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1.
Transthylakoid proton transport based on Photosystem I-dependent cyclic electron transport has been demonstrated in isolated intact spinach chloroplasts already at very low photon flux densities when the acceptor side of Photosystem I (PS I) was largely closed. It was under strict redox control. In spinach leaves, high intensity flashes given every 50 s on top of far-red, but not on top of red background light decreased the activity of Photosystem II (PS II) in the absence of appreciable linear electron transport even when excitation of PS II by the background light was extremely weak. Downregulation of PS II was a consequence of cyclic electron transport as shown by differences in the redox state of P700 in the absence and the presence of CO2 which drained electrons from the cyclic pathway eliminating control of PS II. In the presence of CO2, cyclic electron transport comes into play only at higher photon flux densities. At H+/e=3 in linear electron transport, it does not appear to contribute much ATP for carbon reduction in C3 plants. Rather, its function is to control the activity of PS II. Control is necessary to prevent excessive reduction of the electron transport chain. This helps to protect the photosynthetic apparatus of leaves against photoinactivation under light stress.  相似文献   

2.
The light-dependent quenching of 9-aminoacridine fluorescence was used to monitor the state of the transthylakoid proton gradient in illuminated intact chloroplasts in the presence or absence of external electron acceptors. The absence of appreciable light-dependent fluorescence quenching under anaerobic conditions indicated inhibition of coupled electron transport in the absence of external electron acceptors. Oxygen relieved this inhibition. However, when DCMU inhibited excessive reduction of the plastoquinone pool in the absence of oxygen, coupled cyclic electron transport supported the formation of a transthylakoid proton gradient even under anaerobiosis. This proton gradient collapsed in the presence of oxygen. Under aerobic conditions, and when KCN inhibited ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase and ascorbate peroxidase, fluorescence quenching indicated the formation of a transthylakoid proton gradient which was larger with oxygen in the Mehler reaction as electron acceptor than with methylviologen at similar rates of linear electron transport. Apparently, cyclic electron transport occured simultaneously with linear electron transport, when oxygen was available as electron acceptor, but not when methylviologen accepted electrons from Photosystem I. The ratio of cyclic to linear electron transport could be increased by low concentrations of DCMU. This shows that even under aerobic conditions cyclic electron transport is limited in isolated intact chloroplasts by excessive reduction of electron carriers. In fact, P700 in the reaction center of Photosystem I remained reduced in illuminated isolated chloroplasts under conditions which resulted in extensive oxidation of P700 in leaves. This shows that regulation of Photosystem II activity is less effective in isolated chloroplasts than in leaves. Assuming that a Q-cycle supports a H+/e ratio of 3 during slow linear electron transport, vectorial proton transport coupled to Photosystem I-dependent cyclic electron flow could be calculated. The highest calculated rate of Photosystem I-dependent proton transport, which was not yet light-saturated, was 330 mol protons (mg chlorophyll h)–1 in intact chloroplasts. If H+/e is not three but two proton transfer is not 330 but 220 mol (mg Chl H)–1. Differences in the regulation of cyclic electron transport in isolated chloroplasts and in leaves are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
The light-induced rise in chlorophyll fluorescence and the subsequent decay of fluorescence in darkness were measured in barley and maize leaves exposed to heat treatment. The redox conversions of the photosystem I primary donor P700, induced by far-red light, were also monitored from the absorbance changes at 830 nm. After heating of leaves at temperatures above 40°C, the ratio of variable and maximum fluorescence decreased for leaves of both plant species, indicating the inhibition of photosystem II (PSII) activity. A twofold reduction of this ratio in barley and maize leaves was observed after heating at 45.3 and 48.1°C, respectively, which suggests the higher functional resistance of PSII in maize. The amplitude of the slow phase in the dark relaxation of variable fluorescence did not change after the treatment of barley and maize leaves at temperatures up to 48°C. In leaves treated at 42 and 46°C, the slow phase of dark relaxation deviated from an exponential curve. The relaxation kinetics included a temporary increase in fluorescence to a peak about 1 s after turning off the actinic light. Unlike the slow component, the fast and intermediate phases in the dark relaxation of variable fluorescence disappeared fully or partly after the treatment of leaves at 46°C. The photooxidation of P700 in heat-treated leaves was saturated at much higher irradiances of far-red light than in untreated leaves. At the same time, the dark reduction of P700+ was substantially accelerated after heat treatment. The data provide evidence that the heating of leaves stimulated the alternative pathways of electron transport, i.e., cyclic transport around photosystem I and/or the donation of electrons to the plastoquinone pool from the reduced compounds located in the chloroplast stroma. The rate of alternative electron transport after the heat treatment was higher in maize leaves than in barley leaves. It is supposed that the stimulation of alternative electron transport, associated with proton pumping into the thylakoid, represents a protective mechanism that prevents the photoinhibition of PSII in leaves upon a strong suppression of linear electron transport in chloroplasts exposed to heat treatment.  相似文献   

