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1.
2.
《BBA》1986,851(2):322-326
We have used trivalent lanthanide metal cations in the buffering media of pea chloroplasts to probe the stacking arrangement of thylakoid membranes and the spatial distribution of chlorophyll-protein complexes of Photosystems I and II. Measurements of steady-state chlorophyll fluorescence emission spectra of pea chloroplasts at room temperature demonstrate that, within this tripositive valency group, the extent of membrane appression is a function of hydrated metal ionic radius. These results are in agreement with a recent investigation using monovalent and divalent metal cations (Karukstis, K.K. and Sauer, K. (1985) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 806, 374–389). In addition, the lanthanide cation concentration effective in producing the maximum chlorophyll fluorescence intensity upon grana formation is dependent on hydrated ionic size. The current investigation supports the proposed hypothesis that cation screening ability defines the extent of intermembrane separation as well as the extent of lateral distribution of chlorophyll-protein complexes.  相似文献   

3.
We have compared the effects of thylakoid membrane appression by electrostatic screening and by charge neutralization on the room-temperature chlorophyll fluorescence decay kinetics of broken spinach chloroplasts. Monovalent and divalent metal cations induce both a structural differentiation of thylakoid membranes and a lateral segregation of pigment-protein complexes. These phenomena have distinct effects on the F0- and Fmax-level chlorophyll fluorescence decay kinetics at different levels of added cation. We further find specific cation effects, particularly on a 1-2 ns decay component at the Fmax fluorescence level, that are proposed to be related to the effectiveness of electrostatic screening as determined by the hydrated metal ionic radius. Distinct pH-induced effects on chlorophyll fluorescence decay kinetics are associated with the alternative mechanism of electrostatic neutralization to induce membrane stacking. These observations are used to construct a model of chlorophyll fluorescence emission that accounts for the variable kinetics and multiexponential character of the fluorescence decay upon membrane appression.  相似文献   

4.
Wim F.J. Vermaas  Charles J. Arntzen   《BBA》1983,725(3):483-491
We have analyzed the binding of synthetic quinones and herbicides which inhibit electron transport at the acceptor side of Photosystem II (PS II) of the photosynthetic electron-transport chain in thylakoid membranes. These data show that quinones and PS II-directed herbicides compete for binding to a common binding environment within a PS II region which functions as the Q / PQ oxidoreductase. We observed that (1) synthetic quinones cause a parallel inhibition of electron transport and [14C]herbicide displacement, and (2) herbicide binding is affected both by the fully oxidized and fully reduced form of a quinone. Quinone function and inhibitor binding were also investigated in thylakoids isolated from triazine-resistant weed biotypes. We conclude the following. (1) The affinity of the secondary accepting quinone, B, is decreased in resistant thylakoids. (2) The observation that the equilibrium concentration of reduced Q after transferring one electron to the acceptor side of PS II is increased in resistant as compared to susceptible chloroplasts may be explained both by a decrease in the affinity of PQ for the herbicide / quinone binding environment, and by a decrease of the midpont redox potential of the B / B couple. (3) The binding environment regulating quinone and herbicide affinity may be divided roughly into two domains; we suggest that the domain regulating quinone head-group binding is little changed in resistant membranes, whereas the domain-regulating quinone side-group binding (and atrazine) is altered. This results in increased inhibitory activity of tetrachloro-p-benzoquinone and phenolic herbicides, which are hypothesized to utilize the quinone head-group domain. The two domains appear to be spatially overlapping because efficient atrazine displacement by tetrachloro-p-benzoquinone is observed.  相似文献   

