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1.
Bacillus species producing a thermostable phytase was isolated from soil, boiled rice, and mezu (Korean traditinal koji). The activity of phytase increased markedly at the late stationary phase. An extracellular phytase from Bacillus sp. KHU-10 was purified to homogeneity by acetone precipitation and DEAE-Sepharose and phenyl-Sepharose column chromatographies. Its molecular weight was estimated to be 46 kDa on gel filtration and 44 kDa on SDS-polyacrylamide gel elctrophoresis. Its optimum pH and temperature for phytase activity were pH 6.5-8.5 and 40°C without 10 mM CaCl2 and pH 6.0-9.5 and 60°C with 10 mM CaCl2. About 50% of its original activity remained after incubation at 80°C or 10 min in the presence of 10 mM CaCl2. The enzyme activity was fairly stable from pH 6.5 to 10.0. The enzyme had an isoelectric point of 6.8. As for substrate specificity, it was very specific for sodium phytate and showed no activity on other phosphate esters. The K m value for sodium phytate was 50 M. Its activity was inhibited by EDTA and metal ions such as Ba2+, Cd2+, Co2+, Cr3+, Cu2+, Hg2+, and Mn2+ ions.  相似文献   

2.
Factors influencing the rate of superoxide (O 2 - ) production by thylakoids were investigated to determine if increased production of the radical was related to injury induced by chilling at a moderate photon flux density (PFD). Plants used were Spinacia oleracea L., Cucumis sativus L. and Nerium oleander L. grown at either 200° C or 45° C. Superoxide production was determined by electron-spin-resonance spectroscopy of the (O 2 - )-dependent rate of oxidation of 2-ethyl-1-hydroxy-2,5,5-trimethyl-3-oxazolidine (OXANOH) to the corresponding oxazolidinoxyl radical, OXANO ·. For all plants, the steady-state rate of O 2 - production by thylakoids, incubated at 25° C and 350 mol photon · m–2 · s–1 (moderate PFD) with added ferredoxin and NADP, was between 7.5 and 12.5 mol · (mg chlorophyll)–1 · h–1. Incubation at 5° C and a moderate PFD, decreased the rate of O 2 - production 40% and 15% by thylakoids from S. oleracea and 20° C-grown N. oleander, chillinginsensitive plants, but increased the rate by 56% and 5% by thylakoids from C. sativus and 45° C-grown N. oleander, chilling-sensitive plants. For all plants, the addition of either ferredoxin or methyl viologen increased the rate of O 2 - -production at 25° C by 75–100%. With these electron acceptors, lowering the temperature to 5° C caused only a slight decrease in O 2 - production. In the absence of added electron acceptors, thylakoids produced O 2 - at a rate which was about 45% greater than that when ferredoxin and NADP were present. The addition of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea reduced O 2 - production under all conditions tested. The results show that the rate of O 2 - production increases in thylakoids when the rate of electron transfer to NADP is reduced. This could explain differences in the susceptibility of thylakoids from chilling-sensitive and chilling-insensitive plants to chilling at a moderate PFD, and is consistent with the proposal that O 2 - production is involved in the injury leading to the inhibition of photosynthesis induced under these conditions.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophen-yl)-1,1-dimethylurea - Fd ferredoxin - MV methyl viologen - 20°oleander Nerium oleander grown at 20° C - 45°-oleander N. oleander grown at 45° C - OXANOH 2-ethyl-1-hydroxy-2,5,5-tri-methyl-3-oxazolidine - PFD photon flux density (photon fluence rate) - TEMED tetramethyl ethylenediamine We would like to thank R.T. Furbank, R.S.B.S., Australian National University, Canberra, A.C.T., and C.B. Osmond, now of Duke University, Durham, N.C., USA, for the gift of ferredoxin, R.A.J.H. was supported by a Commonwealth Postgraduate Research Award.  相似文献   

