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1.
The absorption (640–710 nm) and fluorescence emission (670–710 nm) spectra (77 K) of wild-type and Chl b-less, mutant, barley chloroplasts grown under either day or intermittent light were analysed by a RESOL curve-fitting program. The usual four major forms of Chl a at 662, 670, 678 and 684 nm were evident in all of the absorption spectra and three major components at 686, 693 and 704 nm in the emission spectra. A broad Chl a component band at 651 nm most likely exists in all chlorophyll spectra in vivo. The results show that the mutant lacks not only Chl b, but also the Chl a molecules which are bound to the light-harvesting, Chl a/b, protein complex of normal plants. It also appears that the absorption spectrum of this antenna complex is not modified appreciably by its isolation from thylakoid membranes.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - DL daylight - ImL intermittent light - WT wildtype - LHC light-harvesting Chl a/b protein complex - S.E. standard error of the mean DBP-CIW No. 763.  相似文献   

2.
The distribution of xanthophyll cycle pigments (violaxanthin plus antheraxanthin plus zeaxanthin [VAZ]) among photosynthetic pigment-protein complexes was examined in Vinca major before, during, and subsequent to a photoinhibitory treatment at low temperature. Four pigment-protein complexes were isolated: the core of photosystem (PS) II, the major light-harvesting complex (LHC) protein of PSII (LHCII), the minor light-harvesting proteins (CPs) of PSII (CP29, CP26, and CP24), and PSI with its LHC proteins (PSI-LHCI). In isolated thylakoids 80% of VAZ was bound to protein independently of the de-epoxidation state and was found in all complexes. Plants grown outside in natural sunlight had higher levels of VAZ (expressed per chlorophyll), compared with plants grown in low light in the laboratory, and the additional VAZ was mainly bound to the major LHCII complex, apparently in an acid-labile site. The extent of de-epoxidation of VAZ in high light and the rate of reconversion of Z plus A to V following 2.5 h of recovery were greatest in the free-pigment fraction and varied among the pigment-protein complexes. Photoinhibition caused increases in VAZ, particularly in low-light-acclimated leaves. The data suggest that the photoinhibitory treatment caused an enrichment in VAZ bound to the minor CPs caused by de novo synthesis of the pigments and/or a redistribution of VAZ from the major LHCII complex.  相似文献   

3.
We previously reported that applications of chloramphenicol to the chlorina wheat mutant, CD3, decreased the leaf Chl a/b ratio and enhanced accumulations of LHC proteins and LHC complexes during greening (Duysen et al. 1985). We have now examined Chl degradation and the change in Chl a/b ratios in wheat leaves kept in the dark as a measure of LHC destruction. Chl b was stable in chloroplasts of the CD3 wheat kept in darkness up to 5 days. Chloramphenicol significantly increased Chl b accumulations and impaired Chl a degradation in both CD3 mutant and normal wheat relative to untreated plants. Our Chl data suggest that the chloramphenicol induced accumulation of the LHC complex in the mutant wheat results from enhanced processing of LHC into the membrane rather than impairment of LHC degradation. The photosystem I (PSI) fraction of the CD3 wheat mutant was examined relative to that of normal wheat after 3 days greening. PSI was deficient in 25, 26, 26.5 kD LHCI protein in the mutant but both wheats accumulated low quantities of the 27–29 kD LHCII protein as detected by Western blot analysis. Chloramphenicol enhanced accumulations of several LHCI proteins primarily near 25 kD in the mutant and the 27–29 kD LHCII protein in normal wheat. The fluorescence emission and absorbance spectra suggest that chloramphenicol enhances accumulations of dissociated LHC in the PSI preparation of normal and CD3 mutant wheat.A contribution of North Dakota Agricultural Experiment Station. Published with approval of the Director as Journal Paper Number 1563.  相似文献   