4.
Leaves of the C3 plant Brassica oleracea were illuminated with red and/or far-red light of different photon flux densities, with or without additional short pulses of high intensity red light, in air or in an atmosphere containing reduced levels of CO2 and/or oxygen. In the absence of CO2, far-red light increased light scattering, an indicator of the transthylakoid proton gradient, more than red light, although the red and far-red beams were balanced so as to excite Photosystem II to a comparable extent. On red background light, far-red supported a transthylakoid electrical field as indicated by the electrochromic P515 signal. Reducing the oxygen content of the gas phase increased far-red induced light scattering and caused a secondary decrease in the small light scattering signal induced by red light. CO2 inhibited the light-induced scattering responses irrespective of the mode of excitation. Short pulses of high intensity red light given to a background to red and/or far-red light induced appreciable additional light scattering after the flashes only, when CO2 levels were decreased to or below the CO2 compensation point, and when far-red background light was present. While pulse-induced light scattering increased, non-photochemical fluorescence quenching increased and F0 fluorescence decreased indicating increased radiationless dissipation of excitation energy even when the quinone acceptor QA in the reaction center of Photosystem II was largely oxidized. The observations indicate that in the presence of proper redox poising of the chloroplast electron transport chain cyclic electron transport supports a transthylakoid proton gradient which is capable of controlling Photosystem II activity. The data are discussed in relation to protection of the photosynthetic apparatus against photoinactivation.Abbreviations F, FM, F'M, F"M, F0, F'0 chlorophyll fluorescence levels - exc quantum efficiency of excitation energy capture by open Photosystem II - PS II quantum efficiency of electron flow through Photosystem II - P515 field indicating rapid absorbance change peaking at 522 nm - P700 primary donor of Photosystem I - QA primary quinone acceptor in Photosystem II - QN non-photochemical fluorescence quenching - Qq photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence  相似文献   

5.
Cornic G  Bukhov NG  Wiese C  Bligny R  Heber U 《Planta》2000,210(3):468-477
The role of cyclic electron transport has been re-examined in leaves of C3 plants because the bioenergetics of chloroplasts (H+/e = 3 in the presence of a Q-cycle; H+/ATP = 4 of ATP synthesis) had suggested that cyclic electron flow has no function in C3 photosynthesis. After light activation of pea leaves, the dark reduction of P700 (the donor pigment of PSI) following far-red oxidation was much accelerated. This corresponded to loss of sensitivity of P700 to oxidation by far-red light and a large increase in the number of electrons available to reduce P700+ in the dark. At low CO2 and O2 molar ratios, far-red light was capable of decreasing the activity of photosystem II (measured as the ratio of variable to maximal chlorophyll fluorescence, Fv/Fm) and of increasing light scattering at 535 nm and zeaxanthin synthesis, indicating formation of a transthylakoid pH gradient. Both the light-induced increase in the number of electrons capable of reducing far-red-oxidised P700 and the decline in Fv/Fm brought about by far-red in leaves were prevented by methyl viologen. Antimycin A inhibited CO2-dependent O2 evolution of pea leaves at saturating but not under limiting light; in its presence, far-red light failed to decrease Fv/Fm. The results indicate that cyclic electron flow regulates the quantum yield of photosystem II by decreasing the intrathylakoid pH when there is a reduction in the availability of electron acceptors at the PSI level (e.g. during drought or cold stresses). It also provides ATP for the carbon-reduction cycle under high light. Under these conditions, the Q-cycle is not able to maintain a H+/e ratio of 3 for ATP synthesis: we suggest that the ratio is flexible, not obligatory. Received: 23 February 1999 / Accepted: 19 August 1999  相似文献   

