown cells to moderate light induces a rapid (half-time 10 min) decrease in the QB-nonreducing pool size and a concomitant increase in the QB-reducing pool size. These and other results are explained in terms of a pool of QB-nonreducing centers existing in a steady-state relationship with QB-reducing centers and with a photochemically silent form of PS II in the thylakoid membrane of D. salina. It is proposed that QB-nonreducing centers are an intermediate stage in the process of damage and repair of PS II. It is further proposed that cells regulate the inflow and outflow of centers from the QB-nonreducing pool to maintain a constant pool size of QB-nonreducing centers in the thylakoid membrane.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - PS photosystem - QA primary quinone electron acceptor of PS II - QB secondary quinone electron acceptor of PS II - LHC light harvesting complex - Fo non-variable fluorescence yield - Fpl intermediate fluorescence yield plateau level - Fmax maximum fluorescence yield - Fi mitial fluorescence yield increase from Fo to Fpl(Fpl-Fo) - Fv total variable fluorescence yield (Fmax-Fo) - DCMU dichlorophenyl-dimethylurea  相似文献   

9.
In cyanobacteria, Glu-244 and Tyr-246 of the Photosystem II (PS II) D1 protein are hydrogen bonded to two water molecules that are part of a hydrogen-bond network between the bicarbonate ligand to a non-heme iron and the cytosol. Ala substitutions were introduced in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 to investigate the roles of these residues and the hydrogen-bond network on electron transfer between the primary plastoquinone acceptor, QA, and the secondary plastoquinone acceptor, QB, of the quinone-Fe-acceptor complex. All mutants assembled PS II; however, an increase in the PS II to PS I ratio was apparent, particularly in the E244A:Y246A double mutant. The mutants also showed impaired oxygen evolution and retarded chlorophyll a fluorescence decays following single turnover actinic flashes, which appeared to be primarily due to reduced QB binding in the E244A strain and an enhanced back reaction with the S2 state of the oxygen-evolving complex in the Y246A mutant. Impaired PS II in the Y246A and E244A:Y246A mutants resulted in inactivation of the psbA gene encoding D1. The Y246A and E244A:Y246A mutants also showed high light sensitivity whereas the E244A mutant showed enhanced resilience towards photodamage. Unlike the control strain, all of the mutants were insensitive to the addition of formate or bicarbonate in assays following chlorophyll decay kinetics that reflect electron transfer between QA and QB, suggesting the bicarbonate binding environment was perturbed. Our data also indicate that waters W582 and W622 (PDB: 4UB6) have essential roles in maintaining the architecture of the acceptor side of PS II.  相似文献   

10.
11.
In this study the photoinhibition of photosystems (PS) I and II caused by exposure to high intensity light in oat (Avena sativa, var Prevision) is measured by the emission of chlorophyll fluorescence in intact leaves adapted to darkness. The maximal quantum yield of PS II was lower in plants grown under high light intensity than in plants grown under low intensity, which indicates that PS II is photoinhibited by such conditions. PS I was more stable than PS II in plants exposed to strong light for a moderate time (five photoperiods) since the oxidised plastoquinone pool size under far-red (FR) light was similar in plants grown under high light intensity to plants grown under low intensity, probably as a result of the cyclic electron flow around PS I being stimulated in response to high light intensity. However, over longer times (10 photoperiods) the PS I was photoinhibited, since the oxidised plastoquinone pool size under FR light increased as a consequence of the decrease in PS I activity caused by high light intensity. This practical is intended for advanced students of plant biochemistry and plant physiology.  相似文献   