4.
Recently, it has been suggested (Horton et al. 1992) that aggregation of the light-harvesting a-b complex (LHC II) in vitro reflects the processes which occur in vivo during fluorescence induction and related to the major non-photochemical quenching (qE). Therefore the requirement of this chlorophyll a-b containing protein complex to produce qN was investigated by comparison of two barley mutants either lacking (chlorina f2) or depressed (chlorina104) in LHC II to the wild-type and pea leaves submitted to intermittent light (IL) and during their greening in continuous light. It was observed that qN was photoinduced in the absence of LHC II, i.e. in IL grown pea leaves and the barley mutants. Nevertheless, in these leaves qN had no (IL, peas) or little (barley mutants) inhibitory effect on the photochemical efficiency of QA reduction measured by flash dosage response curves of the chlorophyll fluorescence yield increase induced by a single turn-over flash During greening in continuous light of IL pea leaves, an inhibitory effect on QA photoreduction associated to qN developed as Photosystem II antenna size increased with LHC II synthesis. Utilizing data from the literature on connectivity between PS II units versus antenna size, the following hypothesis is put forward to explain the results summarized above. qN can occur in the core antenna or Reaction Center of a fraction of PS II units and these units will not exhibit variable fluorescence. Other PS II units are quenched indirectly through PS II-PS II exciton transfer which develops as the proportion of connected PS II units increases through LHC II synthesis.  相似文献   

5.
Arabidopsis plants with a reduced expression of CHL27 ( chl27 ), an enzyme (EC 1.14.13.81) required for the synthesis of Pchlide, are chlorotic and have a Chl a / b ratio two times higher than wild-type (WT). Knockdown plants transformed with a construct constitutively expressing CHL27 recovered regarding Chl level, a / b ratio and 77K fluorescence. A negative correlation was found between total Chl and Chl a / b ratio in the examined plants. The chl27 plants fail to assemble WT amounts of complete PSI and PSII, leading to an elevated PSII/PSI ratio. The PSI remaining in chl27 is fully functional with a quantum yield higher than for WT. Despite a severe reduction of photosystem II antennae protein (LHCII) and an increased proportion of stroma lammella, the chl27 plants are able to perform state transitions. No major differences were found regarding PSII quantum yield, qN and 1 − qp whereas non-photochemical quenching was decreased by a factor two in chl27 plants. The PSII quantum yield for dark-adapted plants and plants given 10 min recovery after high light treatment were similar for both WT and chl27 showing that chl27 plants are not more susceptible to photoinhibition than WT. Taken together the plant manage to acclimate and to balance the two photosystems well even when it is severely limited in Chl. The way to achieve this differs for the two photosystems: regarding PSI a general reduction of core and antenna subunits occurs with no apparent change in the antenna composition; whereas for PSII there is a preferential loss of antenna proteins.  相似文献   

6.
The size of the Photosystem II light harvesting antenna and the absorption cross-sections of PS I (PSI) and PS II (PSII) were examined in relation to photosynthetic performance fluorescence. Wild-type (WT) rye (Secale cereale) and barley (Hordeurn vulgare) as well as the barley chlorophyllb-less chlorina F2 mutant were grown under control and intermittent light (IML) conditions. (PSII) in control barley F2 was similar to IML grown WT rye and barley, which, in turn was 2.5 to 3.5 times smaller than for control WT plants. In contrast, PSI was similar for all control plants. This was 2.5 to 4 times larger than for IML-grown WT plants. IML-grown barley mutant plants had the smallest absorption cross-sections. Photosynthetic light response curves revealed that the barley chlorina F2-mutant had rates of oxygen evolution on a per leaf area basis that were only slightly lower than control WT rye and barley while IML-grown plants had strongly reduced photosynthetic performance. Convexity () for control barley chlorina F2-mutants was equal to the WT controls (0.6–0.7), while all IML-grown plants had a of 0. This indicates that, in contrast to control barley mutants, IML-plants were limited by PS II turn-over rates at all irradiances. However, on a per leaf Chl-basis the IML-grown plants exhibited the highest photosynthetic rates. Thus, the comparatively poor photosynthetic rates for IML-grown plants on a per leaf area basis were not due to less efficient photosynthetic reaction centers, but may rather be due to an increased limitation from PS II turn-over and a reduction in the number of reaction centers per leaf area.  相似文献   