3.
Jin  Ming-Xian  Li  De-Yao  Mi  Hualing 《Photosynthetica》2002,40(4):581-586
Temperature dependence (25–50 °C) of chlorophyll (Chl) fluorescence induction, far-red radiation (FR)-induced relaxation of the post-irradiation transient increase in apparent F0, and the trans-thylakoid proton gradients (pH) was examined in maize leaves. Temperatures above 30 °C caused an elevation of F0 level and an enhancement of F0 quenching during actinic irradiation. Millisecond delayed light emission (ms-DLE), which reflects the magnitude of pH, decreased strikingly above 35 °C, and almost disappeared at 50 °C. It indicates that the heat-enhanced quenching of F0 under actinic irradiation could not be attributed mainly to the mechanism of pH-dependent quenching. The relaxation of the post-irradiation transient increase in apparent F0 upon FR irradiation could be decomposed into two exponential components (1 = 0.7–1.8 s, 2 = 2.0–9.9 s). Decay times of both components increased with temperature increasing from 25 to 40–45 °C. The bi-phasic kinetics of FR-induced relaxation of the post-irradiation transient increase in apparent F0 and its temperature dependence may be related to plastoquinone (PQ) compartmentation in the thylakoid membranes and its re-organisation at elevated temperature.  相似文献   

4.
Spinach plants (Spinacia oleracea L.) were frost-hardened by cold-acclimation to 1° C or kept in an unhardy state at 20°/14° C in phytotrons. Detached leaves were exposed to temperatures below 0°C. Rates of photosynthetic CO2 uptake by the leaves, recorded after frost treatment, served as a measure of freezing injury. Thylakoid membranes were isolated from frost-injured leaves and their photosynthetic activities tested. Ice formation occurred at about-4° to-5° C, both in unhardened and cold-acclimated leaves. After thawing, unhardened leaves appeared severely damaged when they had been exposed to-5° to-8° C. Acclimated leaves were damaged by freezing at temperatures between-10° to-14° C. The pattern of freezing damage was complex and appeared to be identical in hardened and unhardened leaves: 1. Inactivation of photosynthesis and respiration of the leaves occurred almost simultaneously. 2. When the leaves were partly damaged, the rates of photosynthetic electron transport and noncyclic photophosphorylation and the extent of light-induced H+ uptake by the isolated thylakoids were lowered at about the same degree. The dark decay of the proton gradient was, however, not stimulated, indicating that the permeability of the membrane to-ward protons and metal cations had not increased. 3. As shown by partial reactions of the electron transport system, freezing of leaves predominantly inhibited the oxygen evolution, but photosystem II and photosystem I-dependent electron transport were also impaired. 4. Damage of the chloroplast envelope was indicated by a decline in the percentage of intact chloroplasts found in preparations from injured leaves. The results are discussed in relation to earlier studies on freezing damage of thylakoid membranes occurring in vitro.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - DCPIP 2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol - HEPES N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N-2-ethane sulfonic acid - MES 2(N-morpholino) ethane sulfonic acid  相似文献   

5.
The inactivation temperature for Hill activity and for the long-lived delayed fluorescence of isolated Pisum sativum L. chloroplasts was found to depend on pH, the maximal value being in the pH region 5–7. Salts increase the inactivation temperature by 4–7°C. Effects of D2O and some other substances that modify the thermostability of chloroplasts are dependent on pH. It is concluded that thermal denaturation of proteins is the most probable mechanism for heat inactivation of chloroplasts.Abbreviations Hepes 4-(2-hydroxymethyl)-1-piperazineethane sulfonic acid - Tris 2-amino-2-(hydroxymethyl)-1,3-propanediol  相似文献   

6.
An easily scaled-up technique has been designed to purify -mannanase from Bacillus licheniformis. Using flocculation, ultrafiltration and ion-exchange chromatography, the enzyme was purified 33-fold with a final recovery of 47% and a specific activity of 4341 U mg–1protein. The enzyme had maximum activity at 60 °C and pH 7.0. It was stable at 50 °C and pH 6.0 for 6 h, but lost all of its activity when held at 70 °C and pH 6.0 for 1 h.  相似文献   

7.
Thermostability of the photosynthetic apparatus of abscisic acid (ABA)-treated seedlings of barley (Hordeum vulgare) was studied by light-scattering and by fluorescence measurements of isolated chloroplasts. ABA treatment markedly decreased heat damage of the chloroplast ultrastructure; an exogenous ABA concentration of 10−5 molar was most effective. Heat-induced increase of the 77 kilodalton fluorescence ratio F740/F685 was also smaller at this ABA concentration. The heat-induced increase of the initial chlorophyll fluorescence level (Fo) was virtually eliminated in ABA-treated (10−5 molar) chloroplasts up to 45°C and slightly increased at 50°C, relative to control chloroplasts where Fo increased even at 35°C and reached its maximal value at 45°C. In control chloroplasts, Fo increased with a 5-minute pretreatment temperature, an effect observed as low as 35°C. Fo was maximal at 45°C. In contrast, chloroplasts treated with 10−5 molar ABA did not exhibit a heat-induced increase in Fo until 50°C.  相似文献   

