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1.
2.
R.C. Jennings  F.M. Garlaschi  G. Forti 《BBA》1976,423(2):264-274
Data presented here indicate that the slow fluorescence decline in osmotically disrupted chloroplasts is not associated with the well known divalent cation effect on fluorescence yield. Thus the two phenomena have markedly different magnesium concentration requirements, magnesium addition after the fluorescence decline did not stimulate the dark reversal, and the characteristics of the fluorescence induction kinetics of the two processes are not similar.At pH 7.6 the slow fluorescence decline was stimulated by several uncouplers demonstrated to greatly reduce proton pumping, and at pH 9.2 it was stimulated by all uncouplers tested. Acid-base transition was strongly inhibitory, and this inhibition was relieved by uncoupler. Thus the pH gradient seems to inhibit the process. The involvement of coupling factor is suggested by experiments in which phosphorylation substrates were inhibitory, and this inhibition was prevented by uncoupler. These data are explained in terms of coupling factor structural changes which in an unknown manner influence Photosystem II fluorescence emission.Fluorescence induction curves indicate that the slow quenching decreased only the variable fluorescence. The half rise time was decreased along with the sig-moidicity of the rise curve. These data can be accomodated in terms of a model recently proposed by Butler and Kitajima (Biochim. Biophys Acta (1975) 376, 116–125), involving the transfer of energy from the excited, but closed, reaction centres II to the light harvesting chlorophyll system. The slow fluorescence decline is suggested to represent a decrease of this process.  相似文献   

3.
J. Haveman  P. Mathis 《BBA》1976,440(2):346-355
A comparative study is made, at 15 °C, of flash-induced absorption changes around 820 nm (attributed to the primary donors of Photosystems I and II) and 705 nm (Photosystem I only), in normal chloroplasts and in chloroplasts where O2 evolution was inhibited by low pH or by Tris-treatment.At pH 7.5, with untreated chloroplasts, the absorption changes around 820 nm are shown to be due to P-700 alone. Any contribution of the primary donor of Photosystem II should be in times shorter than 60 μs.When chloroplasts are inhibited at the donor side of Photosystem II by low pH, an additional absorption change at 820 nm appears with an amplitude which, at pH 4.0, is slightly higher than the signal due to oxidized P-700. This additional signal is attributed to the primary donor of Photosystem II. It decays (t12 about 180 μs) mainly by back reaction with the primary acceptor and partly by reduction by another electron donor. Acid-washed chloroplasts resuspended at pH 7.5 still present the signal due to Photosystem II (t12 about 120 μs). This shows that the acid inhibition of the first secondary donor of Photosystem II is irreversible.In Tris-treated chloroplasts, absorption changes at 820 nm due to the primary donor of Photosystem II are also observed, but to a lesser extent and only after some charge accumulation at the donor side. They decay with a half-time of 120 μs.  相似文献   

4.
Inside-out thylakoid vesicles have been separated from right-side-out material after press disruption of chloroplast lamellae. The separation was obtained by partition in an aqueous dextran-polyethylene glycol two-phase system, a method which utilizes differences in surface properties for separation of membrane particles. The isolated thylakoid vesicles showed the following inside-out properties: (1) light-induced reversible proton extrusion into the surrounding medium when supplied with the Photosystem II electron acceptor phenyl-p-benzoquinone; (2) a pH rise in the internal phase accompanying the external proton release, (3) sensitivity to trypsin treatment different from that of thylakoid membranes of normal orientation; (4) concave EF and convex PF freeze-fracture faces.  相似文献   

5.
Raymond P. Cox 《BBA》1975,387(3):588-598

1. 1. Chloroplasts can be suspended in aqueous/organic mixtures which are liquid at sub-zero temperatures with a good retention of the ability to reduce artificial electron acceptors. The reduction of ferricyanide and 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol at temperatures above 0δC is about 50% inhibited by 50% (v/v) ethylene glycol. Higher concentrations cause more extensive inhibition.