7.
The chlorophyll (Chl) a-b light harvesting complex II (LHC II)contains more than 80% of the light-harvesting pigments of photosystemII (PS II) in chloroplasts. The supramolecular assembly andfunction of this auxiliary antenna system was investigated inChi b-deficient and Chi b-less mutant chloroplasts from soybeanand barley plants, and in their wild-type counterparts. Fourdistinct LHC II polypeptides were resolved by SDS-PAGE (subunitsa, b, c and d), having apparent molecular masses of 29, 28,27.2 and 26.8 kDa, respectively. The analysis of LHC II subunitcomposition in different developmental stages of the PS II unitin soybean (3>Chla/Chlbb>6), indicated the associationof specific subunits with the LHC H-inner and LHC II-peripheralin the chloroplast. The amount of subunit a in PS II was constantover a broad range of Chl a/Chl b ratios, suggesting that thissubunit is closely associated with the PS II-core complex. Subunitd also appeared to be constant over a wide range of Chl a/Chlb ratios, suggesting close association with the LHC II-inner.The PS II content in subunits b and c increased with the PSII antenna development in soybean but the ratio of b/c remainedconstant in all developmental stages and equal to 2 :1. Subunita was present in the Chl b-less chlorina f2 mutant of barleygrown under continuous illumination but was absent under intermittentillumination. The results suggest that each subunit binds 13-15Chl molecules. A working hypothesis is presented on the PS IIantenna development and LHC II subunit composition in soybeanchloroplasts. (Received October 11, 1988; Accepted January 19, 1989)  相似文献   

8.
Gap junctions ensure the rapid propagation of the action potential throughout the myocardium. Three mutant forms of connexin40 (Cx40; A96S, M163V, and G38D), the primary component of the atrial gap junction channel, are associated with atrial fibrillation and retain the ability to form functional channels. We determined the biophysical properties of these mutant gap junctions in transiently transfected HeLa and N2A cells. All three mutants showed macroscopic junctional conductances over the range of 0.5 to 40 nS, and voltage dependences comparable to those of wild-type (WT) Cx40. However, the unitary conductance of G38D channels was ∼1.6-fold higher than that of WT Cx40 channels (∼220 vs. ∼135 pS), whereas the unitary conductances of the A96S and M163V mutants were similar to that of WT Cx40. Furthermore, the M163V and G38D channels exhibited approximately two- and approximately fivefold higher permeability to the anionic dye Lucifer yellow (LY) relative to K+ (LY/K+) compared with that of WT Cx40, whereas A96S LY transfer was similar to that of WT (G38D > M163V > A96S ≈ Cx40WT). In contrast, G38D channels were almost impermeable to cationic ethidium bromide (EtBr), suggesting that G38D alters channel selectivity. Conversely, A96S and M163V channels showed enhanced EtBr permeability relative to WT Cx40, with the following permeability order: M163V > A96S > Cx40WT > G38D. Altered conductive and permeability properties of mutant channels suggest an essential role for Cx40-mediated biochemical and electrical coupling in cardiac tissues. The altered properties of the three single-base substitution mutants may play a role in mechanisms of reentry arrhythmias.  相似文献   

9.
The light-sensitive chlorophyll b (Chl b)-deficient oil yellow-yellow green (OY-YG) mutant of maize (Zea mays) grown under conditions of high light exhibits differential reductions in the accumulation of the three major Chl b-containing antenna complexes and characteristic changes in thylakoid architecture. When observed by freeze-fracture electron microscopy, the most notable changes in the OY-YG thylakoid structure are: (a) a major reduction in the number of 8 nanometer particles of the protoplasmic fracture face of stacked membrane regions (PFs) paralleled by a 60% reduction in the chlorophyll-proteins (CP) associated with the peripheral light harvesting complex (LHCII) for photosystem II (PSII) and which give rise to the LHCII oligomer/monomer (CPII*/CPII) bands on mildly dissociated green gels; (b) a sizable decrease in the proportion of 11 to 13 nanometer particles of the protoplasmic fracture face of unstacked membrane regions (PFu) that parallels the loss of light harvesting complex I (LHCI) antennae from photosystem I (PSI) centers and a 40% reduction of the band containing CP1 and LHCI (CPI*) on mildly dissociating green gels; (c) an unchanged or slightly increased average size of particles of the exoplasmic fracture face of stacked (or appressed) membrane regions (EFs) along with a relative increase in CP29, the postulated bound LHC of PSII, and of CP47 and CP43, PSII core antenna complexes. This latter result sets the OY-YG mutant apart from all other Chl b-deficient mutants studied to date, all of which possess EFs particles that are substantially reduced in size. Based on these findings, we postulate that the bound LHCII associated with EFs particles consists mostly of CP29 chlorophyll proteins and very little, if any, CPII*/CPII chlorophyll proteins. Indeed, the CPII*/CPII chlorophyll proteins may be exclusively associated with the `peripheral' LHCII units that give rise to 8 nanometer PF particles. The differential effect of the Chl b deficiency on the accumulation of the three main antenna complexes (CPII*/CPII>CPI*>CP29) suggests, furthermore, that there is a hierarchy among Chl b-binding proteins, and that this hierarchy might be an integral part of long-term photoregulation mediating Chl b partitioning in the chloroplast.  相似文献   