8.
The time courses of some Photosystem II (PS II) parameters have been monitored during in-vivo and in-vitro photoinhibition of spinach chloroplasts, at room temperature and at 10 °C or 0 °C. Exposing leaf discs of low-light grown spinach at 25 °C to high light led to photoinhibition of chloroplasts in-vivo as manifested by a parallel decrease in the number of functional PS II centres, the variable chlorophyll fluorescence at 77K (F v /F m ), and the number of atrazine-binding sites. When the photoinhibitory treatment was given at 10 °C, the former two parameters declined in parallel but the loss of atrazine-binding sites occurred more slowly and to a lesser extent. During in-vitro photoinhibition of chloroplast thylakoids at 25 °C, the loss of functional PS II centres proceeded slightly more rapidly than the loss of atrazine-binding sites, and this difference in rate was further increased when the thylakoids were photoinhibited at 0 °C. During the recovery phase of leaf discs (up to 9 h) the increases in F v /F m preceded that of the number of functional PS II centres, while only a further decline in the number of atrazine-binding sites was observed. The recovery of variable chlorophyll fluorescence and the concentration of functional PS II centres occurred more rapidly at 25 °C than at 10 °C. These results suggest that the photoinhibition of PS II function is a relatively temperature-independent early photochemical event, whereas the changes in the concentration of herbicide-binding sites appear to be a more complex biochemical process which can occur with a delayed time course.Abbreviations BSA bovine serum albumin - Chl chlorophyll - D1 32kDa herbicide-binding polypeptide in photosystem II and product of the psbA gene - D2 34kDa polypeptide in photosystem II which is the product of the psbD gene - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DCPIP 2,6-dichlorophenolin-dophenol - F 0, F v , F m chlorophyll fluorescence with reaction centres open, variable and maximum fluorescence, respectively - LDS lithium dodecyl sulfate - MES 2-(N-morpholino) ethanesulfonic acid - PSII photosystem II - QA, QB first and second quinone-type PS II acceptor, respectively  相似文献   

9.
Initial (Fo), maximum (Fm) and steady-state (Fs) levels of modulated chlorophyll fluorescence were measured in intact avocado leaves (Persea americana Mill.) during state 1-state 2 transitions using a combination of modulated and non-modulated lights with synchronized detection. Under normal temperature conditions (20°C), transition from state 2 to state 1 was associated with a substantial increase (about 20%) in Fm and Fo whereas the Fm/Fo ratio remained constant, reflecting increased absorption cross-section of PS II. On the contrary, at moderately elevated temperature (35°C), these fluorescence changes were very limited, indicating marked inhibition of the state regulation. The fraction of light distributed to PS II () was calculated from the Fo, Fm and Fs levels for both types of leaves. In control leaves, varied from 48% (in state 2) to values as high as 58% (in state 1). In contrast, mild heat treatment resulted in values close to 50% in both states, indicating the inability of heated leaves to reach extreme state 1. The results suggested that avocado leaves under moderately elevated temperature conditions are blocked in a state close to state 2. This effect was shown to occur in a non-injurious temperature range (as shown by the preservation of the (photoacoustically monitored) oxygen evolution activity) and to be rapidly reversed upon lowering of the temperature. Thermally induced development of state 2 (independent on the light spectral quality) could possibly be a protective mechanism to avoid photodamage of the heat-labile PS II by high light intensities which usually accompany heat stress in the field.  相似文献   

