首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Inhibition of Chloroplasts by UV-Irradiation and Heat-Treatment   总被引:24,自引:16,他引:8  
The site of inhibition in UV-irradiated and heat-treated chloroplasts was examined by using artificial electron donor compounds such as p-phenylenediamine and hydroquinone which donated electrons specifically to photosystem II. In both cases the electron donors restored the photoreduction of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate and the restored activity was inhibited by 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethyl urea. The fluorescence of variable yield was eliminated by both inhibitory treatments and was partially restored by the electron donors in the heat-treated but not the UV-irradiated chloroplasts. The results suggest that the sites of inhibition of UV-radiation and heat treatment are in the photosynthetic electron transport chain between water and photosystem II.  相似文献   

2.
The reversible inhibition of Photosystem II by salicylaldoxime was studied in spinach D-10 particles by fluorescence, optical absorption, and electron spin resonance spectroscopy. In the presence of 15 mM salicylaldoxime, the initial fluorescence yield was raised to the level of the maximum fluorescence, indicating efficient charge recombination between reduced pheophytin (Ph) and P680+. In agreement with the rapid (ns) backreaction expected between Ph and P680+, the optical absorption transient at 820 mm was not observed. When the particles were washed free of salicylaldoxime, the optical absorption transient resulting from the rereduction of P680+ was restored to the µs timescale. These results, along with the previously observed inhibition of electron transport reactions and diminution of the 515-nm absorption change in chloroplasts [Golbeck, J.H. (1980) Arch Biochem Biophys 202, 458–466], are consistent with a site of inhibition between Ph and QA in Photosystem II. ESR Signal IIf and Signal Its were abolished in the presence of 25 mM salicylaldoxime, but both signals could be recovered by washing the D-10 particles free of the inhibitor. The loss of Signal Ilf is most likely a consequence of the inhibition between Ph and QA; the rapid charge recombination between Ph and P680+ would preclude electron transfer from an electron donor on the oxidizing side of Photosystem II. The loss of Signal Its may be due to a change in the environment of the donor complex such that the semiquinone radical giving rise to Signal Its interacts with a nearby reductant.Abbreviations D1 electron donor to P680+ in oxygen-inhibited chloroplasts - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - F0 prompt chlorophyll a fluorescence yield - Fi initial chlorophyll a fluorescence yield - Fmax maximum chlorophyll a fluorescence yield - Fvar variable chlorophyll a fluorescence yield - FWHM full width at half maximum - Mes 2-(N-morpholino) ethanesulfonic acid - P680 reaction center chlorophyll a of photosystem II - Ph pheophytin intermediate electron acceptor - QA primary quinone electron acceptor - QB secondary quinone electron acceptor - Tris tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane - Z electron donor to P680+  相似文献   

3.
Shoots of cold-acclimated seedlings of Pinus sylvestris L. were exposed to a temperature of –7°C for 4 h, in darkness or at a photon flux density of 1 300 μmol m-2s-1. Before and after freezing, fluorescence kinetics of intact needles and isolated chloroplast membranes were measured at both room temperature and 77 K. Maximum and variable fluorescence yield of photosystem II both at room temperature and 77 K decreased strongly after freezing in light, whereas the initial fluorescence yield was little affected. Quenching of maximum and variable fluorescence of photosystem I at 77 K also occurred. The results show that freezing in light damages photosystem II, thereby increasing the radiationless decay at the reaction centres of photosystem II. This is a typical symptom of photoinhibition of photosynthesis. Freezing in darkness did not significantly reduce fluorescence yield of photosystem II or photosystem I. Moreover, electron transport capacity was not significantly affected. We therefore suggest that the inhibition of the CO2 assimilation in pine seedlings by freezing alone does not involve thylakoid inactivation.  相似文献   