5.
Aging of cell-free chloroplasts at pH 7.0 and 9.0 causes a decline in the level of photosynthetic pigments, quenching of chlorophyll a fluorescence and enhancement in fluorescence polarization. These changes are correlated with photoinduced enhancement of thylakoid lipid peroxidation. The alkaline earth metal cations, namely magnesium and calcium, show opposite actions on lipid peroxidation and modulate thylakoid disorganisation differently. Magnesium ion may stabilise thylakoid membrane by retarding lipid peroxidation. It lowers aging-induced quenching of fluorescence intensity and enhancement of fluorescence polarization. Calcium ion, on the other hand, stimulates disorganisation of thylakoid membranes. It enhances membrane lipid peroxidation, quenching of chlorophyll a fluorescence intensity and fluorescence polarization.  相似文献   

6.
It has been shown that fluorescence yield of chloroplasts at wavelength near 684 nm can be regulated by Mg+2. But on the other hand trypsin abolishes this Mg+2-induced fluorescence change. Pretreatment of chloroplasts with Mg+2 protects the Mg+2 induced chlorophyll a fluorescence change from trypsin. It is found that the protective effect of Mg+2 pretreatment of chloroplasts against trypsin is concentration dependent (at the range btween 1.5-12 mM Mg+2). At a 12 mM MgCl2 concentration it appears that trypsin has no effect on Mg+2-induced fluorescence change. Similar results were obtained with the determination of chlorophyll contents in the chloroplasts. Plants grown at different temperature produce chloroplasts which show similar characteristics. But lower fluorescence and chlorophyll change are found in the Low temperature grown plants. The above results support the evidence that pretreating the chloroplasts with Mg+2 causes a conformafional change in LHCPs and protecting the functional group that acts as regulator to the fluorescence change against trypsin. It is also proposed that pretreatment of chloroplasts with Mg+2 also protects the connection of chlorophyll molecule with protein against trypsin in thylakoid membrane.  相似文献   

7.
The amphipathic fluorescence probe, 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulphonate has been used to investigate the surface electrical properties of chloroplast thylakoid membranes. The fluorescence yield of 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulphonate in aqueous solution increases on addition of hypotonically shocked chloroplast, and the emission maximum shifts towards the blue to 440 nm, although the emission spectrum is somewhat distorted by chloroplast pigment absorption. The intensity of 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulphonate fluorescence is further increased on adding salts to the membrane suspension, and changes of greater than 100% are routinely observed. Similar observations have also been made with soya bean phospholipid (azolectin) liposomes. The magnitude of the fluorescence increase is dependent on membrane concentration, being more pronounced at high surface area/suspending volume ratios. The effect of salt addition appears to be that of shielding the fixed negative charges on the membrane surface, thus increasing the fraction of 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulphonate molecules at the surface, where the 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulphonate has a higher fluorescence yield than in free aqueous solution. This concept is supported by the fact that the effectiveness of salts in increasing 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulphonate fluorescence is as predicted by classical electrical double layer theory: governed mainly by the charge carried by the cation with an order of effectiveness C3+ greater than C2+ greater than C+, and not by the chemical nature of the cation or by the nature of its co-ion. It has been argued that the chlorophyll fluorescence yield, controlled by the cation composition of the suspending medium follows the total diffusible positive charge density at the thylakoid membrane surface (Barber, J., Mills, J. and Love, A. (1977) Febs. Lett. 74, 174--181). Although the cation induced 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulphonate and chlorophyll fluorescence yield changes show similar characteristics, there are also distinct differences between the two phenomena particularly when cations are added to chloroplasts initially suspended in a virtually cation-free medium. Therefore it is concluded that although both 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulphonate and chlorophyll fluorescence yields are governed by the electrical properties of the thylakoid membrane surface, the mechanism controlling their cation sensitivity is not the same.  相似文献   

