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1.
The regulation of photosystem II (PSII) by light-, CO2-, and O2-dependent changes in the capacity for carbon metabolism was studied. Estimates of the rate of electron transport through PSII were made from gas-exchange data and from measurements of chlorophyll fluorescence. At subsaturating photon-flux density (PFD), the rate of electron transport was independent of O2 and CO2. Feedback on electron transport was observed under two conditions. At saturating PFD and low partial pressure of CO2, p(CO2), the rate of electron transport increased with p(CO2). However, at high p(CO2), switching from normal to low p(O2) did not affect the net rate of photosynthetic CO2 assimilation but the rate of electron-transport decreased by an amount related to the change in the rate of photorespiration. We interpret these effects as 1) regulation of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphatecarboxylase (RuBPCase, EC 4.1.1.39) activity to match the rate of electron transport at limiting PFD, 2) regulation of electron-transport rate to match the rate of RuBPCase at low p(CO2), and 3) regulation of the electron-transport rate to match the capacity for starch and sucrose synthesis at high p(CO2) and PFD. These studies provide evidence that PSII is regulated so that the capacity for electron transport is matched to the capacity for other processes required by photosynthesis, such as ribulose-bisphosphate carboxylation and starch and sucrose synthesis. We show that at least two mechanisms contribute to the regulation of PSII activity and that the relative engagement of these mechanisms varies with time following a step change in the capacity for ribulose-bisphosphate carboxylation and starch and sucrose synthesis. Finally, we take advantage of the relatively slow activation of deactivated RuBPCase in vivo to show that the activation level of this enzyme can limit the rate of electron transport as evidenced by increased feedback on PSII following a step change in p(CO2). As RuBPCase as activated, the feedback on PSII declined.Abbreviations and symbols JC electron-transport rate calculated from CO2-assimilation measurements - JF electron-transport rate calculated from fluorescence parameters - PFD photon-flux density - qE energy-dependent quenching - PSII photosystem II - qQ Q-dependent quenching - QY quantum yield - RuBPCase ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.39) C.I.W. publication No. 1015  相似文献   

2.
The dark-relaxation kinetics of variable fluorescence, Fv, in intact green leaves of Pisum stativum L. and Dolichos lablab L. were analyzed using modulated fluorometers. Fast (t1/2 = 1 s) and slow (t1/2 = 7–8 s) phases in fv dark-decay kinetics were observed; the rate and the relative contribution of each phase in total relaxation depended upon the fluence rate of the actinic light and the point in the induction curve at which the actinic light was switched off. The rate of the slow phase was accelerated markedly by illumination with far-red light; the slow phase was abolished by methyl viologen. The halftime of the fast phase of Fv dark decay decreased from 250 ms in dark-adapted leaves to 12–15 ms upon adaptation to red light which is absorbed by PSII. The analysis of the effect of far-red light, which is absorbed mainly by PSI, on Fv dark decay indicates that the slow phase develops when a fraction of QA (the primary stable electron acceptor of PSII) cannot transfer electrons to PSI because of limitation on the availability of P700+ (the primary electron donor of PSI). After prolonged illumination of dark-adapted leaves in red (PSII-absorbed) light, a transient. Fv rise appears which is prevented by far-red (PSI-absorbed) light. This transient fv rise reflects the accumulation of QA in the dark. The observation of this transient Fv rise even in the presence of the uncoupler carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenyl hydrazone (CCCP) indicates that a mechanism other than ATP-driven back-transfer of electrons to QA may be responsible for the phenomenon. It is suggested that the fast phase in Fv dark-decay kinetics represents the reoxidation of QA by the electron-transport chain to PSI, whereas the slow phase is likely to be related to the interaction of QA with the donor side of PSII.Abbreviations CCCP carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone - FO initial fluorescence level - Fv variable fluorescence - P700 primary electron donor of PSI - PSI, II photosystem I, II - QA (QA ) QB (QB ) primary and secondary stable electron acceptor of PSII in oxidized (reduced) state Supported by grant B6.1/88 DST, Govt. of India.  相似文献   