10.
The chlorinal-1 (ch1-1) mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana lacks the light-harvesting complexes in photosystem II (LHCII) due to deficiency of ability to synthesize chlorophyll (Chl) b. To investigate if a lack of LHCII affects plant growth and water loss, the Chl content, Chl fluorescence, glutathione (GSH) content, plant growth, water loss and stomatal aperture were measured using wild-type (WT) and ch1-1 mutant plants. The leaves of ch1-1 mutants accumulated significantly lower Chl content, Chl fluorescence and GSH content than WT plants. Plant growth and the leaf area of ch1-1 plants were also lower when compared to WT plants. The ch1-1 plant showed delayed flowering and higher a number of rosette leaves compared to the WT plants. The treatment of N-acetyl-cysteine increased Chl content and Chl fluorescence in leaves of both plants. Stomatal aperture was significantly lower in guard cells of the ch1-1 mutant than that of WT plants. Dark treatment increased stomatal closure which was corrected followed by the light treatment. Abscisic acid (ABA)-induced stomatal aperture was significantly lower in ch1-1 mutant than WT plants. Water loss through stomatal opening in ch1-1 plants was significantly lower than WT plants regardless of ABA treatment. This study suggests that a lack of LHCII might control plant growth and water loss in ch1-1 mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana.  相似文献   

11.
Two rice chlorophyll (Chl) b-less mutants (VG28-1, VG30-5) and the respective wild type (WT) plant (cv. Zhonghua No. 11) were analyzed for the changes in Chl fluorescence parameters, xanthophyll cycle pool, and its de-epoxidation state under exposure to strong irradiance, SI (1 700 μmol m−2 s−1). We also examined alterations in the chloroplast ultrastructure of the mutants induced by methyl viologen (MV) photooxidation. During HI (0–3.5 h), the photoinactivation of photosystem 2 (PS2) appeared earlier and more severely in Chl b-less mutants than in the WT. The decreases in maximal photochemical efficiency of PS2 in the dark (Fv/Fm), quantum efficiency of PS2 electron transport (ΦPS2), photochemical quenching (qP), as well as rate of photochemistry (Prate), and the increases in de-epoxidation state (DES) and rate of thermal dissipation of excitation energy (Drate) were significantly greater in Chl b-mutants compared with the WT plant. A relatively larger xanthophyll pool and 78–83 % conversion of violaxanthin into antheraxanthin and zeaxanthin in the mutants after 3.5 h of HI was accompanied with a high ratio of inactive/total PS2 (0.55–0.73) and high 1–qP (0.57–0.68) which showed that the activities of the xanthophyll cycle were probably insufficient to protect the photosynthetic apparatus against photoinhibition. No apparent difference of chloroplast ultrastructure was found between Chl b-less mutants and WT plants grown under low, LI (180 μmol m−2 s−1) and high, HI (700 μmol m−2 s−1) irradiance. However, swollen chloroplasts and slight dilation of thylakoids occurred in both mutants and the WT grown under LI followed by MV treatment. These typical symptoms of photooxidative damage were aggravated as plants were exposed to HI. Distorted and loose scattered thylakoids were observed in particular in the Chl b-less mutants. A greater extent of photoinhibition and photooxidation in these mutants indicated that the susceptibility to HI and oxidative stresses was enhanced in the photosynthetic apparatus without Chl b most likely as a consequence of a smaller antenna size.  相似文献   