8.
The light dependent energization of the thylakoid membrane was analyzed in isolated intact spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) chloroplasts incubated with different concentrations of inorganic phosphate (Pi). Two independent methods were used: (a) the accumulation of [14C]5,5-dimethyl-2,4-oxazolidinedione and [14C] methylamine; (b) the energy dependent chlorophyll fluorescence quenching. The inhibition of CO2 fixation by superoptimal medium Pi or by adding glyceraldehyde—an inhibitor of the Calvin cycle—leads to an increased energization of the thylakoid membrane; however, the membrane energization decreases when chloroplasts are inhibited by suboptimal Pi. This specific `low phosphate' effect could be partially reversed by adding oxaloacetate, which regenerates the electron acceptor NADP+ and stimulates linear electron transport. The energization seen in low Pi is, however, always lower than in superoptimal Pi, even in the presence of oxaloacetate. Energization recovers in the presence of low amounts of N,N′-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide, which reacts with proton channels including the coupling factor 1 ATP synthase. N,N′-Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide has no effect on energization of chloroplasts in superoptimal Pi. These results suggest there is a specific `low phosphate' proton leak in the thylakoids, and its origin is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
G. H. Krause 《Planta》1978,138(1):73-78
Uncoupling concentrations (about 1 mol l-1) of desaspidin or carbonyl cyanide-4-trifluoromethoxyphenyl hydrazone reverse the slow light-induced, Mg2+-dependent quenching of fluorescence of chlorophyll a in isolated (intact and broken) spinach chloroplasts. Likewise, uncoupling inhibits the light-induced increase of the Mg2+ concentration in the stroma of intact chloroplasts, as determined with Eriochrome Blue SE. Addition of higher amounts of the uncouplers to the chloroplasts leads to a slow, light-dependent fluorescence lowering which appears to be promoted by high light intensities and is not reversed in the dark. The reversal of the fluorescence quenching by uncoupling is interpreted to reflect exchange of protons for Mg2+ ions at negative sites of the inner thylakoid face, caused by the collapse of the proton gradient across the membrane. The secondary fluorescence lowering caused by high levels of the uncouplers and high light intensities is suggested to be related to an inhibition of non-cyclic photosynthetic electron transport.Abbreviation FCCP carbonyl cyanide-4-trifluoromethoxyphenyl hydrazone  相似文献   

10.
Leucyl-tRNA synthetase from Escherichia coli is rapidly inactivated by 6-amino-7-chloro-5,8-dioxoquinoline (quinone), a model substance for cytostatic quinones. Loss of activity follows pseudo-first order kinetics. The quinone masks essential--SH groups that are reactive with N-ethylmaleimide. Specific protection of the enzyme by leucine provides evidence for active site-directed modification. Half-maximal protection is found at a concentration of 150 micron which is identical with the dissociation constant of the enzyme.substrate complex. The competitive inhibitor leucinol also protects the enzyme from inactivation by the quinone. MgATP enhances the protective effect of leucinol about 250-fold, thus substantiating recently published findings on synergistic coupling of ligands to aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases. The results support the assumption that the bacteriostatic quinone directly interferes with leucyl-tRNA synthetase in growing cells. Active-site-directed inhibition of the enzyme could adequately explain the phenotypically observed auxotrophy for leucine of quinone-treated E. coli.  相似文献   

11.
We studied the effects of a variety of cations on chlorophyll fluorescence yield of broken chloroplasts prepared under carefully controlled ionic conditions. In the absence of light-induced electron transport and associated proton pumping, two types of cation-induced chlorophyll fluorescence changes could be distinguished in broken chloroplasts. These are termed "reversible" and "irreversible" fluorescence yield changes. Reversible fluorescence yield changes are characterized by antagonistic effects of monovalent and divalent cations and are prevented by the presence of 5 mM Mg2+ in the suspending media. Reversible-type fluorescence yield changes show little or no dependence on the structure, lipid solubility, or coordination number of the cation, but depend strictly on the net positive charge carried by the ion. It is proposed that these fluorescence changes are brought about through the interaction of monovalent or divalent cations with an electrical double layer at the interface of the outer surface of the thylakoid membrane and the surrounding aqueous solution. The results are interpreted in terms of the Gouy-Chapman theory of the diffuse double layer, indicating that the thylakoid outer surface bears an excess fixed negative charge density of about 2.5 muC/cm2, or approximately 1 negative charge per 640 A2 of membrane surface. Chlorophyll fluorescence quenching in isolated broken chloroplasts suspended in media containing 5 mM MgCl2 is also observed on addition of certain polyvalent cations to the medium. This type of cation-induced fluorescence change appears to be largely irreversible and may occur through specific binding of the cation to the thylakoid as a result of the high electrostatic attraction exerted by the negatively charged membrane surface.  相似文献   