4.
Disulfiram (tetraethylthiuram disulfide), a metal chelator, inhibits photosynthetic electron transport in broken chloroplasts. A major site of inhibition is detected on the electron-acceptor side of photosystem II between QA, the first plastoquinone electron-acceptor, and the second plastoquinone electron-acceptor, QB. This site of inhibition is shown by a severalfold increase in the half-time of QA oxidation, as monitored by the decay of the variable chlorophyll a flourescence after an actinic flash. Another site of inhibition is detected in the functioning of the reaction center of photosystem II; disulfiram is observed to quench the room temperature variable chlorophyll a fluorescence, as well as the intensity of the 695 nm peak, relative to the 685 nm peak, in the chlorophyll a fluorescence spectrum at 77 K. Electron transport from H2O to the photosystem II electron-acceptor silicomolybdate is also inhibited. Disulfiram does not inhibit electron flow before the site(s) of donation by exogenous electron donors to photosystem II, and no inhibition is detected in the partial reactions associated with photosystem I.  相似文献   

5.
The fluorescence yield at room temperature, the capacity of excitation energy distribution between photosystem Ⅰ and Ⅱ by Mg2+, variable fluorescence yield, variable fluorescence quenching rate and fluorescence complementary area were decreased under water stress. These indicated that photosystem Il was impaired. The inhibited variable fluorescence yield could be partly recovered by the addition of artificial electron donor DPC. Therefore, water stress inhibited not only the oxidizing site of photosystem Ⅱ but also impaired partly the reaction center of photosystem Ⅱ.  相似文献   

6.
Chlorella was used to study the effects of dehydration on photosynthetic activities. The use of unicellular green algae assured that the extent of dehydration was uniform throughout the whole cell population during the course of desiccation. Changes in the activities of the cells were monitored by measurements of fluorescence induction kinetics. It was found that inhibition of most of the photosynthetic activities started at a similar level of cellular water content. They included CO2 fixation, photochemical activity of Photosystem II and electron transport through Photosystem I. The blockage of electron flow through Photosystem I was complete and the whole transition occurred within a relative short time of dehydration. On the other hand, the suppression of Photosystem II activity was incomplete and the transition took a longer time of dehydration. Upon rehydration, the inhibition of Photosystem II activity was fully reversible when samples were in the middle of the transition, but was not thereafter. The electron transport through Photosystem I was also reversible during the transition, but was only partially afterward.Abbreviations DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethyl urea - Fm maximum fluorescence yield - F0 non-variable fluorescence level emitted when all PS II centers are open - Fv variable part of fluorescence - PS photosystem - QA primary quinone acceptor of Photosystem II  相似文献   

7.
Transient time courses ("induction") and the intensity of thedelayed fluorescence of chlorophyll a (measured between 0.1and 3.9 msec after a 0.9 msec excitation period) were studiedwith a phosphoroscope at temperatures between 40 and –170°Cin Tris-washed chloroplasts. Tris-washing of chloroplasts changed the temperature dependenciesof the induction and the intensity of the delayed fluorescence.From the analysis of the induction each photosystem II reactioncenter appears to be linked to a donor pool which can supplyone electron to the acceptor pool in Tris-washed chloroplasts. An artificial electron donor, diphenylcarbazide affected thedelayed fluorescence above –100°C evidence that electronsare donated to photosystem II in at least two different ways. An electron transport inhibitor, 3-(3',4'-dichlorophenyl)-l,l-dimethylurea,changed the induction of the delayed fluorescence at temperaturesabove –60°C. The temperature dependence of the electron transport in thevicinity of photosystem II was characterized from these results. (Received May 27, 1980; )  相似文献   

8.
The reversibility of nitrite-induced inhibition in relation to energy distribution between the two photosystems was studied in spinach thylakoid membranes. Measurements of electron transfer rate catalyzed by photosystem I (PS I) and photosystem II (PS II), chlorophyll a (Chl a ) fluorescence induction kinetics, S2 state multiline spectra, and room temperature electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) signals indicated that nitrite anions bind PS II in two ways: dissociable (loose) and non-dissociable (tight). The inhibition caused by the dissociable binding was reversible in washed (nitrite-treated samples washed with nitrite-free medium) samples, while the inhibition caused by the non-dissociable binding was irreversible. At 77 K, an increase in absorption cross section of PS I (as inferred from the excitation spectra of Chl a fluorescence) and a decrease in absorption cross section of PS II in nitrite-treated sample when compared with sample washed with nitrite-free medium and control sample suggested that nitrite plays a role in regulating the distribution of absorbed excitation energy between the two photosystems. We propose, for the first time, that the removal of loosely bound nitrite leads to migration of light-harvesting complex II back to the PS II, and thus the mode of binding of nitrite regulates the extent of migration of antenna molecules between the two photosystems.  相似文献   