2. 2. Different solvents were compared on the basis of their ability to cause a given depression of the freezing point of an aqueous solution. Ethylene glycol caused less inhibition of electron transport than glycerol, which in its turn was found to be superior to methanol.

3. 3. The reduction of oxidised 2,3,5,6-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine could be measured at −25δC in 40% (v/v) ethylene glycol. Using an acceptor with a high extinction coefficient, methyl purple (a derivative of 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol) it was possible to observe electron flow at temperatures as low as −40δC in 50% (v/v) ethylene glycol.

4. 4. From studies of the effects of the inhibitors 3(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea and 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone it is suggested that electron flow from the donor side of Photosystem II to the acceptor side of Photosystem I can occur at temperatures at least as low as −25δC. The ultimate electron donor is presumably water but it was not possible to demonstrate this directly.

Abbreviations: DCIP, 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol; DAD, 2,3,5,6-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine; DCMU, 3(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea; DBMIB, 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone; DMSO, dimethylsulphoxide  相似文献   


6.
J. Amesz  M.P.J. Pulles  B.R. Velthuys 《BBA》1973,325(3):472-482

1. 1. Spinach chloroplasts were stored in the dark for at least 1 h, rapidly cooled to −40 °C, and illuminated with continuous light or short saturating flashes. In agreement with the measurements of Joliot and Joliot, chloroplasts that had been preilluminated with one or two flashes just before cooling showed a less efficient increase in the yield of chlorophyll a fluorescence upon illumination at −40 °C than dark-adapted chloroplasts. The effect disappeared below −150 °C, but reappeared again upon warming to −40 °C. Little effect was seen at room temperature in the presence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU), added after the preillumination.

2. 2. Light-induced absorbance difference spectra at −40 °C in the region 500–560 nm indicated the participation of two components, the socalled 518-nm change (P518) and C-550. After preillumination with two flashes the absorbance change at 518 nm was smaller, and almost no C-550 was observed. After four flashes, the bands of C-550 were clearly visible again.

3. 3. The fluorescence increase and the absorbance change at 518 nm showed the same type of flash pattern with a minimum after the second and a maximum at the fourth flash. In the presence of 100 μM hydroxylamine, the fluorescence response was low after the fourth and high again after the sixth flash, which confirmed the hypothesis that the flash effect was related to the so-called S-state of the electron transport pathway from water to Photosystem 2.

4. 4. The kinetics of the light-induced absorbance changes were the same at each wavelength, and, apart from the size of the deflection, they were independent of preillumination. Flash experiments indicated that the absorbance changes were a one-quantum reaction. This was also true for the fluorescence increase in dark-adapted chloroplasts, but with preilluminated chloroplasts several flashes were needed to approximately saturate the fluorescence yield.

5. 5. The results are discussed in terms of a mechanism involving two electron donors and two electron acceptors for System 2 of photosynthesis.

Abbreviations: DCMU, 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethylurea  相似文献   


7.
8.
Delayed fluorescence, as measured with a laser phosphoroscope, is stimulated not inhibited by uncouplers during the first 100 μs after the light is turned off. This is true only wen uncouplers cause an increase in the rate of electron transport. When ADP and Pi cause an increase in the electron transport rate, microsecond-delayed fluorescence is also increased. Indeed, there is a complex quantitative relationship between the rate of electron transport and the initial intensity of delayed fluorescence under a wide range of conditions.

Uncouplers or ADP and Pi also increase the rate of decay of delayed fluorescence so that after about 150 μs they become inhibitory, as already reported by many authors.

Microsecond-delayed fluorescence continues to rise with rising light intensities long after the rate of reduction of exogenous acceptor is light-saturated.

