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1.
The light response curves of the acceptor and donor side mechanisms of photoinhibition of Photosystem II were calculated, using Arabidopsis as a model organism. Acceptor-side photoinhibition was modelled as double reduction of QA, noting that non-photochemical quenching has the same effect on the quantum yield of QA double reduction in closed PSII centres as it has on the quantum yield of electron transport in open centres. The light response curve of acceptor-side photoinhibition in Arabidopsis shows very low efficiency under low intensity light and a relatively constant quantum yield above light saturation of photosynthesis. To calculate the light response curve of donor-side photoinhibition, we built a model describing the concentration of the oxidized primary donor P680+ during steady-state photosynthesis. The model is based on literature values of rate constants of electron transfer reactions of PSII, and it was fitted with fluorescence parameters measured in the steady state. The modelling analysis showed that the quantum yield of donor-side photoinhibition peaks under moderate light. The deviation of the acceptor and donor side mechanisms from the direct proportionality between photoinhibition and photon flux density suggests that these mechanisms cannot solely account for photoinhibition in vivo, but contribution of a reaction whose quantum yield is independent of light intensity is needed. Furthermore, a simple kinetic calculation suggests that the acceptor-side mechanism may not explain singlet oxygen production by photoinhibited leaves. The theoretical framework described here can be used to estimate the yields of different photoinhibition mechanisms under different wavelengths or light intensities.  相似文献   

2.
High light treatments were given to attached leaves of pumpkin (Cucurbita pepo L.) at room temperature and at 1°C where the diffusion- and enzyme-dependent repair processes of Photosystem II are at a minimum. After treatments, electron transfer activities and fluorescence induction were measured from thylakoids isolated from the treated leaves. When the photoinhibition treatment was given at 1°C, the Photosystem II electron transfer assays that were designed to require electron transfer to the plastoquinone pool showed greater inhibition than electron transfer from H2O to paraphenyl-benzoquinone, which measures all PS II centers. When the light treatment was given at room temperature, electron transfer from H2O to paraphenyl-benzoquinone was inhibited more than whole-chain electron transfer. Variable fluorescence measured in the presence of ferricyanide decreased only during room-temperature treatments. These results suggest that reaction centers of one pool of Photosystem II, non-QB-PS II, replace photoinhibited reaction centers at room temperature, while no replacement occurs at 1°C. A simulation of photoinhibition at 1°C supports this conclusion.Abbreviations BSA bovine serum albumin - Chl chlorophyll - DCMU 3-(3,4,-dichlorophenyl)-1,1,-dimethylurea - DCPIP dichlorophenol-indophenol (2,6-dichloro-4((4-hydroxyphenyl)imino)-2,5-cyclohexadien-1-one) - DPC diphenyl carbazide (2,2-diphenylcarbonic dihydrazide) - FeCN ferricyanide (hexacyanoferrate(III)) - app apparent quantum yield of photosynthetic oxygen evolution - MV methyl viologen (1,1-dimethyl-4,4-bipyridinium dichloride) - PPBQ phenyl-p-benzoquinone - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density - PQ pool plastoquinone - QB secondary quinone acceptor of PS II - RT room temperature - WC whole chain electron transfer  相似文献   

3.
Photoinhibition of O2 evolution and reactions leading to millisecond-delayed light emission (ms-DLE) of chlorophyll by illumination of leaves with excess white light were investigated in wheat seedlings greened for different times in a special chamber with constant conditions (20°C; CO2 and humidity). A sharp reduction in initial and steady state rates of O2 evolution and in the intensity of different components of ms-DLE under excess light on the stage of lag-phase of chlorophyll biosynthesis (4–6h of greening) were observed. An increasing stability of the oxygen-evolving process and ms-DLE of chlorophyll during formation of the thylakoid membrane photosystems (12–24 h of greening) was shown. Rifampicin did not influence the stability of oxygen evolution whereas cycloheximide led to the intensification of photoinhibition of the initial and steady-state rates of oxygen evolution under the inhibitory light action. The early stages of photosystems formation during short time of greening of etiolated seedlings were more sensitive to the action of inhibitory light, possibly due to a weak interaction of the oxygen-evolving system components and connection with reaction centers of Photosystem II.  相似文献   