10.
Etiolated seedlings developed at cold-hardening temperatures (5°C) exhibited etioplasts with considerable vesiculation of internal membranes compared to etioplasts developed at 20°C regardless of the osmotic concentration employed during sample preparation. This vesiculation disappeared during exposure to continuous light at 5°C. This transformation of 5°C and 20°C etioplasts to chloroplasts under continuous light at 5° and 20°C respectively proceeded normally with the initial development of non-appressed lamellae and the subsequent appearance of granal stacks. However, chloroplasts developed at 5°C exhibited fewer lamellae per granum than chloroplasts developed at 20°C.Although the polypeptide complements of etioplasts and chloroplasts developed at 5° or 20°C were not significantly different, monomeric light harvesting complex (LHCII3) was assembled into oligomeric light harvesting complex (LHCII1) during chloroplast biogenesis at 20°C (oligomer:monomer =1.8) whereas monomeric LHCII predominated at 5°C (oligomer:monomer =0.3). Low temperature fluorescence emission spectra of isolated thylakoids indicated that both the F685/F735 and F695/F735 were significantly higher after greening at 5°C than at 20°C. In addition, chloroplast biogenesis at 5°C was associated with a low ratio of trans-3-hexadecenoic acid (0.5) in phosphatidylglycerol whereas at 20°C biogenesis was associated with a high ratio (1.6). Comparative kinetics indicated that the maximization of the trans-3-hexadecenoic acid level precedes the assembly of monomeric LHCII into oligomeric LHCII during biogenesis at 20°C. It is suggested that low developmental temperatures modulate the assembly of LHCII by reducing the trans-3-hexadecenoic acid content of phosphatidylglycerol such that monomeric or some intermediate form of LHCII predominates.Abbreviations RH Cold-hardened rye - RNH Non-hardened rye - EF Exoplasmic freeze fracture face - Chl Chlorophyll - LHCII Light harvesting Chl a/b protein complex - LHCII1 Oligomeric form - LHCII2 Dimeric form - LHCII3 Monomeric form - CPl Chl a-protein complex associated with photosystem I - CPa Chl a-protein comples associated with photosystem II - FP Free pigment - PSI Photosystem I - PSII Photosystem II - Trans-16:1 Trans-3-hexadecenoic acid - 16:0 Palmitic acid - 18:3 Linolenic acid - PG Phosphatidylglycerol - PC Phosphatidylcholine - PE Phosphatidylethanolamine - SL Sulfolipid - DGDG Digalactosyldiacylglycerol - MGDG Monogalactosyldiacylglycerol - SDS Sodium dodecyl sulfate - PAGE Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - PLB Prolamellar body - A Angstrom - DOC deoxycholate  相似文献   

11.
The CO2/O2 specificity of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The substrate specificity factor, V cKo/VoKc, of spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase was determined at ribulosebisphosphate concentrations between 0.63 and 200 M, at pH values between 7.4 and 8.9, and at temperatures in the range of 5° C to 40° C. The CO2/O2 specificity was the same at all ribulosebisphosphate concentrations and largely independent of pH. With increasing temperature, the specificity decreased from values of about 160 at 5° C to about 50 at 40° C. The primary effects of temperature were on K c [Km(CO2)] and V c [Vmax (CO2)], which increased by factors of about 10 and 20, respectively, over the temperature range examined. In contrast, K o [Ki (O2)] was unchanged and V o [Vmax (O2)] increased by a factor of 5 over these temperatures. The CO2 compensation concentrations () were calculated from specificity values obtained at temperatures between 5° C and 40° C, and were compared with literature values of . Quantitative agreement was found for the calculated and measured values. The observations reported here indicate that the temperature response of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase kinetic parameters accounts for two-thirds of the temperature dependence of the photorespiration/photosynthesis ratio in C3 plants, with the remaining one-third the consequence of differential temperature effects on the solubilities of CO2 and O2.Abbreviations RuBPC/O(ase) ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - RuBP ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate - CO2 compensation concentration  相似文献   

12.
The fungus Geotrichum candidum was selected from isolates of oil-mill waste as a potent lipase producer. Factors affecting lipase production by the fungus G. candidum in yeast-extract-peptone medium have been optimized by using a Box–Behnken design with seven variables to identify the significant correlation between effects of these variables in the production of the enzyme lipase. The experimental values were found to be in accordance with the predicted values, the correlation coefficient is 0.9957. It was observed that the variables days (6), pH (7.0), temperature (30 °C), carbon (1.25%), nitrogen (2.0%), Tween (1.0%) and salt concentrations (0.5 mM) were the optimum conditions for maximum lipase production (87.7 LU/ml). The enzyme was purified to homogeneity with an apparent molecular mass of 32 kDa by SDS-PAGE. The optimum pH at 40 °C was 7.0 and the optimum temperature at pH 7.0 was 40 °C. The enzyme was stable within a pH range of 6.5 to 8.5 at 30 °C for 24 h. The enzyme activity was strongly inhibited by AgNO3, NiCl2, HgCl2, and EDTA. However, the presence of Ca2+ and Ba2+ ions enhanced the activity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