12.
This Review discusses energy transfer pathways in Photosystem I (PS I) from oxygenic organisms. In the trimeric PS I core from cyanobacteria, the efficiency of solar energy conversion is largely determined by ultrafast excitation transfer processes in the core chlorophyll a (Chl a) antenna network and efficient photochemical trapping in the reaction center (RC). The role of clusters of Chl a in energy equilibration and photochemical trapping in the PS I core is discussed. Dimers of the longest-wavelength absorbing (red) pigments with strongest excitonic interactions localize the excitation in the PS I core antenna. Those dimers that are located closer to the RC participate in a fast energy equilibration with coupled pigments of the RC. This suggests that the function of the red pigments is to concentrate the excitation near the RC. In the PS I holocomplex from algae and higher plants, in addition to the red pigments of the core antenna, spectrally distinct red pigments are bound to the peripheral Chl a/b-binding light-harvesting antenna (LHC I), specifically to the Lhca4 subunit of the LHC I-730 complex. Intramonomeric energy equilibration between pools of Chl b and Chl a in Lhca1 and Lhca4 monomers of the LHC I-730 heterodimer are as fast as the energy equilibration processes within the PS I core. In contrast to the structural stability of the PS I core, the flexible subunit structure of the LHC I would probably determine the observed slow excitation energy equilibration processes in the range of tens of picoseconds. The red pigments in the LHC I are suggested to function largely as photoprotective excitation sinks in the peripheral antenna of PS I. This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

13.
The possible role of zeaxanthin formation and antenna proteins in energy-dependent chlorophyll fluorescence quenching (qE) has been investigated. Intermittent-light-grown pea (Pisum sativum L.) plants that lack most of the chlorophyll a/b antenna proteins exhibited a significantly reduced qE upon illumination with respect to control plants. On the other hand, the violaxanthin content related to the number of reaction centers and to xanthophyll cycle activity, i.e. the conversion of violaxanthin into zeaxanthin, was found to be increased in the antenna-protein-depleted plants. Western blot analyses indicated that, with the exception of CP 26, the content of all chlorophyll a/b-binding proteins in these plants is reduced to less than 10% of control values. The results indicate that chlorophyll a/b-binding antenna proteins are involved in the energy-dependent fluorescence quenching but that only a part of qE can be attributed to quenching by chlorophyll a/b-binding proteins. It seems very unlikely that xanthophylls are exclusively responsible for the qE mechanism.Abbreviations CAB chlorophyll a/b-binding - Chl chlorophyll - FV variable fluorescence - IML intermittent light - LHC light harvesting complex - PFD photon flux density - qP photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluoresence - qN non-photochemical quenching - qE energy-dependent quenching - qI photoinhibitory quenching - qT quenching by state transition  相似文献   

14.
In higher plants, development of the chloroplasts must be coordinated with development of the leaf. In order to study the signals that synchronize these two developmental processes, we have isolated virescent (delayed in greening) mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana. Two such mutants that have pale-green young leaves which gradually green more fully during leaf maturation have been partially characterized. The two, vir1 and vir2, are due to separate nuclear recessive mutations. The pale leaves of vir1 and vir2 both had reduced 77°K fluorescence emission at 730–734 nm relative to that at 686–687 nm, indicating a reduction in the relative amount of LHC I compared to WT. As leaves greened, the amount of LHC I increased to near wildtype levels. The shift in the fluorescence emission peak from 730 nm to 734 nm, characteristic of maturing LHC I, was seen for vir1, but not vir2, suggesting that vir1 is a regulatory mutant while vir2 may be defective in a specific aspect(s) of LHC I function.Abbreviations D dark - EMS ethyl methanesulfonate - er erecta - gl1 glabrous1 - L light - LHC I light harvesting complex of Photosystem I - LHC II light harvesting complex of Photosystem II - M2 second generation of mutagenized seed - M3 third generation of mutagenized seed - vir virescent - WT wildtype  相似文献   