12.
A non-detergent photosystem II preparation, named BS, has been characterized by countercurrent distribution, light saturation curves, absorption spectra and fluorescence at room and at low temperature (–196°C). The BS fraction is prepared by a sonication-phase partitioning procedure (Svensson P and Albertsson P-Å, Photosynth Res 20: 249–259, 1989) which removes the stroma lamellae and the margins from the grana and leaves the appressed partition region intact in the form of vesicles. These are closed structures of inside-out conformation. They have a chlorophyll a/b ratio of 1.8–2.0, have a high oxygen evolving capacity (295 mol O2 per mg chl h), are depleted in P700 and enriched in the cytochrome b/f complex. They have about 2 Photosystem II reaction centers per 1 cytochrome b/f complex.The plastoquinone pool available for PS II in the BS vesicles is 6–7 quinones per reaction center, about the same as for the whole thylakoid. It is concluded, therefore, that the plastoquinone of the stroma lamellae is not available to the PS II in the grana and that plastoquinone does not act as a long range electron transport shuttler between the grana and stroma lamellae.Compared with Photosystem II particles prepared by detergent (Triton X-100) treatment, the BS vesicles retain more cytochrome b/f complex and are more homogenous in their surface properties, as revealed by countercurrent distribution, and they have a more efficient energy transfer from the antenna pigments to the reaction center.Abbreviations DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - Fv variable fluorescence - LHC light-harvesting complex - PpBQ phenyl-p-benzoquinone - PQ plastoquinone pool - P700 reaction center of PS I - PS I, PS II Photosystem I, II - QA first bound plastoquinone accepter - RC reaction centre  相似文献   

13.
Light-dependent reduction of the plastoquinone pool regulates the activity of the thylakoid-bound protein kinase which phosphorylates the light harvesting chlorophyll a,b-protein complex (LHC II) and regulates energy distribution between photosystems II (PS II) and I (Staehelin, L. A., and C. J. Arntzen, 1983, J. Cell Biol., 97:1327-1337). Since reduction of plastoquinone by PS II is abolished in photoinhibited thylakoids due to loss of the secondary electron acceptor QB protein (Kyle, D. J., I. Ohad, and C. J. Arntzen, 1984, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 81:4070-4074), it was of interest to examine the activity of the LHC II protein kinase system during photoinhibition and recovery of PS II activity. The kinase activity was assessed both in vivo and in vitro in Chlamydomonas cells exposed to high light intensity (photoinhibition) and recovery at low light intensity. The kinase activity was progressively reduced during photoinhibition and became undetectable after 90 min. The inactive LHC II-kinase system could not be reactivated in vitro either by light or by reduction of the plastoquinone pool following addition of reduced duroquinone (TMQH2). The LHC II polypeptides were dephosphorylated in vivo when cells, prelabeled with [32P]orthophosphate before exposure to high light intensity, were transferred to photoinhibiting light in the presence of [32P]orthophosphate. In vivo recovery of the LHC II-kinase activity, elicited by the addition of TMQH2 to the assay system, did not require restoration of QB-dependent electron flow or de novo protein synthesis, either in the cytoplasm or in the chloroplast. Mild sonication of thylakoids isolated from photoinhibited cells restored the ability of the LHC II protein kinase system to be activated in vitro by addition to TMQH2. Restoration of the light-activated LHC-II kinase required recovery of QB-dependent electron flow. At the structural level, photoinhibition did not affect the ratio of grana/stroma thylakoids. A reduction of approximately 20% of the 11-17-nm intramembrane particles and an equivalent increase in the number of 6-10.5-nm particles was observed on the E-fracture faces of stacked thylakoid membranes. Similar but smaller changes were observed also on the E-fracture faces of unstacked thylakoid membranes (more 10-14-nm and less 6-9-nm particles) and P-fracture faces of stacked thylakoid membranes (more 6-8- and less 9.5-13-nm particles). All these structural changes were reversed to normal values during recovery of PS II activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
The possible functions of a light-induced electron transfer to oxygen in the photosynthetic electron transport chain of higher plant chloroplasts are considered. The thermodynamic preconditions, as well as the experimental data about the participations of ferredoxin, the components of photosystems I and II, and plastoquinone in oxygen reduction are examined. It is concluded that, even in the presence of ferredoxin and ferredoxin + NADP+, oxygen reduction is carried out mainly by the membrane-bound carriers of the photosynthetic electron transport chain. The hypothesis is put forward that most superoxides, which are produced by reduction of O2 molecules by the intramembrane components of the acceptor side of photosystem I, are reduced within the membrane by the plastohydroquinone molecules to the hydrogen peroxide. It is assumed that the H2O2 molecules that originate as the result of this process serve for signaling about the redox state of the plastoquinone pool. Published in Russian in Biokhimiya, 2008, Vol. 73, No. 1, pp. 137–144.  相似文献   