9.
The light-dependent reactivation of photosystem II in Chlorella pyrenoidosa Chick, CALU-175 cells, inactivated with supraoptimal temperatures (40-43 degrees C) in the dark or during heterotrophic growth was studied. It was shown that the inactivation of photosystem II after incubation in the dark at 41-42 degrees C, which showed up in the suppression of relative yield of variable chlorophyll fluorescence Fv due to an increase in yield F0 could be completely reversed by light. The inactivation of photosystem II at 43 degrees C in the dark could not be reversed by subsequent irradiation. In this case, the suppression of Fv/Fm was related not only to the growth of F0 but also with the decrease in Fm. The light dependences of the rate and extent of reactivation of yield Fv after heterotrophic growth or incubation of chlorella at 41 degrees C in the dark completely coincided. The full light-induced reactivation of photosystem II took place as the rate of photoinduced electron transport reached the rate of nonphotochemical reduction of plastoquinone in the dark. These results suggest that the light-reversed inactivation of photosystem II after heterotrophic growth or incubation at 41 degrees C in the dark is due to the redox-interaction of the primary quinone acceptor with plastoquinone reduced by the electron flux from the substrates of chlororespiration.  相似文献   

10.
Preincubation of chloroplasts from pea leaves (Pisum sativum L. cv. Kelvedon) with 0.5 millimolar ferricyanide in the dark, caused a parallel inhibition of the rate of rise of the variable fluorescence and the rate of electron transport. Both reactions were inhibited to a similar extent by varying the time of preincubation, the concentration of ferricyanide during preincubation, and by raising the concentration of salts in the preincubation medium. Ferricyanide treatment of Tris-washed chloroplasts did not inhibit electron transport from the Photosystem II (PSII) electron donor 1,5-diphenylcarbazide to methylviologen. The inhibition of the variable fluorescence rise and of NADP reduction (caused by ferricyanide pretreatment) was bypassed by addition of the PSII electron donor couple hydroquinone/ascorbate. It was concluded that preincubation of chloroplasts with ferricyanide in the dark inhibited electron transport between water and PSII.  相似文献   

11.
In this paper the recent research from our laboratory is reviewed. Short fragments of the photochemical electron transfer chain of photosynthesis were reproduced in aqueous detergent solutions or in organic solvents. The function of photosystem I is reproduced in a ternary system of chlorophylls, electron donors (dienols, sulfhydryl compounds, hydrazine, etc.), and electron acceptors (viologens, nicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide [NAD], flavines, etc.). Chlorophyll-photosensitized reduction of viologens in some cases is activated by oxygen at the expense of active reductants formed during the photosensitized oxidation of an initial electron donor (thiourea). Chlorophyll-photosensitized oxidoreduction of cytochromes is activated by flavines, viologens, vitamin K derivatives, and some other redox systems (cofactors of cyclic photophosphorylation). The primary mechanism of the reactions studied depends on the reversible chlorophyll photooxidoreduction. In binary systems, chlorophyll (monomeric or aggregated) and electron donor or electron acceptor, reversible photoreduction or photooxidation is observed. Irreversible bacteriochlorophyll oxidation leads to the formation of chlorophyll and protochlorophyll analogues; irreversible protochlorophyll photoreduction results in chlorophyll-like pigment appearance. The photodisaggregation of chlorophyll was observed. The models of photosystem II studied were the photochemical oxygen evolution in aqueous solutions of electron acceptors (ferric compounds, quinone), photosensitized in the near UV part of the spectrum by inorganic semiconductors (tungsten, titanium, and zinc oxides). All reactions described are based on electron (hydrogen) transfer photosensitized by pigment system.  相似文献   