3.
The findings presented in this paper support the suggestion that in the cyanobacterium Anabaena variabilis photobleaching is the result of an increased intracellular level of singlet molecular oxygen, whereas photoinhibition is controlled by a different molecular mechanism. Photobleaching of Anabaena trichomes can be prevented effectively by gassing with argon, nitrogen and carbon dioxide as well as by treatment with the 1O2 quenchers sodium azide and crocetin, and finally, with 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU). On the other hand, photodynamically active compounds, capable of 1O2 generation, increase photobleaching drastically. Thus, photobleaching is probably caused by singlet molecular oxygen. Photoinhibition studied with the aid of the fluorescence induction was not prevented by most of the treatments which prevent photobleaching. Therefore, different control mechanisms have to be assumed for this process.Abbreviations DABCO 1,4-diazabicyclo(2,2,2)octane - DBMIB dibromothymoquinone = (2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone) - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - C-PC C-phycocyanin - Chl a chlorophyll a - LFE low fluence rate exposure - HFE high fluence rate exposure  相似文献   

4.
Fluorimetric, photoacoustic, polarographic and absorbance techniques were used to measure in situ various functional aspects of the photochemical apparatus of photosynthesis in intact pea leaves (Pisum sativum L.) after short exposures to a high temperature of 40 ° C. The results indicated (i) that the in-vivo responses of the two photosystems to high-temperature pretreatments were markedly different and in some respects opposite, with photosystem (PS) II activity being inhibited (or down-regulated) and PSI function being stimulated; and (ii) that light strongly interacts with the response of the photosystems, acting as an efficient protector of the photochemical activity against its inactivation by heat. When imposed in the dark, heat provoked a drastic inhibition of photosynthetic oxygen evolution and photochemical energy storage, correlated with a marked loss of variable PSII-chlorophyll fluorescence emission. None of the above changes were observed in leaves which were illuminated during heating. This photoprotection was saturated at rather low light fluence rates (around 10 W · m–2). Heat stress in darkness appeared to increase the capacity for cyclic electron flow around PSI, as indicated by the enhanced photochemical energy storage in far-red light and the faster decay of P 700 + (oxidized reaction center of PSI) monitored upon sudded interruption of the far-red light. The presence of light during heat stress reduced somewhat this PSI-driven cyclic electron transport. It was also observed that heat stress in darkness resulted in the progressive closure of the PSI reaction centers in leaves under steady illumination whereas PSII traps remained largely open, possibly reflecting the adjustment of the photochemical efficiency of undamaged PSI to the reduced rate of photochemistry in PSII.Abbreviations B1 and B2 fraction of closed PSI and PSII reaction centers, respectively - ES photoacoustically measured energy storage - Fo, Fm and Fs initial, maximal and steady-state levels of chlorophyll fluorescence - P700 reaction center of PSI - PS (I, II) photosystem (I, II) - V = (Fs – Fo)/(Fm – Fo) relative variable chlorophyll fluorescence We wish to thank Professor R. Lannoye (ULB, Brussels) for the use of this photoacoustic spectrometer and Mrs. M. Eyletters for her help.  相似文献   