15.
Twenty-three chlorina (clo) mutants from the barley mutant collection of the Carlsberg Laboratory, Copenhagen, were tested for the presence of the four light-harvesting chlorophyll (Chl) a/b-binding proteins (LHC) of Photosystem I (Lhca1-4) and the PS II antenna proteins Lhcb1-3 (LHC II), Lhcb4-6 (CP29, CP26, CP24) and PsbS (CP22) using monospecific and monoclonal antibodies. Mutants allelic to barley mutant clo-f2, impaired in Chl b synthesis, provided evidence that Lhca4, Lhcb1 and Lhcb6 are unstable in the absence of Chl b, and the accumulation of Lhcb2, Lhcb3 and Lhcb4 is also impaired. Mutants at the locus chlorina-a (clo-a117, clo-a126 and clo-a134) lack or have only trace amounts of Lhca1, Lhca4, Lhcb1 and Lhcb3, whereas a mutant at the locus chlorina-b (clo-b125) had reduced amounts of all Lhca proteins. These two mutations could have an effect in protein import or assembly. Evidence is presented that Lhcb5 is the innermost LHC protein of PS II, and that Lhca1 and Lhca4, which have been supposed to be intimately associated in the LHCI-730 complex, can accumulate independently of each other. 77 K fluorescence emission spectra taken from leaves of clo-f2 101, clo-a126 and clo-b125 indicate that chlorophyll(s) emitting at 742 nm are coupled to the presence of Lhca4 that is bound to the reaction centre, and those emitting around 730 nm are located on Lhca1.  相似文献   

16.
The generation of nonphotochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence (qN) in the antenna of photosystem II (PSII) is accompanied by the de-epoxidation of violaxanthin to antheraxanthin and zeaxanthin. The function of zeaxanthin in two mechanisms of qN, energy-dependent quenching (qE) and photoinhibitory quenching (qI), was investigated by measuring the de-epoxidation state in the antenna subcomplexes of PSII during the generation and relaxation of qN under varying conditions. Three different antenna subcomplexes were separated by isoelectric focusing: Lhcb1/2/3, Lhcb5/6, and the Lhcb4/PSII core. Under all conditions, the highest de-epoxidation state was detected in Lhcb1/2/3 and Lhcb5/6. The kinetics of de-epoxidation in these complexes were found to be similar to the formation of qE. The Lhcb4/PSII core showed the most pronounced differences in the de-epoxidation state when illumination with low and high light intensities was compared, correlating roughly with the differences in qI. Furthermore, the epoxidation kinetics in the Lhcb4/PSII core showed the most pronounced differences of all subcomplexes when comparing the epoxidation after either moderate or very strong photoinhibitory preillumination. Our data support the suggestion that zeaxanthin formation/epoxidation in Lhcb1-3 and Lhcb5/6 may be related to qE, and in Lhcb4 (and/or PSII core) to qI.  相似文献   

17.
The changes in some proteins involved in the light reactions of photosynthesis of the resurrection plant Haberlea rhodopensis were examined in connection with desiccation. Fully hydrated (control) and completely desiccated plants (relative water content (RWC) 6.5%) were used for thylakoid preparations. The chlorophyll (Chl) a to Chl b ratios of thylakoids isolated from control and desiccated leaves were very similar, which was also confirmed by measuring their absorption spectra. HPLC analysis revealed that β-carotene content was only slightly enhanced in desiccated leaves compared with the control, but the zeaxanthin level was strongly increased. Desiccation of H. rhodopensis to an air-dried state at very low light irradiance led to a little decrease in the level of D1, D2, PsbS and PsaA/B proteins in thylakoids, but a relative increase in LHC polypeptides. To further elucidate whether the composition of the protein complexes of the thylakoid membranes had changed, we performed a separation of solubilized thylakoids on sucrose density gradients. In contrast to spinach, Haberlea thylakoids appeared to be much more resistant to the same solubilization procedure, i.e. complexes were not separated completely and complexes of higher density were found. However, the fractions analyzed provided clear evidence for a move of part of the antenna complexes from PSII to PSI when plants became desiccated. This move was also confirmed by low temperature emission spectra of thylakoids.Overall, the photosynthetic proteins remained comparatively stable in dried Haberlea leaves when plants were desiccated under conditions similar to their natural habitat. Low light during desiccation was enough to induce a rise in the xanthophyll zeaxanthin and β-carotene. Together with the extensive leaf shrinkage and some leaf folding, increased zeaxanthin content and the observed shift in antenna proteins from PSII to PSI during desiccation of Haberlea contributed to the integrity of the photosynthetic apparatus, which is important for rapid recovery after rehydration.  相似文献   