These observations suggest a correlation of the rate of electron transport both with the intensity of the 5–100 μs-delayed fluorescence and with the rate of decay in the intensity of delayed fluorescence. The data imply that the decrease in intensity of millisecond-delayed fluorescence which has often been noted with uncouplers is probably not due to the elimination of a membrane potential. It seems more likely that the decrease in millisecond-delayed fluorescence is a reflection of the rate of disappearance of some other electron transport-generated condition, a condition which is uncoupler-insensitive. Certainly stimulations of microsecond-delayed fluorescence by electron transport which has been uncoupled by gramicidin suggest that ion gradients are not an essential component of the conditions responsible for delayed fluorescence.  相似文献   


9.
J.A. Van Best  P. Mathis 《BBA》1978,503(1):178-188
Absorption changes (ΔA) at 820 nm, following laser flash excitation of spinach chloroplasts and Chlorella cells, were studied in order to obtain information on the reduction time of the photooxidized primary donor of Photosystem II at physiological temperatures.In the microsecond time range the difference spectrum of ΔA between 750 and 900 nm represents a peak at 820 nm, attributable to a radical-cation of chlorophyll a. In untreated dark-adapted material the signal can be attributed solely to P+?700; it decays in a polyphasic manner with half-times of 17 μs, 210 μs and over 1 ms. The oxidized primary donor of Photosystem II (P+II) is not detected with a time resolution of 3 μs. After treatment with 3–10 mM hydroxylamine, which inhibits the donor side of Photosystem II, P+II is observed and decays biphasically (a major phase with t12 = 20–40 μs, and a minor phase with t12 ? 200 μs), probably by reduction by an accessory electron donor.In the nanosecond range, which was made accessible by a new fast-response flash photometer operating at 820 nm, it was found the P+II is reduced with a half-time of 25–45 ns in untreated dark-adapted chloroplasts. It is assumed that the normal secondary electron donor is responsible for this fast reduction.  相似文献   

10.
The cyanobacterium Chlorogloea fritschii loses Photosystem II activity, measured by delayed fluorescence and oxygen evolution, during dark heterotrophic growth, but retains Photosystem I, measured as light induced EPR signals. Following transition to the light, Photosystem II recovers in two stages, the first of which does not require protein synthesis. New Photosystem I reaction centres are not synthesised until after net chlorophyll synthesis has commenced. Carbon dioxide fixation recovery commences immediately, the initial rate being unaffected by chloramphenicol. The recovery of carbon dioxide fixation is not directly related to oxygen evolution rate and is only inhibited slightly by 3-(3,4-dichlorophyenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea and 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone.  相似文献   

11.
G. Girault  J.M. Galmiche 《BBA》1974,333(2):314-319
The restoration by silicotungstic acid of the reversible light-induced pH rise mediated by pyocyanine in EDTA-treated chloroplasts corresponds to an irreversible fixation of the acid. The proton uptake is linearly related to the amount of fixed acid (4 protons per molecule of acid) as long as the amount of silicotungstic acid does not exceed 200 nmoles/mg of chlorophyll.In the same conditions silicotungstic acid partly restores ferricyanide reduction and O2 evolution in chloroplasts suspensions supplemented with DCMU. These photoreactions are observed only with chloroplasts and these chloroplasts must have an unimpaired water-splitting mechanism.Silicotungstic acid does not impair DCMU fixation on the specific sites. More likely in its presence the properties of the membrane change and ferricyanide can accept electrons from a part of the electron transport chain, between the Photosystem II reaction center and the block of the electron flow by DCMU.  相似文献   

12.
13.
S.C. Huber  G.E. Edwards   《BBA》1976,449(3):420-433
1. Cyclic photophosphorylation driven by white light, as followed by 14CO2 fixation by mesophyll chloroplast preparations of the C4 plant Digitaria sanguinalis, was specifically inhibited by disalicylidenepropanediamine (DSPD), antimycin A, 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone (DBMIb), 1-ethyl-3(3-dimethylaminopropyl)-carbodiimide (EDAC), and KCN suggesting that ferredoxin, cytochrome b563, plastoquinone, cytochrome f, and plastocyanin are obligatory intermediates of cyclic electron flow. It was found that 0.2 μM DCMU and 40 μM o-phenanthroline blocked noncyclic electron flow, stimulated cyclic photophosphorylation, and caused a partial reversal (40–100%) of the inhibition by DBMIB and antimycin A, but not DSPD.