5.
Illumination of a liquid culture of Synechococcus 6301 at high photon flux density (PFD) elicits a time-dependent first-order exponential decline in relative quantum yield of photosynthetic O2 evolution to some steady-state value. Full photosynthetic activity is restored, also as a time-dependent first-order process, when the photoinhibited culture is transferred to lower PFD. Temperature and irradiation dependence of photoinhibition were measured under conditions which precluded simultaneous recovery from photoinhibition. Also the temperature and irradiation dependence of recovery from photoinhibition were determined under conditions which precluded simultaneous photoinhibition. Kinetics of photoinhibition were sensitive to PFD but relatively independent of temperature. Kinetics of recovery saturated at low PFD but were very temperature dependent at all PFDs. A general equation can be written to predict the change in photosynthetic activity versus time when a cell culture is placed at photoinhibitory PFD, assuming that first-order exponential photoinhibition and first-order exponential recovery from photoinhibition occur simultaneously. The equation can be made specific if the values of the kinetic constant for photoinhibition and for recovery from photoinhibition are known for the particular environmental conditions to which the cells are exposed. These values can be obtained by independently measuring the kinetics of photoinhibition without simultaneous recovery and the kinetics of recovery without simultaneous photoinhibition. The curve of photosynthetic activity versus time for cells placed at high PFD, which is predicted by this equation, precisely fits the experimentally determined kinetics of photoinhibition. This correlation remains valid over a wide range of temperatures and PFDs. Identical results were obtained with the marine cyanobacterium Synechococcus 7002. We conclude that the extent of net photoinhibition over a broad range of conditions represents a sum of individual rates of simultaneous photoinhibition and recovery from photoinhibition. The results support previous proposals that a protein required for photosystem II activity becomes functionally depleted during photoinhibition because protein synthesis or assembly into the membranes cannot keep up with the rate of its inactivation at excessively high PFDs. We also conclude that photoinhibition and light-dependent chilling sensitivity are manifestations of the same phenomenon.Abbreviations CAP chloramphenicol - Chl chlorophyll - PFD photon flux density - PSII photosystem II The authors thank Rockey Butler and Donna Scott for performing many of the preliminary experiments which led to this research. This work was supported by R.A. Welch and University Research Institute Grants to J.J.B.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Recovery (at 20° C) of spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) leaf sections from photoinhibition of photosynthesis was monitored by means of the fluorescence parameter FV/FM of intact leaf tissue and of PSII-driven electron-transport activity of isolated thylakoids. Different degrees of photoinactivation of PSII were obtained by preillumination in ambient air (at 4 or 20° C), CO2-free air or at low and high O2 levels (2 or 41 %) in N2. The kinetics of recovery exhibited two distinct phases. The first phase usually was completed within about 20-60 min and was most pronounced after preillumination in low O2. The slow phase proceeded for several hours leading to almost complete reactivation of PSII. Preincubation of the leaves with streptomycin (SM), which inhibits chloroplast-encoded protein synthesis, inhibited the slow recovery phase only, indicating the dependence of this phase on resynthesis of the reaction-centre protein, D1. The fast recovery phase remained largely unaffected by SM. Both phases were strongly but not totally dependent on irradiation of the leaf with low light. When SM was absent, net degradation of the D1 protein could neither be detected upon photoinhibitory irradiation nor during following incubation of the leaf sections in low light or darkness. In the presence of SM, net D1 degradation was seen and tended to increase with O2 concentration during photoinhibition treatment. Based on these data, we suggest that photoinactivation of PSII in vivo occurs in at least two steps. From the first step, reactivation appears possible in low light without D1 turnover (fast recovery phase). Action of oxygen then may lead to a second step, in which the D1 protein is affected and reactivation requires its removal and replacement (slow phase).Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - F0, FM and FV initial, maximum total and maximum variable chlorophyll fluorescence yield, respectively - PFD photon flux density - SM streptomycin We thank Professor P. Böger (Department of Plant Physiology and Biochemistry, University of Konstanz, Germany) for a gift of D1-specific antibodies. The paper contains part of the thesis work of J.L. The study was supported by the Deutsche Forschungs-gemeinschaft (SFB 189).  相似文献   

8.
Soluble proteins from leaves of Nicotiana glauca Grah., N. langsdorffii Weinm., their reciprocal hybrids and amphiploid hybrid (N. glaucaxN. langsdorffii) were resolved by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. Among a group of well-resolved polypeptides, in the isoelectric-point range of 5–5.5 and relative-molecular-mass (Mr) range of 18–23 kilodaltons (kDa), species-specific variation was observed. Polypeptides designated L and l are specific to N. langsdorffii, and G and g to N. glauca, while C is common to both species. Polypeptides L, G and C are localized in the chloroplasts and associated with thylakoid membranes. Polypeptide L is more acidic than polypeptide G, and both polypeptides have an Mr of 23 kDa. They were isolated from two-dimensional gels and their first 13 N-terminal amino-acid sequences were determined. These were found to be identical to the 13N-terminal amino acids of the photosystem II (PSII) 23-kDa polypeptide from spinach (T. Jansen et al. (1987) FEBS Lett. 216, 234–240) and, except for one change, to those from pea (R. Wales et al. (1989) Plant Molec. Biol., in press). Polypeptides G and L cross-react with antiserum against the PSII 23-kDa polypeptide from pea. Therefore, polypeptides G and L are extrinsic PSII 23-kDa polypeptides. They appear jointly and in equal amounts in the reciprocal hybrids. Since chloroplasts in Nicotiana are maternally inherited, these results demonstrate that polypeptides G and L are encoded by nuclear genes, are polymorphic variants of the PSII 23-kDa polypeptide, and are inherited in a Mendelian manner.Abbreviations kDa kilodalton - LS large subunit of Rubisco - Mr relative molecular mass - NEPHGE non-equilibrium pH gradient gel electrophoresis - PSII photosystem II - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - SS small subunit of Rubisco  相似文献   