4.
A ‘metal-free’ chlorophyll (Chl) a, pheophytin (Phe) a, functions as the primary electron acceptor in PS II. On the basis of Phe a/PS II = 2, Phe a content is postulated as an index for estimation of the stoichiometry of pigments and photosystems. We found Phe a in a Chl d-dominant cyanobacterium Acaryochloris marina, whereas Phe d was absent. The minimum Chl a:Phe a ratio was 2:2, indicating that the primary electron donor is Chl a, accessory is Chl d, and the primary electron acceptor is Phe a in PS II of A. marina. Chl d was artificially formed by the treatment of Chl a with papain in aqueous organic solvents. Further, we will raise a key question on the mechanisms of water oxidation in PS II.  相似文献   

5.
The dominance of diatoms in turbulent waters suggests special adaptations to the wide fluctuations in light intensity that phytoplankton must cope with in such an environment. Our recent demonstration of the unusually effective photoprotection by the xanthophyll cycle in diatoms [Lavaud et al. (2002) Plant Physiol 129 (3) (in press)] also revealed that failure of this protection led to inactivation of oxygen evolution, but not to the expected photoinhibition. Photo-oxidative damage might be prevented by an electron transfer cycle around Photosystem II (PS II). The induction of such a cycle at high light intensity was verified by measurements of the flash number dependence of oxygen production in a series of single-turnover flashes. After a few minutes of saturating illumination, the oxygen flash yields are temporarily decreased. The deficit in oxygen production amounts to at most 3 electrons per PS II, but continues to reappear with a half time of 2 min in the dark until the total pool of reducing equivalents accumulated during the illumination has been consumed by (chloro)respiration. This is attributed to an electron transfer pathway from the plastoquinone pool or the acceptor side of PS II to the donor side of PS II that is insignificant at limiting light intensity but is accelerated to milliseconds at excess light intensity. Partial filling of the 3-equivalents capacity of the cyclic electron transfer path in PS II may prevent both acceptor-side photoinhibition in oxygen-evolving PS II and donor-side photoinhibition when the oxygen-evolving complex is temporarily inactivated. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

6.
In order to understand the mechanism of photodamage induced by solar radiation under natural conditions, we studied the interaction of visible and ultraviolet-B light in the inactivation and repair of the Photosystem II complex by using oxygen evolution and flash-induced chlorophyll fluorescence measurements. In isolated spinach thylakoids and Synechocystis 6803 cells, in which de novo protein synthesis is blocked by lincomycin, photodamage of Photosystem II by visible and UV-B light is characterized by linear semilogarithmic inactivation curves for both separate and combined illumination protocols. The extent of PS II inactivation obtained after combined illumination can be well simulated by assuming independent damaging events induced by visible and UV-B photons. In intact Synechocystis cells capable of protein repair, simultaneous illumination by visible and UV-B light impairs Photosystem II activity to a smaller extent than expected from the independent damaging events. This protective effect is pronounced at low visible light (130 μE m−2 s−1), but becomes negligible at high intensities (1300 μE m−2 s−1). Exposure of intact Synechocystis 6803 cells to direct sunlight leads to a rapid inactivation of PS II, accompanied by the accumulation of donor side inhibited centers. This phenomenon, which shows the impairment of the manganese cluster of water oxidation was not observed when the ultraviolet components of sunlight were filtered out. We conclude that visible and UV-B photons inactivate PS II via non-interacting mechanisms, which affect different target sites. In intact cells, the two spectral regions do interact, and results in synergistically enhanced protein repair capacity when UV-B radiation is accompanied by low intensity visible light, which provides protection against photodamage. However, this ameliorating effect becomes insignificant at high light intensities characteristic of direct sunlight. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

7.
The variable fluorescence quenching found in the presence of DCMU with isolated chloroplasts which have been exposed previously to a prolonged low light intensity (Sinclair and Spence 1988), is accompanied by a loss of the sigmoidal appearance of the fluorescence induction transient. About 80% of the fluorescence decrease is due to the PS II units and 50% of the centres are inactivated by light exposure. Light incubation slows the PS II partial reaction while the PS I partial reaction is unaffected. We propose that in the light, normal PS II centres change into quenching centres which degrade excitation energy to thermal energy. This change can be reversed by 30 min of darkness. A higher flash intensity is needed to saturate the steady state O2 flash yield from light-incubated chloroplasts indicating a light-induced decrease of the average photosynthetic unit size as would happen if PS II units were preferentially inactivated. These light-induced changes may relate to an adaptation in leaves to increasing light intensity.Abbreviations Chl Chlorophyll - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DCPIP 2,6-Dichlorophenol-Indophenol - EDTA ethylaminediaminetetraacetic acid - Fv Level of variable fluorescence emission - Fo Initial level of fluorescence - Hepes buffer N-[2-Hydroxyethyl]piperazine-N-[2-ethanesulfonic acid]  相似文献   