15.
《BBA》2022,1863(2):148519
PsbX is a 4.1 kDa intrinsic Photosystem II (PS II) protein, found together with the low-molecular-weight proteins, PsbY and PsbJ, in proximity to cytochrome b559. The function of PsbX is not yet fully characterized but PsbX may play a role in the exchange of the secondary plastoquinone electron acceptor QB with the quinone pool in the thylakoid membrane. To study the role of PsbX, we have constructed a PsbX-lacking strain of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. Our studies indicate that the absence of PsbX causes sensitivity to high light and impairs electron transport within PS II. In addition to a change in the QB-binding pocket, PsbX-lacking cells exhibited sensitivity to sodium formate, suggesting altered binding of the bicarbonate ligand to the non-heme iron between the sequential plastoquinone electron acceptors QA and QB. Experiments using 35S-methionine revealed high-light-treated PsbX-lacking cells restore PS II activity during recovery under low light by an increase in the turnover of PS II-associated core proteins. These labeling experiments indicate the recovery after exposure to high light requires both selective removal and replacement of the D1 protein and de novo PS II assembly.  相似文献   

16.
Fluorescence yield relaxation following a light pulse was studied in various cyanobacteria under aerobic and microaerobic conditions. In Synechocystis PCC 6803 fluorescence yield decays in a monotonous fashion under aerobic conditions. However, under microaerobic conditions the decay exhibits a wave feature showing a dip at 30–50 ms after the flash followed by a transient rise, reaching maximum at ~ 1 s, before decaying back to the initial level. The wave phenomenon can also be observed under aerobic conditions in cells preilluminated with continuous light. Illumination preconditions cells for the wave phenomenon transiently: for few seconds in Synechocystis PCC 6803, but up to one hour in Thermosynechocystis elongatus BP-1. The wave is eliminated by inhibition of plastoquinone binding either to the QB site of Photosystem-II or the Qo site of cytochrome b6f complex by 3-(3′,4′-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea or 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone, respectively. The wave is also absent in mutants, which lack either Photosystem-I or the NAD(P)H-quinone oxidoreductase (NDH-1) complex. Monitoring the redox state of the plastoquinone pool revealed that the dip of the fluorescence wave corresponds to transient oxidation, whereas the following rise to re-reduction of the plastoquinone pool. It is concluded that the unusual wave feature of fluorescence yield relaxation reflects transient oxidation of highly reduced plastoquinone pool by Photosystem-I followed by its re-reduction from stromal components via the NDH-1 complex, which is transmitted back to the fluorescence yield modulator primary quinone electron acceptor via charge equilibria. Potential applications of the wave phenomenon in studying photosynthetic and respiratory electron transport are discussed. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Photosynthesis Research for Sustainability: Keys to Produce Clean Energy.  相似文献   

17.
An unusual dip (compared to higher plant behaviour under comparable light conditions) in chlorophyll fluorescence induction (FI) at about 0.2-2 s was observed for thalli of several lichen species having Trebouxia species (the most common symbiotic green algae) as their native photobionts and for Trebouxia species cultured separately in nutrient solution. This dip appears after the usual O(J)IP transient at a wide range of excitation light intensities (100-1800 micromol photons m(-2) s(-1)). Simultaneous measurements of FI and 820-nm transmission kinetics (I(820)) with lichen thalli showed that the decreasing part of the fluorescence dip (0.2-0.4 s) is accompanied by a decrease of I(820), i.e., by a reoxidation of electron carriers at photosystem I (PSI), while the subsequent increasing part (0.4-2 s) of the dip is not paralleled by the change in I(820). These results were compared with that measured with pea leaves-representatives of higher plants. In pea, PSI started to reoxidize after 2-s excitation. The simultaneous measurements performed with thalli treated with methylviologen (MV), an efficient electron acceptor from PSI, revealed that the narrow P peak in FI of Trebouxia-possessing lichens (i.e., the I-P-dip phase) gradually disappeared with prolonged MV treatment. Thus, the P peak behaves in a similar way as in higher plants where it reflects a traffic jam of electrons induced by a transient block at the acceptor side of PSI. The increasing part of the dip in FI remained unaffected by the addition of MV. We have found that the fluorescence dip is insensitive to antimycin A, rotenone (inhibitors of cyclic electron flow around PSI), and propyl gallate (an inhibitor of plastid terminal oxidase). The 2-h treatment with 5 microM nigericin, an ionophore effectively dissipating the pH-gradient across the thylakoid membrane, did not lead to significant changes either in FI nor I(820) kinetics. On the basis of the presented results, we suggest that the decreasing part of the fluorescence dip in FI of Trebouxia-lichens reflects the activation of ferredoxin-NADP(+)-oxidoreductase or Mehler-peroxidase reaction leading to the fast reoxidation of electron carriers in thylakoid membranes. The increasing part of the dip probably reflects a transient reduction of plastoquinone (PQ) pool that is not associated with cyclic electron flow around PSI. Possible causes of this MV-insensitive PQ reduction are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Fluorescence induction of isolated spinach chloroplasts was measured by using weak continuous light. It is found that the kinetics of the initial phase of fluorescence induction as well as the initial fluorescence level Fj are influenced by the number of preilluminating flashes, and shows damped period 4 oscillation. Evidence is given to show that it is correlated with the S-state transitions of oxygen evolution. Based on the previous observations that the S states can modulate the fluorescence yield of Photosystem II, a simulating calculation suggests that, in addition to the Photosystem II centers inactive in the plastoquinone reduction, the S-state transitions can also make a contribution to the intial phase of fluorescence induction.Abbreviations DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethyl urea - F0 non-variable fluorescence level emitted when all PS II centers are open - Fi initial fluorescence level immediately after shutter open - Fpt intermediate plateau fluorescence level - Fm maximum fluorescence level emitted when all PS II centers are closed - PS II Photosystem II - QA primary quinone acceptor of PS II - QB secondary quinone acceptor of PS II  相似文献   