9.
A. Laisk  O. Kiirats  V. Oja  U. Gerst  E. Weis  U. Heber 《Planta》1992,186(3):434-441
Exchange of CO2 and O2 and chlorophyll fluorescence were measured in the presence of 360 1 · 1–1 CO2 in nitrogen in Helianthus annuss L. leaves which had been preconditioned in the dark or at a photon flux density (PFD) of 24 mol · m–2 · s–1 either in 21 or 0% O2. An initial light-dependent O2 outburst of 6 mol · m–2 was measured after aerobic dark incubation. It was attributed to the reduction of electron carriers, predominantly plastoquinone. The maximum initial rate of O2 evolution at PFD 8000 mol · m–2 · s–1 was 170 mol · m–2 · s–2 or about four times the steady CO2-and light-saturated rate of photosynthesis. Fluorescence measurements showed that the rate was still acceptor-limited. Fast O2 evolution ceased after electron carriers were reduced in the dark-adapted leaf, but continued for a short time at the lower rate of 62 mol · m–2 · s–1 in the light-adapted leaf. The data are interpreted to show that enzymes involved in 3-phosphoglycerate reduction are dark-inhibited, but were fully active in low light. In a dark-adapted leaf, respiratory CO2 evolution continued under nitrogen; it was partially inhibited by illumination. Prolonged exposure of a leaf to anaerobic conditions caused reducing equivalents to accumulate. This was shown by a slowly increasing chlorophyll fluorescence yield which indicated the reduction of the PSII acceptor QA in the dark. When the leaf was illuminated, no O2 evolution was detected from short light pulses, although transient O2 production was appreciable during longer light pulses. This indicates that an electron donor (pool size about 2–3 e/PSII reaction center) became reduced in the dark and the first photons were used to oxidise this donor instead of water.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - CRC carbon reduction cycle - GAPDH NADP-glyceraldehyde-phosphate dehydrogenase - PFD photon flux density - PGA 3-phosphoglycerate - RuBP ribulose bisphosphate - TCA tricarboxylic acid cycle To whom correspondence should be addressedThis work received support by the Estonian Academy of Sciences, the Gottfried-Wilhelm-Leibniz Program of the Deutsche For-schungsgemeinschaft and the Sonderforschungsbereich 251 of the University of Würzburg.  相似文献   

10.
11.
12.
A simple and sensitive spectrophotometric method was developed for the determination of carbinoxamine maleate in pharmaceutical formulations. The method is based on the formation of a ternary complex, extractable with chloroform, between copper(II), eosin, and carbinoxamine maleate. The absorption spectra of the ternary complexes shows, under optimum conditions, a maxima at 538 nm, with apparent molar absorptive 6.1690 x 10(4) mol(-1) cm(-1), Sandell's sensitives 6.75 x 10(-3) microg cm(-2), and linearity in the concentration range 0.75-10.0 microg ml(-1). The method can be achieved with high accuracy (recovery values, 100 +/- 2%) and precision (with standard deviation 0.029-0.155 and relative standard deviation 3.87-1.55%). The method was again successfully applied, with high accuracy and good precision, for the determination of carbinoxamine maleate in various pharmaceutical formulations (syrup, drops, and tablets).  相似文献   

13.
Effect of low (5 mmol·dm−3) and high (10 or 20 mmol·dm−3) doses of 1.10-phenanthroline (Phe), a photodynamic herbicide, on the development of chloroplasts in etiolated and subsequently illuminated maize seedlings and on the structure of already developed chloroplasts of green maize seedlings was examined. Etiolated and then irradiated plants were resistant to 5 mmol·dm−3 of Phe with respect to morphology, however Phe caused inhibition of greening and of grana formation. Higher Phe concentrations followed by exposure to light caused not only total inhibition of greening but also dilation of thylakoids, swelling of chloroplasts, and finally total destruction of chloroplast structure. Application of Phe in the same concentrations to green plants revealed that they were resistant to low dose of Phe with respect to morphology and structure of chloroplasts, however 10 and 20 mmol·dm−3 Phe and illumination caused the loss of turgor of treated plants and other photooxidative damages seen at the ultrastructural level. We concluded that maize, as representant of monocotyledonous plants, is resistant to low (5 mmol·dm−3) Phe concentration. Higher (10 or 20 mmol·dm−3) concentrations, used to determine the site of damage and mode of action of Phe on the level of cell revealed that action of photodynamic herbicides is based on standard photoinhibition mechanism and also probably on their chelating properties.  相似文献   