8.
Summary Affinity purified, polyclonal antibodies raised against the Photosystem II 33 kDa manganese-stabilizing polypeptide of the spinach oxygen-evolving complex were used to isolate the gene encoding the homologous protein from Synechocystis 6803. Comparison of the amino acid sequence deduced from the Synechocystis psb1 nucleotide sequence with recently published sequences of spinach and pea confirms the homology indicated by antigenic crossreactivity and shows that the cyanobacterial and higher plant sequences are 43% identical and 63% conserved. Regions of identity, varying in length from 1 to 10 consecutive residues, are distributed throughout the protein. The 28 residues at the amino terminus of the psb1 gene product, characteristic of prokaryotic signal peptides, show homology with the carboxyl-terminal third of the transit sequences of pea and spinach and are most likely needed for the transport of the manganese-stabilizing protein across the thylakoid membrane to its destination of the lumen. Synechocystis mutants which contain a kanamycin resistance gene cassette inserted into the coding region for the 32 kDa polypeptide were constructed. These mutants contain no detectable 32 kDa polypeptide, do not evolve oxygen, and are incapable of photoautotrophic growth.  相似文献   

9.
A comparative study of X-band EPR and ENDOR of the S2 state of photosystem II membrane fragments and core complexes in the frozen state is presented. The S2 state was generated either by continuous illumination at T=200 K or by a single turn-over light flash at T=273 K yielding entirely the same S2 state EPR signals at 10 K. In membrane fragments and core complex preparations both the multiline and the g=4.1 signals were detected with comparable relative intensity. The absence of the 17 and 23 kDa proteins in the core complex preparation has no effect on the appearance of the EPR signals. 1H-ENDOR experiments performed at two different field positions of the S2 state multiline signal of core complexes permitted the resolution of four hyperfine (hf) splittings. The hf coupling constants obtained are 4.0, 2.3, 1.1 and 0.6 MHz, in good agreement with results that were previously reported (Tang et al. (1993) J Am Chem Soc 115: 2382–2389). The intensities of all four line pairs belonging to these hf couplings are diminished in D2O. A novel model is presented and on the basis of the two largest hfc's distances between the manganese ions and the exchangeable protons are deduced. The interpretation of the ENDOR data indicates that these hf couplings might arise from water which is directly ligated to the manganese of the water oxidizing complex in redox state S2.Abbreviations cw continuous wave - ENDOR electron nuclear double resonance - EPR electron paramagnetic resonance - hf hyperfine - hfc hyperfine coupling - MLS multiline signal - PS II Photosystem II - rf radio frequency - WOC water oxidizing complex  相似文献   

10.
In this minireview we discuss effects of excitation stress on the molecular organization and function of PS II as induced by high light or low temperature in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. PCC 7942. Synechococcus displays PS II plasticity by transiently replacing the constitutive D1 form (D1:1) with another form (D1:2) upon exposure to excitation stress. The cells thereby counteract photoinhibition by increasing D1 turn over and modulating PS II function. A comparison between the cyanobacterium Synechococcus and plants shows that in cyanobacteria, with their large phycobilisomes, resistance to photoinhibition is mainly through the dynamic properties (D1 turnover and quenching) of the reaction centre. In contrast, plants use antenna quenching in the light-harvesting complex as an important means to protect the reaction center from excessive excitation.Abbreviations D1 reaction center protein of Photosystem II - P680 the reaction center of Photosystem II - QA the primary quinone acceptor of Photosystem II - TyrZ tyrosine electron donor to P680  相似文献   

11.
12.
The oxygen production of dark-adapted Photosystem II upon illumination by a series of single-turnover flashes shows a damped period four oscillation with flash number. The damping is attributed to `misses' resulting from a statistical probability that a reaction center fails to produce a stable charge separation after a saturating flash. The origin of misses is of interest because its probable dependence on flash number, in principle, affects the quantitative interpretation of all measurements on phenomena associated with the period four oscillation. We show that the kinetics of chlorophyll fluorescence yield transients induced by a flash series can be used to estimate the relative amplitudes of the miss probability on each flash. It is concluded that a major part of the misses must be caused by failure of the reduction of the oxidized primary electron donor chlorophyll P680+ by the secondary donor tyrosine YZ before the charge separation is lost by recombination. The probability of this failure is found to increase with the oxidation state of the oxygen-evolving complex: more than half of it occurs upon charge separation in the S3 state, which is attributed to the presence of YZ ox S2 in Boltzmann equilibrium with YZS3. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