12.
Polycation binding to the negatively charged surface of chloroplast thylakoid membranes is known to cause an inhibition of photosystem I activity. It also interferes with the cation-dependent rearrangement of chlorophyll proteins in the thylakoid membrane. It was shown that added anions prevented or reversed the inhibition of photosystem I by polylysine without decreasing its binding to the membranes. Anions also caused a change in the interaction of the chlorophyll proteins in polylysine-treated thylakoids as indicated by an increase in the relative fluorescence intensity from photosystem II. In both cases, the relative effectiveness of the anions tested depended on their valence; for example, the tetravalent species Fe(CN)64t- was effective at a concentration at least 2 orders of magnitude lower than the divalent species SO42?. These results suggest that anions act by screening the positive charge of the polylysine-coated membrane surface. Measurements of the response of the anionic fluorescent probe 1-anilinonapthalene-8-sulfonate to an addition of anions to polylysine-treated thylakoids supported this contention. It was concluded that the action of polylysine on photosystem I and on the chlorophyll proteins is mediated by changes of the electrical properties of the thylakoid membrane and may not involve a direct binding of the polycation to the affected membrane proteins.  相似文献   

13.
The potassium salt-induced transient increase of delayed fluorescence yield was studied in pea chloroplasts treated with 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea.A simple kinetic model is proposed to account for the actinic light intensity dependence of the delayed fluorescence enhancement by the transmembrane diffusion potential induced by sudden salt addition. The electric field dependence of the rate constants for the recombination of primary separated charges with and without subsequent electronic excitation of reaction center chlorophyll was obtained.From the value of enhancement of delayed fluorescence by salt concentration gradients at saturating actinic light intensity, it is concluded that the distance, normal to thylakoid membrane surface, between the primary acceptor and the donor of Photosystem II is smaller than the membrane thickness.  相似文献   

14.
A good correlation exists between the extent of thylakoid aggregation (grana reconstitution) and the increase in the chlorophyll a fluorescence yield (FDCMU; DCMU = 3-(3′,4′-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethyl urea) caused by the addition of monovalent or divalent cations to low-salt disorganized (agranal) chloroplasts. The extent of grana stacking was monitored by the yield of heavy subchloroplast fractions after digitonin disruption of chloroplasts. A good correlation of the cation effect on both parameters was also found in light subchloroplast fractions (10,000g supernatants) obtained from sonicated “low-salt” Tricine-suspended pea chloroplasts. Addition of cations to the agranal protochloroplasts of etiolated pea or bean leaves exposed to periodic light-dark cycles, suspended in low-salt Tricine buffer, does not affect formation of heavy subchloroplast fractions, nor does it affect their chlorophyll a fluorescence yield level (FDCMU). The cation effect on the increase of the chlorophyll a fluorescence yield level seems to be due to the cation-induced thylakoid structural changes leading to grana stacking.  相似文献   