14.
Oscillatoria amphigranulata is a fast-growing (3 doublings/day) cyanobacterium isolated from sulfide hot springs in New Zealand. Photosynthesis, as measured by incorporation of [14C]-HCO 3 - , was initially inhibited by 0.3–1.5 mM sulfide at pH 7.9–8.1. However, conversion to sulfide-dependent anoxygenic photosynthesis occurred in about 2 h or less under light intensities of 3–14 klx. Under the stimulation of higher light intensity (8–14 klx) a partial recovery of oxygenic photosynthesis also occurred. It was concluded that oxygenic photosynthesis was responsible for 21–42% of the total incorporation at sulfide concentrations of 1.0–0.3 mM, respectively. This contribution was suppressed at 1.5 mM sulfide and not elicited under lower light intensities (3–7 klx). As judged by the inhibitory effect of 10 g/ml chloramphenicol protein synthesis was required for attainment of both anoxygenic photosynthesis and photosystem II recovery. Sulfide could not be replaced by thiosulfate, elemental sulfur or dithionite as electron donors in photosynthesis, but elemental sulfur could serve as the sole assimilatory source of sulfur. Oxygenic photosynthesis was inhibited by DCMU [3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea] or DBMIB (2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone), but sulfide relieved the effect of either inhibitor in adapted cells, indicating that electrons derived from sulfide enter the photosynthetic electron transport chain at a point beyond plastoquinone.Uncommon abbreviations DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DBMIB 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone - DSPD disalicyclidene propanediamine - DNP-INT 2-4-dinitrophenyl ether of 2-iodo-4-nitrothymol - TMPD N,N,N,N-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine - PPO 2,5-diphenyloxazole - POPOP 1,4-bis-2-(5-phenyl oxzolyl) benzene  相似文献   

15.
The C-terminus region of the D1 protein of Photosystem II (PS II) is situated on the lumenal side of the complex and is likely to be involved in the coordination of the active site Mn atoms of the water oxidation complex (WOC). The strictly conserved arginine at position 334 (D1-334) was targeted for site-directed mutagenesis to explore the hypothesis that it is involved in the PS II extrinsic protein binding, chloride binding, or proton transfer. Although it was found that D1-R334 probably not essential for these functions, mutations at this position were found to uniquely alter the kinetics of S-state cycling in general and the properties of the S2 state in particular. Substitutions of a glutamate (D1-R334E) and a valine (D1-R334V) for D1-R334 lead to an unusually stable (t 1/2 >30 min at room temp) S2 state, but not S3, as measured by double flash measurements on the bare platinum electrode. However, measurements of fluorescence decay in the presence of DCMU suggest the S2 state is only modestly affected by the mutations. Possible reasons for these apparently contradictory results are discussed. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

16.
P. Horton  P. Lee 《Planta》1985,165(1):37-42
Thylakoids isolated from peas (Pisum sativum cv. Kelvedon Wonder) and phosphorylated by incubation with ATP have been compared with non-phosphorylated thylakoids in their sensitivity to photoinhibition by exposure to illumination in vitro. Assays of the kinetics of fluorescence induction at 20° C and the fluorescence emission spectra at-196° C indicate a proportionally larger decrease in fluorescence as a result of photoinhibitory treatment of non-phosphorylated compared with phosphorylated thylakoids. It is concluded that protein phosphorylation can afford partial protection to thylakoids exposed to photoinhibitory conditions.Abbreviations and symbols DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - F 0 Level of chlorophyll fluorescence when photosystem 2 traps are open - F m Level of chlorphyll fluorescence when photosystem 2 traps are closed - P Maximum level of fluorescence reached in the absence of DCMU - PSI (II) photosystem I(II)  相似文献   