18.
Most chloroplasts undergo changes in composition, function and structure in response to growth irradiance. However, Tradescantia albiflora, a facultative shade plant, is unable to modulate its light-harvesting components and has the same Chl a/Chl b ratios and number of functional PS II and PS I reaction centres on a Chl basis at all growth irradiances. With increasing growth irradiance, Tradescantia leaves have the same relative amount of chlorophyll—proteins of PS II and PS I, but increased xanthophyll cycle components and more zeaxanthin formation under high light. Despite high-light leaves having enhanced xanthophyll cycle content, all Tradescantia leaves acclimated to varying growth irradiances have similar non-photochemical quenching. These data strongly suggest that not all of the zeaxanthin formed under high light is necessarily non-covalently bound to major and minor light-harvesting proteins of both photosystems, but free zeaxanthin may be associated with LHC II and LHC I or located in the lipid bilayer. Under the unusual circumstances in light-acclimated Tradescantia where the numbers of functional PS II and PS I reaction centres and their antenna size are unaltered during growth under different irradiances, the extents of PS II photoinactivation by high irradiances are comparable. This is due to the extent of PS II photoinactivation being a light dosage effect that depends on the input (photon exposure, antenna size) and output (photosynthetic capacity, non-radiative dissipation) parameters, which in Tradescantia are not greatly varied by changes in growth irradiance.This revised version was published online in October 2005 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

19.
The chlorophyll a antenna of photosystems I and II were each isolated after detergent treatment by gel electrophoresis or sucrose gradient centrifugation from a b-less mutant of barley grown in daylight and from wildtype barley developed in intermittent light. We identified each fraction by both its electrophoretic position and PS I activity (P700 content) in the case of the mutant, and by both PS I and PS II activity (DCIP reduction from DPC) in the light-limited plants. The proportion of Chl a in each photosystem was estimated from the amount in each gel or sucrose gradient band, and from addition of the areas under the absorption spectra (650–710 nm) of each fraction to match the spectrum of the solubilized thylakoids. The latter method was possible because the spectrum (77 K) of each fraction was unique; in the mutant about 70% of chlorophyll is associated with PS I and 30% with PS II. In the light-limited plants, the reverse is true with nearly 70% associated with PS II. RESOL analyses of both absorption and fluorescence emission spectra of all isolated fractions indicated an abnormal arrangement of antenna chlorophyll molecules in the light-limited, developing membranes even though their reaction centers are fully functional.Abbreviations DCIP dichlorophenolindophenol - DOC deoxycholate - DPC diphenylcarbazide - DL daylight - ImL intermittent light - LHC light-harvesting Chl a/b protein complex - PAGE polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis DPB-CIW No. 778  相似文献   

20.
Zia A  Johnson MP  Ruban AV 《Planta》2011,233(6):1253-1264
The efficiency of photosystem II antenna complexes (LHCs) in higher plants must be regulated to avoid potentially damaging overexcitation of the reaction centre in excess light. Regulation is achieved via a feedback mechanism known as non-photochemical quenching (NPQ), triggered the proton gradient (ΔpH) causing heat dissipation within the LHC antenna. ΔpH causes protonation of the LHCs, the PsbS protein and triggers the enzymatic de-epoxidation of the xanthophyll, violaxanthin, to zeaxanthin. A key step in understanding the mechanism is to decipher whether PsbS and zeaxanthin cooperate to promote NPQ. To obtain clues about their respective functions we studied the effects of PsbS and zeaxanthin on the rates of NPQ formation and relaxation in wild-type Arabidopsis leaves and those overexpressing PsbS (L17) or lacking zeaxanthin (npq1). Overexpression of PsbS was found to increase the rate of NPQ formation, as previously reported for zeaxanthin. However, PsbS overexpression also increased the rate of NPQ relaxation, unlike zeaxanthin, which is known decrease the rate. The enhancement of PsbS levels in plants lacking zeaxanthin (npq1) by either acclimation to high light or crossing with L17 plants showed that the effect of PsbS was independent of zeaxanthin. PsbS levels also affected the kinetics of the 535 nm absorption change (ΔA535), which monitors the formation of the conformational state of the LHC antenna associated with NPQ, in an identical way. The antagonistic action of PsbS and zeaxanthin with respect to NPQ and ΔA535 relaxation kinetics suggests that the two molecules have distinct regulatory functions.  相似文献   

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