13.
Chloroplast proteins were phosphorylated under two test conditions: white light irradiance alone and white light irradiance with the addition of glucose and glucose oxidase, used to produce an anaerobic medium. The interaction of phospho-LHC II with Photosystem 1 (PS 1) was studied for two types of PS I preparation. Changes in the chlorophyll a/b ratio and the ratio of 650 and 680 nm band intensities (E650/E680) in fluorescence excitation spectra were used in calculating the phospho-LHC II portion which became associated with PS 1. It is shown that the associated portion of phospho-LHC II varies for each of the PS 1 preparations and phosphorylation procedures. Possible conclusions as regards the transfer of various sets of LHC II subpopulations under different phosphorylation procedures and the differences of interaction with PS 1 are discussed.Abbreviations PS 1 Photosystem 1 - PS 2 Photosystem 2 - LHC II light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein complex II - Chl chlorophyll - fluorescence quantum yield - f life time of fluorescence at =685 nm - F735 fluorescence band with a maximum at 735 nm - F685 fluorescence band with a maximum at 685 nm - E650/E680 ratio of amplitudes in excitation fluorescence spectrum at 650 and 680 nm  相似文献   

14.
Yu  Y.  Tian  S.-M.  Ruan  K.-C.  Xu  C.-H. 《Photosynthetica》2001,39(1):115-117
Three extrinsic polypeptides and manganese cluster were sequentially released from the membrane when photosystem 2 (PS2) membranes were kept under high hydrostatic pressure. The 17 kDa polypeptide was the most sensitive, while the 33 kDa polypeptide was the most reluctant to the treatment with high pressure. The release of manganese was not simply correlated with the loss of 33 kDa polypeptide. The losing of oxygen-evolving activity of PS2 was synchronised with the releasing of extrinsic polypeptides and manganese.  相似文献   

15.
Photosystem I particles devoid of the secondary electron acceptor A1 were studied by nanosecond flash absorption. The primary radical pair (P-700+, A0 -) decays with a half-time of 35 ns. The difference spectrum was measured (400–870 nm). After subtraction of the P-700+/P-700 difference spectrum, the A0 -/A0 was obtained. It includes bleachings centered at 690 and 430 nm, and broad positive bands in the near infra-red and the blue-green. This spectrum is consistent with A0 being chlorophyll a absorbing at 690 nm.  相似文献   

16.
Effects of photoinhibition on photosynthesis in pea (Pisum sativum L.) leaves were investigated by studying the relationship between the severity of a photoinhibitory treatment (measured as Fv/Fm) and several photoacoustic and chlorophyll a fluorescence parameters. Because of the observed linear relationship between the decline of Fv/Fm and the potential oxygen evolution rate determined by the photoacoustic method, the parameter Fv/Fm was used as an indicator for the severity of photoinhibition. Our analysis revealed that part of the Photosystem II (PS II) reaction centers is inactive in oxygen evolution and is also less sensitive to photoinhibition. Correcting the parameter qP (fraction of open PS II reaction centers) for inactive PS II centers unveiled a strong increase of qP in severely inhibited pea leaves, indicating that the inactivated active centers do no longer contribute to qP and that photoinhibition has an all or none effect on PS II centers. Analysis of qE (energy quenching) demonstrated its initial increase possibly associated with dephosphorylation of LHC II. Analysis of qI (photoinhibition dependent quenching) showed that the half-time of recovery of qI increases steeply below an Fv/Fm of 0.65. This increase of the relaxation half-time corresponds with a decrease of the electron transport rate J and tentatively indicates that the supply of ATP, needed for the recovery, starts to decrease. The data indicate the necessity of correcting for inactive centers in order to make valuable conclusions about effects of photoinhibition on photosynthetic parameters.  相似文献   