17.
The effect of H2O2 on photosynthetic O2 evolution and photosynthetic electron transfer in cells of cyanobacteria Anabaena variabilis and Anacystis nidulans was studied. The following experiments were performed: 1) directly testing the effect of exogenous H2O2; 2) testing the effect of intracellular H2O2 generated with the use of methyl viologen (MV); 3) testing the effect of inhibiting intracellular H2O2 decomposition by salicylic acid (SA) and 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole (AT). H2O2 inhibited photosynthetic O2 evolution and light-induced reduction of p-benzoquinone (BQ) + ferricyanide (FeCy) in the Hill reaction. The I50 value for H2O2 was 0.75 mM. Photosynthetic electron transfer in the cells treated with H2O2 was not maintained by H2O2, NH2OH, 1,5-diphenylcarbazide, tetraphenylboron, or butylated hydroxytoluene added as artificial electron donors for Photosystem (PS) II. The H2O CO2, H2O MV (involving PSII and PSI) and H2O BQ + FeCy (chiefly dependent on PSII) electron transfer reactions were inhibited upon incubation of the cells with MV, SA, or AT. The N,N,N",N"-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine MV (chiefly dependent on PSI) electron transfer was inhibited by SA and AT but was resistant to MV. The results show that H2O2 inhibits photosynthetic electron transfer. It is unlikely that H2O2 could be a physiological electron donor in oxygenic photosynthesis.  相似文献   

18.
Hydrogen peroxide inhibits photosynthetic O2 evolution. It has been shown that H2O2 destroys the function of the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) in some chloroplast and Photosystem (PS) II preparations causing release of manganese from the OEC. In other preparations, H2O2 did not cause or caused only insignificant release of manganese. In this work, we tested the effect of H2O2 on the photosynthetic electron transfer and the state of OEC manganese in a native system (intact cells of the cyanobacterium Anabaena variabilis). According to EPR spectroscopy data, H2O2 caused an increase in the level of photooxidation of P700, the reaction centers of PS I, and decreased the rate of their subsequent reduction in the dark by a factor larger than four. Combined effect of H2O2, CN-, and EDTA caused more than eight- to ninefold suppression of the dark reduction of P700+. EPR spectroscopy revealed that the content of free (or loosely bound) Mn2+ in washed cyanobacterial cells was ~20% of the total manganese pool. This content remained unchanged upon the addition of CN- and increased to 25-30% after addition of H2O2. The content of the total manganese decreased to 35% after the treatment of the cells with EDTA. The level of the H2O2-induced release of manganese increased after the treatment of the cells with EDTA. Incubation of cells with H2O2 for 2 h had no effect on the absorption spectra of the photosynthetic pigments. More prolonged incubation with H2O2 (20 h) brought about degradation of phycobilins and chlorophyll a and lysis of cells. Thus, H2O2 causes extraction of manganese from cyanobacterial cells, inhibits the OEC activity and photosynthetic electron transfer, and leads to the destruction of the photosynthetic apparatus. H2O2 is unable to serve as a physiological electron donor in photosynthesis.  相似文献   

19.
Methods are described for the rigorous measurement of C2H4 metabolism and C2H4 binding in plant tissue. Comparisons are drawn between the results obtained using other methods and those which emerge from our studies, indicating that significant misapprehensions may have arisen in relation both to the distribution of metabolism and binding.  相似文献   

20.
Excitation of photosynthetic systems with short intense flashes is known to lead to exciton-exciton annihilation processes. Here we quantify the effect of competition between annihilation and trapping for Photosystem II, Photosystem I (thylakoids from peas and membranes from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp.), as well as for the purple bacterium Rhodospirillum rubrum. In none of the cases it was possible to reach complete product saturation (i.e. closure of reaction centers) even with an excitation energy exceeding 10 hits per photosynthetic unit. The parameter introduced by Deprez et al. ((1990) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1015: 295–303) describing the competition between exciton-exciton annihilation and trapping was calculated to range between 4.5 (PS II) and 6 (Rs. rubrum). The rate constants for bimolecular exciton-exciton annihilation ranged between (42 ps)-1 and (2.5 ps)-1 for PS II and PS I-membranes of Synechocystis, respectively. The data are interpreted in terms of hopping times (i.e. mean residence time of the excited state on a chromophore) according to random walk in isoenergetic antenna.Abbreviations DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - LHC II light harvesting complex II - P primary donor - PS I Photosystem I - PS II Photosystem II - PSU photosynthetic unit - RC reaction center  相似文献   

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