13.
Summary Aspergillus sp NCIM 508 produced 22 U/L of extracellular -mannosidase activity in a medium containing 8 % brewer's yeast cells. The optimum period and pH range for maximum production of the enzyme were 7 days and 4.0–6.0, respectively. The optimum pH and temperature for enzyme activity were 6.0 and 50°C, respectively. The enzyme was stable for 24 h at 28°C, in the pH range 6.0–7.0. The enzyme retained 100 and 65 % of its original activity after heating for 15 min at 45 and 55°C, respectively. The Km and Vmax for p-nitrophenyl--D- mannoside (PNPM) were 71M and 7.5 × 10–2 moles/min/mg, respectively. The enzyme was strongly inhibited by 1 mM Hg++ and Cu++ and partially by Co.++ (NCL Communication No.; 5780)  相似文献   

14.
After preheating of Amaranthus chloroplasts at elevated temperatures (up to 45°C), the chlorophyll a fluorescence level under low excitation light rises as compared to control (unheated) as observed earlier in other chloroplasts (Schreiber U and Armond PA (1978) Biochim Biophys Acta 502: 138–151). This elevation of heat induced fluorescence yield is quenched by addition of 0.1 mM potassium ferricyanide, suggesting that with mild heat stress the primary electron acceptor of photosystem II is more easily reduced than the unheated samples. Furthermore, the level of fluorescence attained after illumination of dithionite-treated samples is independent of preheating (up to 45°C). Thus, these experiments indicate that the heat induced rise of fluorescence level at low light can not be due to changes in the elevation in the true constant F0 level, that must by definition, be independent of the concentration of QA. It is supposed that the increase in the fluorescence level by weak modulated light is either partly associated with dark reduction of QA due to exposure of chloroplasts to elevated temperature or due to temperature induced fluorescence rise in the so called inactive photosystem II centre where QA are not connected to plastoquinone pool. In the presence of dichlorophenyldimethylurea the fluorescence level triggered by weak modulated light increases at alkaline pH, both in control and heat stressed chloroplasts. This result suggests that the alkaline pH accelerates electron donation from secondary electron donor of photosystem II to QA both in control and heat stressed samples. Thus the increase in fluorescence level probed by weak modulated light due to preheating is not solely linked to increase in true F0 level, but largely associated with the shift in the redox state of QA, the primary stable electron acceptor of photosystem II.Abbreviations ADRY Acceleration of Deactivation of Reaction of Enzyme Y - CCCP Carbonyl cyanide 4-(trifluoromethoxy)-phenylhydrazone - Chl Chlorophyll - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - FeCN potassium ferricyanide - HEPES 4-(2-hydroxy ethyl)-1-piperazine ethane sulfonic acid - LHCP Light harvesting chlorophyll protein - MES (4-morpholine ethane sulfonic acid) - PS photosystem - QA and QB first and second consecutive electron acceptors of photosystem II - TES (2-[tris(hydroxymethyl)-methylamino]-1-ethanesulfonic acid) sulfonic acid - TRICINE N-[tris(hydroxymethyl)methyl] glycine  相似文献   

15.
Among 97 fungal strains isolated from soil collected in the arctic tundra (Spitsbergen), Penicillium chrysogenum 9 was found to be the best lipase producer. The maximum lipase activity was 68 units mL–1 culture medium on the fifth day of incubation at pH 6.0 and 20°C. Therefore, P. chrysogenum 9 was classified as a psychrotrophic microorganism. The non-specific extracellular lipase showed a maximum activity at 30°C and pH 5.0 for natural oils or at pH 7.0 for synthetic substrates. Tributyrin was found to be the best substrate for lipase, among those tested. The Km and Vmax were calculated to be 2.33 mM and 22.1 units mL–1, respectively, with tributyrin as substrate. The enzyme was inhibited more by EDTA than by phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride and was reactivated by Ca2+. The P. chrysogenum 9 lipase was very stable in the presence of hexane and 1,4-dioxane at a concentration of 50%, whereas it was unstable in presence of xylene.  相似文献   