12.
The toxic effect of Ni2+ on photosynthetic electron transport was studied in a photosystem II submembrane fraction. It was shown that Ni2+ strongly inhibits oxygen evolution in the millimolar range of concentration. The inhibition was insensitive to NaCl but significantly decreased in the presence of CaCl2. Maximal chlorophyll fluorescence, together with variable fluorescence, maximal quantum yield of photosystem II, and flash-induced fluorescence decays were all significantly declined by Ni2+. Further, the extrinsic polypeptides of 16 and 24 kDa associated with the oxygen-evolving complex of photosystem II were depleted following Ni2+ treatment. It was deduced that interaction of Ni2+ with these polypeptides caused a conformational change that induced their release together with Ca2+ from the oxygen-evolving complex of photosystem II with consequent inhibition of the electron transport activity.  相似文献   

13.
Inhibition of Photosystem II in Isolated Chloroplasts by Lead   总被引:4,自引:3,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Inhibition of photosynthetic electron transport in isolated chloroplasts by lead salts has been demonstrated. Photosystem I activity, as measured by electron transfer from dichlorophenol indophenol to methylviologen, was not reduced by such treatment. However, photosystem II was inhibited by lead salts when electron flow was measured from water to methylviologen and Hill reaction or by chlorophyll fluorescence. Fluorescence induction curves indicated the primary site of inhibition was on the oxidizing side of photosystem II. That this site was between the primary electron donor of photosystem II and the site of water oxidation could be demonstrated by hydroxylamine restoration of normal fluorescence following lead inhibition.  相似文献   

14.
Abstract. The kinetics of in vivo chlorophyll fluorescence of photosystem II (PS II) was measured at room temperature and 77 K during frost hardening of seedlings of Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.), and after exposure of frost-hardened shoots to sub-freezing temperatures. A more pronounced decrease in variable fluorescence yield for the upper exposed than for the lower shaded surface of the needles suggested that some photoinhibition occurred during prolonged frost hardening at 50 μmol photons m?2 s?1 and 4°C. Reversible inhibition of photosynthesis after exposure to sub-freezing temperatures was initially manifested as an increase of steady-state energy-dependent fluorescence quenching (qE) and a reduction in the rate of O2 evolution. Further inhibition after treatment at still lower temperatures caused a progressive decline of steady-state photochemical quenching (qQ) and the rate of O2 evolution, whereas qE remained high. This implies an inactivation of enzymes in the photosynthetic carbon reduction cycle decreasing the consumption of ATP and NADPH, which is likely to cause an increase of membrane energization and a reduction of the primary electron acceptor (QA) of PS II. Alternatively, the changes in qQ and qE might be attributed to an inhibition of photophosphorylation. Severe, irreversible damage to photosynthesis resulted in a suppression of qE and of variable fluorescence yield, probably because the photochemical efficiency of PS II was impaired. Changes in the fast fluorescence kinetics at room temperature after severe freezing damage were interpreted as an inhibition of the electron flow from QA to the plastoquinone pool. It is suggested that irreversible freezing injury to needles of frost-hardened P. sylvestris causes damage to the QB,-protein.  相似文献   

15.
In this study, we evaluated how cadmium inhibitory effect on photosystem II and I electron transport may affect light energy conversion into electron transport by photosystem II. To induce cadmium effect on the photosynthetic apparatus, we exposed Chlamydomonas reinhardtii 24 h to 0–4.62 μM Cd2+. By evaluating the half time of fluorescence transients O–J–I–P at different temperatures (20–30°C), we were able to determine the photosystem II apparent activation energies for different reduction steps of photosystem II, indicated by the O–J–I–P fluorescence transients. The decrease of the apparent activation energies for PSII electron transport was found to be strongly related to the cadmium-induced inhibition of photosynthetic electron transport. We found a strong correlation between the photosystem II apparent activation energies and photosystem II oxygen evolution rate and photosystem I activity. Different levels of cadmium inhibition at photosystem II water-splitting system and photosystem I activity showed that photosystem II apparent activation energies are strongly dependent to photosystem II donor and acceptor sides. Therefore, the oxido-reduction state of whole photosystem II and I electron transport chain affects the conversion of light energy from antenna complex to photosystem II electron transport.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract: This study presents information on the mechanism of inhibition of the photosynthetic electron transport of Nostoc muscorum by chromium (Cr) and lead (Pb). Photosystem II (PS II) was found to be more sensitive both to low and high concentrations of test metals used. A considerable inhibition of photosystem I (PS I) was, however, observed at high concentrations only. Although Cr-induced inhibition of DCPIP photoreduction and lowering of chlorophyll a (Chl a ) fluorescence intensity ( F 685) could not be reversed by artificial electron donors (diphenyl-carbazide (DPC), NH2OH, MnCl2 and benzidine) of PS II, these electron donors did substantially reverse the Pb-induced inhibition of DCPIP photoreduction as well as the lowering of Chl a fluorescence. Nevertheless, an increase in Chl a fluorescence at high concentrations of Pb suggested that this metal also arrests electron flow on the reducing side of the PS II reaction centre. Besides this, the suppression of fluorescence intensity of phycocyanin at low concentrations of both metals points to the involvement of phycobilisomes in the inhibition of PS II activity. The present study demonstrates that the modes of action of Cr and Pb on PS II are quite different.  相似文献   