15.
Glycerate 3-phosphate-dependent O2 evolution was measured in intact chloroplasts in the absence of CO2. At all concentrations of added glycerate 3-phosphate oxygen evolution ceased before stoichiometric amounts of oxygen were evolved. The inhibition of glycerate 3-phosphate-dependent-O2 evolution increased with increasing concentrations of substrate added. A similar response was observed in chloroplasts treated with KCN which inhibits ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase. Oxygen uptake via the oxygenase activity of this enzyme is therefore not the cause of the discrepancy in stoichiometry of oxygen release in this system. The addition of NaHCO3 to chloroplasts in which oxygen evolution was inhibited by glycerate 3-phosphate caused an immediate sustained rate of oxygen evolution in the absence of KCN but not with KCN present. Simultaneous measurements of chlorophyll a fluorescence showed that qQ remained oxidized, although net O2 evolution had ceased. As O2 evolution decreased, qE and delta pH increased. Upon the addition of the NaHCO3, QA became more oxidized while delta pH and qE were decreased, suggesting that the inhibition of electron transport at high glycerate 3-phosphate concentrations was mediated by photosynthetic control via delta pH. However, the levels of ATP, ADP, ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate, and Pi concentrations and ATP/ADP ratio. The stromal glycerate 3-phosphate content declined upon illumination until O2 evolution ceased. At this time a constant stromal glycerate 3-phosphate concentration of 8-10 mM was maintained while net import of glycerate 3-phosphate into the stroma had virtually ceased. The stromal triosephosphate content remained at a constant low level throughout but the glycerate 3-phosphate level increased slightly after addition of NaHCO3. The data provided by the measurements of thylakoid reactions and stromal metabolites suggest that photosynthetic electron transport is tightly coupled to the requirements of the stroma for ATP and NADPH. Glycerate 3-phosphate reduction requires much less ATP than the operation of the complete Benson-Calvin cycle since the stoichiometry of ATP and NADPH utilization is reduced to 1:1. We conclude that thylakoid electron flow is not sufficiently flexible to maintain NADPH and ATP production in the ratio of 1:1. This situation will favor overenergization of the thylakoid membrane, increased leakiness of protons, increased electron drainage to O2, and result in progressive inhibition of noncyclic electron flow.  相似文献   

16.
C Xu  J Auger 《Cytometry》1990,11(3):349-358
Flow cytometry data of spinach thylakoid membrane preparations indicate the presence of a homogeneous thylakoid population. Fluorescence data from a flow cytometer and comparison with data from two other fluorometers show that chlorophyll a fluorescence detected with a flow cytometer has the character of maximum fluorescence (Fmax), not of the constant component (Fo). This conclusion is important since Fo measures fluorescence that is affected mostly by changes in excitation energy transfer and Fmax-Fo (the variable fluorescence) by changes in photochemistry. This was demonstrated by: 1) The light intensity as well as diffusion rate dependence of the quenching effect of various quinones (p-benzoquinone, phenyl-benzoquinone, and 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone, DBMIB) on fluorescence yield; quenching for the same concentration of these quinones was lower at the higher than at the lower light intensities. 2) Temperature dependence of the fluorescence yield; increasing the temperature from 20 to 70 degrees C did not show an increase in fluorescence yield using a flow cytometer in contrast to measurements with weak excitation light, but similar to those obtained for Fmax. 3) Addition of an inhibitor diuron up to 100 microM did not change the fluorescence intensity. A comparison of quenching of fluorescence by various quinones obtained by flow cytometry with those by other fluorometers suggests that the high intensity used in the cytometry produces unique results: the rate of reduction of quinones in much larger than the rate of equilibration with the bulk quinones.  相似文献   

17.
The ATP-induced quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence in chloroplasts of higher plants is shown to be inhibited when the mobility of the protein complexes into the thylakoid membranes is reduced. Its occurrence also requires the presence of LHC complexes and the ability of the membranes to unstack. These observations, in addition to a slight increase of charge density of the surface—as indicated by 9-aminoacridine fluorescence and high salt-induced chlorophyll fluorescence studies—and partial unstacking of the membranes—as monitored by digitonin method and 540 nm light scattering changes—after phosphorylation, suggest that the ATP-induced quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence could reflect some lateral redistribution of membrane proteins in the lipid matrix of the thylakoids.  相似文献   