16.
Summary Peptidergic neurons dissociated from the neurosecretory cell group, the X-organ, of adult crabs (Cardisoma carnifex) show immediate outgrowth on unconditioned plastic dishes in defined medium. Most of the neurons can be categorized as small cells, branchers or veilers. A fourth type, superlarge, found occasionally, has a soma diameter greater than 40 m and multipolar outgrowth. We report here the effects on morphology that follow alterations of the standard defined culturing conditions. The three common types of neurons are present when cells are grown in crab saline or saline with l-glutamine and glucose (saline medium). Changes of pH between 7.0 to 7.9 have no effect. Osmolarity changes cause transient varicosities in small cells. In some veilers, pits rapidly appear in the veil and then disappear within 35 min. In cultures at 26° C instead of 22° C, veilers extend processes from the initial veil in a pattern similar to branchers, and the processes of adjacent veilers sometimes form appositions. Culturing in higher [K+]o medium ([K+]o=15–110 mM; standard=11 mM) has no long-term effect, but growth is arrested by [K+]o greater than 30 mM. Cultures were also grown in media in which [Ca2+]o ranged from 0.1 M to 26 mM (standard=13 mM). Outgrowth occured from all neuronal types in all [Ca2+]o tested. Thus, the expression of different outgrowth morphologies occurs under a wide variety of culturing conditions.  相似文献   

17.
S. Somersalo  G. H. Krause 《Planta》1989,177(3):409-416
The effects of moderate light at chilling temperature on the photosynthesis of unhardened (acclimated to +18° C) and hardened (cold-acclimated) spinach (Spinacea oleracea L.) leaves were studied by means of fluorescence-induction measurements at 20° C and 77K and by determination of quantum yield of O2 evolution. Exposure to 550 mol photons·m-2·s-1 at +4° C induced a strong photoinhibition in the unhardened leaves within a few hours. Photoinhibition manifested by a decline in quantum yield was characterized by an increase in initial fluorescence (F o) and a decrease in variable fluorescence (F v) and in the ratio of variable to maximum fluorescence (F V/F M), both at 77K and 20° C. The decline in quantum yield was more closely related to the decrease in the F V/F M ratio measured at 20° C, as compared with F V/F M at 77K. Quenching of the variable fluorescence of photosystem II was accompanied by a decline in photosystem-I fluorescence at 77K, indicating increased thermal de-excitation of pigments as the main consequence of the light treatment. All these changes detected in fluorescence parameters as well as in the quantum yield of O2 evolution were fully reversible within 1–3 h at a higher temperature in low light. The fast recovery led us to the view that this photoinhibition represents a regulatory mechanism protecting the photosynthetic apparatus from the adverse effects of excess light by increasing thermal energy dissipation. Long-term cold acclimation probably enforces other protective mechanisms, as the hardened leaves were insensitive to the same light treatment that induced strong inhibition of photosynthesis in unhardened leaves.Abbreviations F 0 initial fluorescence - F M maximum fluorescence - F V variable fluorescence (F M-F 0 - PFD photon flux density - PS photosystem  相似文献   