17.
Light-induced modification of Photosystem II (PS II) complex was characterized in the cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. PCC 7942 treated with either DCMU (a phenylurea PS II inhibitor) or BNT (a phenolic PS II inhibitor). The irradiance response of photoinactivation of PS II oxygen evolution indicated a BNT-specific photoinhibition that saturated at relatively low intensity of light. This BNT-specific process was slowed down under anaerobiosis, was accompanied by the oxygen-dependent formation of a 39 kDa D1 protein adduct, and was not related to stable QA reduction or the ADRY effect. In the BNT-treated cells, the light-induced, oxygen-independent initial drop of PS II electron flow was not affected by formate, an anion modifying properties of the PS II non-heme iron. For DCMU-treated cells, anaerobiosis did not significantly affect PS II photoinactivation, the D1 adduct was not observed and addition of formate induced similar initial decrease of PS II electron flow as in the BNT-treated cells. Our results indicate that reactive oxygen species (most likely singlet oxygen) and modification of the PS II acceptor side are responsible for the fast BNT-induced photoinactivation of PS II. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

18.
Preparations of photosystem II (PSII) from pea (Pisum sativum L.) leaves were used to study the evolution and reduction of molecular oxygen under photoinhibitory conditions. Under these conditions, the photoinduced oxygen uptake did not exceed 10% of the total oxygen-evolving activity in PSII preparations. Both the Hill and the Mehler reactions were found to occur simultaneously under long-term illumination of PSII preparations with high-intensity light in the presence of potassium ferricyanide. During this light treatment in the presence of potassium ferricyanide, the rate of oxygen uptake increased gradually reaching 30% of the oxygen-evolving activity. The photogeneration of superoxide anion radical at increasing light intensities followed a typical light-response curve with a light saturation at 800 W/m2. The results provide evidence that the Mehler reaction is the major source for superoxide and hydrogen peroxide in PSII preparations under photoinhibitory conditions and that the Mehler reaction in PSII proceeds more effectively at high light intensities. The relatively low and sustained rate of oxygen photoreduction in PSII preparations under photoinhibitory conditions substantiates the hypothesis on the involvement of Mehler reaction in cell signaling and regulation.  相似文献   

19.
Thylakoids and Photosystem II particles prepared from the cyanobacterium Synechococcus PCC 7942 washed with a HEPES/glycerol buffer exhibited low rates of light-induced oxygen evolution. Addition of either Ca2+ or Mg2+ to both thylakoids and Photosystem II particles increased oxygen evolution independently, maximal rates being obtained by addition of both ions. If either preparation was washed with NaCl, light induced O2 evolution was completely inhibited, but re-activated in the same manner by Ca2+ and Mg2+ but to a lower level. In the presence of Mg2+, the reactivation of O2 evolution by Ca2+ allowed sigmoid kinetics, implying co-operative binding. The results are interpreted as indicating that not only Ca2+, but also Mg2+, is essential for light-induced oxygen evolution in thylakoids and Photosystem II particles from Synechococcus PC 7942. The significance of the reactivation kinetics is discussed. Reactivation by Ca2+ was inhibited by antibodies to mammalian calmodulin, indicating that the binding site in Photosystem II may be analogous to that of this protein.Abbreviation HEPES n-2-Hydroxyethylpiperazine--2-ethane sulphonic acid  相似文献   

20.
The psbP gene product, the so called 23 kDa extrinsic protein, is involved in water oxidation carried out by Photosystem II. However, the protein is not absolutely required for water oxidation. Here we have studied Photosystem II mediated electron transfer in a mutant of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, the FUD 39 mutant, that lacks the psbP protein. When grown in dim light the Photosystem II content in thylakoid membranes of FUD 39 is approximately similar to that in the wild-type. The oxygen evolution is dependent on the presence of chloride as a cofactor, which activates the water oxidation with a dissociation constant of about 4 mM. In the mutant, the oxygen evolution is very sensitive to photoinhibition when assayed at low chloride concentrations while chloride protects against photoinhibition with a dissociation constant of about 5 mM. The photoinhibition is irreversible as oxygen evolution cannot be restored by the addition of chloride to inhibited samples. In addition the inhibition seems to be targeted primarily to the Mn-cluster in Photosystem II as the electron transfer through the remaining part of Photosystem II is photoinhibited with slower kinetics. Thus, this mutant provides an experimental system in which effects of photoinhibition induced by lesions at the donor side of Photosystem II can be studied in vivo.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - DCIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - DPC 2,2-diphenylcarbonic dihydrazide - HEPES 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazinethanesulfonic acid - P680 the primary electron donor to PS II - PpBQ phenyl-p-benzoquinone - PS II Photosystem II - QA the first quinone acceptor of PS II - QB the second quinone acceptor of PS II - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate - Tris tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane - TyrD accessory electron donor on the D2-protein - TyrZ tyrosine residue, acting as electron carrier between P680 and the water oxidizing system  相似文献   

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