2. Cyclic photophosphorylation could also be activated using only far-red illumination. Under this condition, however, cyclic photophosphorylation was much less sensitive to the inhibitors DBMIB, EDAC and antimycin A, but remained completely sensitive to DSPD and KCN. Inhibition in far-red light was not increased by preincubating the chloroplasts with the various inhibitors for several minutes in white light.

3. The striking correspondence between the effects of photosystem II inhibitors, DCMU and o-phenanthroline, on cyclic photophosphorylation under white light and cyclic photophosphorylation under far-red light (in the absence of photosystem II inhibitors) suggests that electrons flowing from photosystem II may regulate the pathway of cyclic electron flow.  相似文献   


14.
Steven P. Berg  S. Izawa 《BBA》1977,460(2):206-219
Three sites of silicomolybdate reduction in the electron transport chain of isolated tobacco chloroplasts are described. The relative participation of these sites is greatly influenced by the particular reaction conditions. One site (the only site when the reaction medium contains high concentrations of bovine serum albumin (> 5 mg/ml)) is associated with Photosystem I, since it supports phosphorylation with a P/e2 value close to 1 and the reaction is totally sensitive to both plastocyanin inhibitors and 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea. Two other sites of silicomolybdate reduction are associated with Photosystem II. One site is 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea insensitive and supports phosphorylation when the reaction mixture contains dimethyl sulfoxide and glycerol (protective agents). The P/e2 value routinely observed is about 0.2. Bovine serum albumin (1–2 mg/ml) can also act as a protective agent, but the efficiency of Photosystem II phosphorylation observed is lower. Silicomolybdate reduction supports virtually no phosphorylation, regardless of the reduction pathway, when the reaction mixture contains no protective agents. This is due to irreversible uncoupling by silicomolybdate itself. The silicomolybdate uncoupling is potentiated by high salt concentrations even in the presence of protective agents. Exposure of chloroplasts to silicomolybdate in the absence of protective agents rapidly inactivates both photosystems.  相似文献   

15.
S.G. Reeves  D.O. Hall 《BBA》1973,314(1):66-78
1. The stoichiometry of non-cyclic photophosphorylation and electron transport in isolated chloroplasts has been re-investigated. Variations in the isolation and assay techniques were studied in detail in order to obtain optimum conditions necessary for reproducibly higher ADP/O (equivalent to ATP/2e?) and photosynthetic control ratios.2. Studies which we carried out on the possible contribution of cyclic phosphorylation to non-cyclic phosphorylation suggested that not more than 10% of the total phosphorylation found could be due to cyclic phosphorylation.3. Photosynthetic control, and the uncoupling of electron transport in the presence of NH4Cl, were demonstrated using oxidised diaminodurene as the electron acceptor. A halving of the ADP/O ratio was found, suggesting that electrons were being accepted between two sites of energy conservation, one of which is associated with Photosystem I and the other associated with Photosystem II.4. ATP was shown to inhibit State 2 and State 3 of electron transport, but not State 4 electron transport or the overall ADP/O ratio, thus confirming its activity as an energy transfer inhibitor. It is suggested that part of the non-phosphorylating electron transport rate (State 2) which is not inhibited by ATP is incapable of being coupled to subsequent phosphorylation triggered by the addition of ADP (State 3). If the ATP-insensitive State 2 electron transport is deducted from the State 3 electron transport when calculating the ADP/O ratio, a value of 2.0 is obtained.5. The experiments reported demonstrate that there are two sites of energy conservation in the non-cyclic electron transfer pathway: one associated with Photosystem II and the other with Photosystem I. Thus, non-cyclic photophosphorylation can probably produce sufficient ATP and NADPH “in vivo” to allow CO2 fixation to proceed.  相似文献   

16.
The kinetics of fluorescence yield inChlorella pyrenoidosa and spinach chloroplasts were studied in the time range of 0.5 μs to several hundreds of microseconds in the presence of hydroxylamine. Fluorescence was excited with a just-saturating xenon flash with a halfwidth of 13 μs (λ = 420 nm). The fast rise of the fluorescence yield which was limited by the rate of light influx, was, in the presence of 10−3–10−2 M hydroxylamine, replaced by a slow component which had a half risetime of 25 μs in essence independent of light intensity. This slow fluorescence yield increase reflects a dark reaction on the watersplitting side of Photosystem II. Simultaneous oxygen evolution measurements suggested that a fast fluorescence component is only present in organisms with intact O2-evolving system, whereas a slow rise predominantly occurs in organisms with the watersplitting system irreversibly inhibited by hydroxylamine.