17.
18.
In this work, we extended the reversible radical pair model which describes energy utilization and electron transfer up to the first quinone electron acceptor (Q(A)) in photosystem II (PSII), by redox reactions involving cytochrome (cyt) b559. In the model, cyt b559 accepts electrons from the reduced primary electron acceptor in PSII, pheophytin, and donates electrons to the oxidized primary electron donor in PSII (P680+). Theoretical simulations of chlorophyll fluorescence rise based on the model show that the maximal fluorescence, F(M), increases with an increasing amount of initially reduced cyt b559. In this work we applied, the first to our knowledge, metabolic control analysis (MCA) to a model of reactions in PSII. The MCA was used to determine to what extent the reactions occurring in the model control the F(M) level and how this control depends on the initial redox state of cyt b559. The simulations also revealed that increasing the amount of initially reduced cyt b559 could protect PSII against photoinhibition. Also experimental data, which might be used to validate our theory, are presented and discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Long-term and short-term effects of gramine on cells of Anabaena sp. were studied. Culture death was observed after an initial growth in the presence of 0.5 mM gramine, and lower concentrations decreased both the specific growth rate and the growth yield. Cultures showed a reduction in the chlorophyll content as well as an increase in the level of accessory pigments, which were proportional to the alkaloid concentration. When cultures were excited with green light in the presence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea, the fluorescence spectra of the cells showed a shoulder at 685 nm related to the photosystem II (PSII) antennae emission. This band was reduced when gramine was present during the growth, suggesting that gramine suppresses the energy transfer between the phycobilisomes and PSII. At lethal concentrations for cellular growth, gramine suppressed immediately the photosynthetic oxygen production as well as the electron transport from H2O to p-benzoquinone. The influence of gramine on the PSII photochemical reactions was investigated by flash-induced fluorescence measurements, and the results suggest that the alkaloid could act as an electron donor to the PSII reaction center.  相似文献   

20.
Yocum CF 《Plant physiology》1977,60(4):597-601
A number of uncouplers and energy transfer inhibitors suppress photosystem II cyclic photophosphorylation catalyzed by either a proton/electron or electron donor. Valinomycin and 2,4-dinitrophenol also inhibit photosystem II cyclic photophosphorylation, but these compounds appear to act as electron transport inhibitors rather than as uncouplers. Only when valinomycin, KCl, and 2,4-dinitrophenol were added simultaneously to phosphorylation reaction mixtures was substantial uncoupling observed. Photosystem II noncyclic and cyclic electron transport reactions generate positive absorbance changes at 518 nm. Uncoupling and energy transfer inhibition diminished the magnitude of these absorbance changes. Photosystem II cyclic electron transport catalyzed by either p-phenylenediamine or N,N,N′,N′-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine stimulated proton uptake in KCN-Hg-NH2OH-inhibited spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) chloroplasts. Illumination with 640 nm light produced an extent of proton uptake approximately 3-fold greater than did 700 nm illumination, indicating that photosystem II-catalyzed electron transport was responsible for proton uptake. Electron transport inhibitors, uncouplers, and energy transfer inhibitors produced inhibitions of photosystem II-dependent proton uptake consistent with the effects of these compounds on ATP synthesis by the photosystem II cycle. These results are interpreted as indicating that endogenous proton-translocating components of the thylakoid membrane participate in coupling of ATP synthesis to photosystem II cyclic electron transport.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号