18.
Peter Horton  Michael T. Black 《BBA》1983,722(1):214-218
Fluorescence induction curves in chloroplasts phosphorylated by the thylakoid protein kinase activated at low light intensity and high chlorophyll concentration have been measured. At 5 mM Mg2+, phosphorylation did not preferentially quench variable fluorescence. At 1 mM, preferential quenching of variable fluorescence was observed, indicating a second effect of phosphorylation at low Mg2+ (Horton, P. and Black, M.T. (1982) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 680, 22–27). Comparison of the extent of fluorescence decrease and the resulting ratio of variable to maximum fluorescence after phosphorylation and after lowering Mg2+ concentration demonstrated a difference between these two mechanisms of lowering of fluorescence. The significance of these results in terms of how phosphorylation may alter membrane organization is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
The time-resolved chlorophyll fluorescence emission of higher plant chloroplasts monitors the primary processes of photosynthesis and reflects photosynthetic membrane organization. In the present study we compare measurements of the chlorophyll fluorescence decay kinetics of the chlorophyll-b-less chlorina-f2 barley mutant and wild-type barley to investigate the effect of alterations in thylakoid membrane composition on chlorophyll fluorescence. Our analysis characterizes the fluorescence decay of chlorina-f2 barley chloroplasts by three exponential components with lifetimes of approx. 100 ps, 400 ps and 2 ns. The majority of the chlorophyll fluorescence originates in the two faster decay components. Although photo-induced and cation-induced effects on fluorescence yields are evident, the fluorescence lifetimes are independent of the state of the Photosystem-II reaction centers and the degree of grana stacking. Wild-type barley chloroplasts also exhibit three kinetic fluorescence components, but they are distinguished from those of the chlorina-f2 chloroplasts by a slow decay component which displays cation- and photo-induced yield and lifetime changes. A comparison is presented of the kinetic analysis of the chlorina-f2 barley fluorescence to the decay kinetics previously measured for intermittent-light-grown peas (Karukstis, K. and Sauer, K. (1983) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 725, 384–393). We propose that similarities in the fluorescence decay kinetics of both species are a consequence of analogous rearrangements of the thylakoid membrane organization due to the deficiencies present in the light-harvesting chlorophyll ab complex.  相似文献   

20.
Quinones may induce toxicity by a number of mechanisms, including alkylation and oxidative stress following redox cycling. The metabolism of quinones by isolated rat hepatocytes is associated with cytoskeletal alterations, plasma membrane blebbing, and subsequent cytotoxicity. The different mechanisms underlying the effects of alkylating (p-benzoquinone), redox cycling (2,3-dimethoxy-1,4-naphthoquinone), and mixed redox cycling/alkylating (2-methyl-1,4-naphthoquinone) quinones on hepatocyte cytoskeleton have been investigated in detail in this study. Analysis of the cytoskeletal fraction extracted from quinone-treated cells revealed a concentration-dependent increase in the amount of cytoskeletal protein and a concomitant loss of protein thiols, irrespective of the quinone employed. In the case of redox cycling quinones, these alterations were associated with an oxidation-dependent actin crosslinking (sensitive to the thiol reductant dithiothreitol). In contrast, with alkylating quinones an oxidation-independent cytoskeletal protein crosslinking (insensitive to thiol reductants) was observed. In addition to these changes, a dose-dependent increase in the relative abundance of F-actin was detected as a consequence of the metabolism of oxidizing quinones in hepatocytes. Addition of dithiothreitol solubilized a considerable amount of polypeptides from the cytoskeletal fraction isolated from hepatocytes exposed to redox cycling but not alkylating quinones. Our findings indicate that the hepatocyte cytoskeleton is an important target for the toxic effects of different quinones. However, the mechanisms underlying cytoskeletal damage differ depending on whether the quinone acts primarily by oxidative stress or alkylation.  相似文献   

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