The results can be explained by the following hypotheses: (a) The primary donor of Photosystem II in its oxidized state, P+, is a fluorescence quencher. (b) Hydroxylamine prevents the secondary electron donor Z from reducing the oxidized reaction center pigment P+ rapidly. This inhibition is dependent on hydroxylamine concentration and is complete at a concentration of 10−2 M. (c) A second donor (not transporting electrons from water) transfers electrons to P+ with a half time of roughly 25 μs.  相似文献   


17.
Conditions for the optimization of silicomolybdate reduction by isolated pea chloroplasts are described. Maximum rates of reduction are related to time of addition to the chloroplasts and the presence of an oxidizing cofactor, such as ferricyanide. Silicomolybdate or silicomolybdate plus ferricyanide reduction is only partially inhibited by a concentration of CMU which totally abolishes ferricyanide reduction. Evidence for a differing response of the two reduction sites to silicomolbydate is described.  相似文献   

18.
Patrick M. Kelley  S. Izawa 《BBA》1978,502(2):198-210
1. Chloroplasts washed with Cl?-free, low-salt media (pH 8) containing EDTA, show virtually no DCMU-insensitive silicomolybdate reduction. The activity is readily restored when 10 mM Cl? is added to the reaction mixture. Very similar results were obtained with the other Photosystem II electron acceptor 2,5-dimethylquinone (with dibromothymoquinone), with the Photosystem I electron acceptor FMN, and also with ferricyanide which accepts electrons from both photosystems.2. Strong Cl?-dependence of Hill activity was observed invariably at all pH values tested (5.5–8.3) and in chloroplasts from three different plants: spinach, tobacco and corn (mesophyll).3. In the absence of added Cl? the functionally Cl?-depleted chloroplasts are able to oxidize, through Photosystem II, artificial reductants such as catechol, diphenylcarbazide, ascorbate and H2O2 at rates which are 4–12 times faster than the rate of the residual Hill reaction.4. The Cl?-concentration dependence of Hill activity with dimethylquinone as an electron acceptor is kinetically consistent with the typical enzyme activation mechanism: E(inactive) + Cl?ag E · Cl? (active), and the apparent activation constant (0.9 mM at pH 7.2) is unchanged by chloroplast fragmentation.5. The initial phase of the development of inhibition of water oxidation in Cl?-depleted chloroplasts during the dark incubation with NH2OH (12 H2SO4) is 5 times slower when the incubation medium contains Cl? than when the medium contains NH2OH alone or NH2OH plus acetate ion. (Acetate is shown to be ineffective in stimulating O2 evolution.)6. We conclude that the Cl?-requiring step is one which is specifically associated with the water-splitting reaction, and suggests that Cl? probably acts as a cofactor (ligand) of the NH2OH-sensitive, Mn-containing O2-evolving enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
20.
G. Renger  Ch. Wolff 《BBA》1976,423(3):610-614
In Tris-washed chloroplasts the kinetics of the primary electron acceptor X 320 of reaction center II has been investigated by fast repetitive flash spectroscopy with a time resolution of ≈ 1 μs. It has been found that X 320 is reduced by a flash in ? 1 μs. The subsequent reoxidation in the dark occurs mainly by a reaction with a 100–200 μs kinetics. The light-induced difference spectrum confirms X 320 to be the reactive species. From these results it is concluded that in Tris-washed chloroplasts the reaction centers of System II are characterized by a high photochemical turnover rate mediated either via rapid direct charge recombination or via fast cyclic electron flow.  相似文献   

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