18.
Linda A. Franklin 《Planta》1994,192(3):324-331
The effect of acclimation to 25, 18, or 10° C on the relationship between photoprotection and photodamage was tested in low-light-grown (80 mol · m–2 · s–1) Ulva rotundata Blid. exposed to several higher irradiances at the acclimation temperature. Changes in chlorophyll fluorescence parameters (minimum fluorescence, F0, and the ratio of variable to maximum fluorescence, Fv/Fm, measured after 5 min darkness) were monitored during 5 h transfers to 350, 850, and 1700 mol · m–2 · s–1, and during recovery after 1- or 5-h treatments. At all temperatures, rate of onset and final extent of photoinhibition, measured by a decrease in Fv/Fm, increased with increasing irradiance. At a given photoinhibitory irradiance, rate of onset was most rapid at 10 ° C, but the extent was temperature-independent. Recovery rates from mild light stress were similar at all temperatures, but recovery from the most extreme photoinhibitory treatment lagged 2 h at 10° C. De-epoxidation of xanthophyll-cycle components proceeded faster and to a lower epoxidation status at 25° C, but there was little difference in the pool size among the three growth conditions. Using chloramphenicol to inhibit chloroplast protein synthesis and dithiothreitol to inhibit violaxanthin de-epoxidation, it was shown that at the lowest light treatment given, the extent of photoinhibition could be attributed both to greater amounts of photodamage and to greater zeaxanthin-related photoprotection at 25 than at 10° C. While these two mechanisms for high-light-induced loss of photosynthetic efficiency were operating at 10° C, there was evidence for a relatively greater proportion of zeaxanthin-unrelated photoprotection at the low temperature. This photoprotective mechanism is related to a rapidly reversible increase in F0 and is insentivite to both chloramphenicol and dithiothreitol.Abbreviations and Symbol CAP chloramphenicol - DTT dihiothreitol - F0, Fm, Fv minimum, maximum, and variable fluorescence - quantum yield This research was conducted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Ph. D. degree in the Department of Botany, Duke University. The author wishes to thank E.-M. Aro, W.J. Henley, G. Levavasseur, C.B. Osmond, and J. Ramus for helpful discussions, and C. Lovelock for pigment standards. Funding was provided by Grants-in-Aid of Research from Sigma Xi and the Phycological Society of America, and a Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation Fellowship to L.A.F., and National Science Foundation grant OCE-8812157 to C.B.O. and J.R.  相似文献   

19.
With a glucose-limited chemostat culture of Bacillus stearothermophilus, increasing the incubation temperature progressively from 45°C to 63°C led to a progressive marked increase in the maintenance rates of glucose and oxygen consumption. Hence, at a fixed low dilution rate the yield values with respect to glucose and oxygen decreased substantially with increased temperature. However, the apparent Y glucose max and values did not decrease but actually increased with temperature, being highest at 63°C (i.e., close to the maximum growth temperature). With glucose-sufficient cultures growing at a fixed low dilution rate (0.2 h–1) and at their optimum temperature (55°C), glucose and oxygen consumption rates invariably were higher than that of a corresponding glucose-limited culture. Cation (K+ or Mg2+)-limited cultures expressed the highest metabolic rates and with the K+ limited culture this rate was found to be very markedly temperature dependent. As the temperature was increased from 45°C to 63°C the rate of glucose consumption increased 1.8-fold, and that of oxygen consumption by 3.7-fold. The culture pH value also exerted a noticeable effect on the metabolic rate of a glucose-limited culture, particularly at the extremes of pH tolerance (5.5 and 8.5, respectively). A K+-limited culture was less affected with respect to metabolic rate by the culture pH value though the steady state bacterial concentration, and thus the cellular K+ content, changed substantially. These results are discussed in relation to previous findings of the behaviour of this organism in batch culture, and to the behaviour of other thermophilic Bacillus species in chemostat culture.  相似文献   

20.
The response of effective quantum yield of photosystem 2 (F/Fm) to temperature was investigated under field conditions (1 950 m a.s.l.) in three alpine plant species with contrasting leaf temperature climates. The in situ temperature response did not follow an optimum curve but under saturating irradiances [PPFD >800 µìmol(photon) m–2s–1] highest F/Fm occurred at leaf temperatures below 10°C. This was comparable to the temperature response of antarctic vascular plants. Leaf temperatures between 0 and 15°C were the most frequently (41 to 56%) experienced by the investigated species. At these temperatures, F/Fm was highest in all species (data from all irradiation classes included) but the species differed in the temperature at which F/Fm dropped below 50% (Soldanella pusilla >20°C, Loiseleuria procumbens >25°C, and Saxifraga paniculata >40°C). The in situ response of F/Fm showed significantly higher F/Fm values at saturating PPFD for the species growing in full sunlight (S. paniculata and L. procumbens) than for S. pusilla growing under more moderate PPFD. The effect of increasing PPFD on F/Fm, for a given leaf temperature, was most pronounced in S. pusilla. Despite the broad diurnal leaf temperature amplitude of alpine environments, only in S. paniculata did saturating PPFD occur over a broad range of leaf temperatures (43 K). In the other two species it was half of that (around 20 K). This indicates that the setting of environmental scenarios (leaf temperature×PPFD) in laboratory experiments often likely exceeds the actual environmental demand in the field.This revised version was published online in March 2005 with corrections to the page numbers.  相似文献   

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