19.
The dominance of diatoms in turbulent waters suggests special adaptations to the wide fluctuations in light intensity that phytoplankton must cope with in such an environment. Our recent demonstration of the unusually effective photoprotection by the xanthophyll cycle in diatoms [Lavaud et al. (2002) Plant Physiol 129 (3) (in press)] also revealed that failure of this protection led to inactivation of oxygen evolution, but not to the expected photoinhibition. Photo-oxidative damage might be prevented by an electron transfer cycle around Photosystem II (PS II). The induction of such a cycle at high light intensity was verified by measurements of the flash number dependence of oxygen production in a series of single-turnover flashes. After a few minutes of saturating illumination, the oxygen flash yields are temporarily decreased. The deficit in oxygen production amounts to at most 3 electrons per PS II, but continues to reappear with a half time of 2 min in the dark until the total pool of reducing equivalents accumulated during the illumination has been consumed by (chloro)respiration. This is attributed to an electron transfer pathway from the plastoquinone pool or the acceptor side of PS II to the donor side of PS II that is insignificant at limiting light intensity but is accelerated to milliseconds at excess light intensity. Partial filling of the 3-equivalents capacity of the cyclic electron transfer path in PS II may prevent both acceptor-side photoinhibition in oxygen-evolving PS II and donor-side photoinhibition when the oxygen-evolving complex is temporarily inactivated. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

20.
Meiko Aoki  Sakae Katoh 《BBA》1982,682(3):307-314
The I-D dip, an early transient of the fluorescence induction, was examined as a means to monitor redox changes of plastoquinone in cells of a cyanobacterium, Synechococcus sp. That the occurrence of the dip depends upon the reduced state of the plastoquinone pool was indicated by observations that 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone and 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea did not affect the initial rise to I but abolished the subsequent decline from I to D and that illumination of the cells with light 1, prior to fluorescence measurements, eliminated the transient. The I-D dip was prominent in freshly harvested cells containing abundant endogenous substrates, disappeared slowly as the cells were starved by aeration but reappeared on addition of fructose to the starved cells in the dark. The dip that had been induced by a brief illumination of the starved cells with light 2 was rapidly diminished in the dark and KCN inhibited the dark decay of the transient. The results indicate that plastoquinone is reduced with endogenous as well as exogenous substrates and oxidized by a KCN-sensitive oxidase in the dark, thus providing strong support for the view that plastoquinone of photosynthetic electron transport also functions in respiration. In addition, the occurrence of a cyclic pathway of electrons from Photosystem I to plastoquinone, possibly via ferredoxin or NADP, was suggested. Several lines of evidence indicate that, under a strong light 2, Photosystem I-dependent oxidation of plastoquinone predominates over Photosystem II-dependent reduction of the quinone in the cyanobacterium which contains Photosystem I more abundantly than Photosystem II.  相似文献   

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