6.
Geum montanum L. is an alpine plant usually found at altitudes between 1700 and 2600 m. Its wintergreen leaves can be subjected to very low temperatures and at the same time receive high photon flux densities at the beginning of the growth season when the snow melts. We report results of a study, performed with classical methods of biophysics, showing that leaves of G. montanum were remarkably tolerant to sunlight even at low temperatures. This tolerance results from the interplay of photorespiration and CO2 photosassimilation. When temperatures approach 0°C, responses include stomatal opening and CO2 uptake even under desiccation stress. This permits linear electron transport that is sufficient to avoid the excessive reduction of the electron transport chain which is known to lead to photodamage. In addition, excitation energy was shifted from photosystem (PS)II to PSI which is a very efficient energy quencher. Sensitivity of P700 in PSI to oxidation by far-red light was decreased and rates of dark reduction of photooxidized P700 were increased by actinic illumination, suggesting activation of cyclic electron transport. Consistent with this, far-red light was able to decrease the quantum yield of PSII (measured by the F v/F m ratio of chlorophyll fluorescence). We suggest that cyclic electron transport decreases the lumenal pH under strong light. In the presence of zeaxanthin, this increases energy dissipation at the PSII level. At low temperatures, P700 remained strongly oxidized under high irradiation while the primary electron acceptor of PSII, QA, was largely reduced. This shows efficient control of electron transport presumably at the level of the cytochrome b/f complex and suggests formation of a protective transthylakoid proton gradient even when linear electron transport is much reduced in the cold. Thus, several mechanisms cooperate to effectively protect the photosynthetic apparatus of G. montanum from photodamage. We see no indication of destructive “photostress” in this species during the growth season under alpine low-temperature and drought conditions. Received: 2 March 1998 / Accepted: 7 January 1999  相似文献   

7.
Ivanov  B.  Kobayashi  Y.  Bukhov  N.G.  Heber  U. 《Photosynthesis research》1998,57(1):61-70
Photosystem I-dependent cyclic electron transport is shown to operate in intact spinach chloroplasts with oxaloacetate, but not with nitrite or methylviologen as electron acceptors. It is regulated by the redox state of the chloroplast NADP system. Inhibition of cyclic electron transport by antimycin A occurs immediately on addition of this antibiotic in the light. It is unrelated to a different function of antimycin A, inhibition of nonphotochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence, which requires prior dissipation of the transthylakoid proton gradient before antimycin A can become effective.  相似文献   

8.
Short-term responses of Photosystem I to heat stress   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
When 23°C-grown potato leaves (Solanum tuberosum L.) were exposed for 15 min to elevated temperatures in weak light, a dramatic and preferential inactivation of Photosystem (PS) II was observed at temperatures higher than about 38°C. In vivo photoacoustic measurements indicated that, concomitantly with the loss of PS II activity, heat stress induced a marked gas-uptake activity both in far-red light (>715 nm) exciting only PS I and in broadband light (350–600 nm) exciting PS I and PS II. In view of its suppression by nitrogen gas and oxygen and its stimulation by high carbon-dioxide concentrations, the bulk of the photoacoustically measured gas uptake by heat-stressed leaves was ascribed to rapid carbon-dioxide solubilization in response to light-modulated stroma alkalization coupled to PS I-driven electron transport. Heat-induced gas uptake was observed to be insensitive to the PS II inhibitor diuron, sensitive to the plastocyanin inhibitor HgCl2 and saturated at a rather high photon flux density of around 1200 E m–2 s–1. Upon transition from far-red light to darkness, the oxidized reaction center P700+ of PS I was re-reduced very slowly in control leaves (with a half time t1/2 higher than 500 ms), as measured by leaf absorbance changes at around 820 nm. Heat stress caused a spectacular acceleration of the postillumination P700+ reduction, with t1/2 falling to a value lower than 50 ms (after leaf exposure to 48°C). The decreased t1/2 was sensitive to HgCl2 and insensitive to diuron, methyl viologen (an electron acceptor of PS I competing with the endogenous acceptor ferredoxin) and anaerobiosis. This acceleration of the P700+ reduction was very rapidly induced by heat treatment (within less than 5 min) and persisted even after prolonged irradiation of the leaves with far-red light. After heat stress, the plastoquinone pool exhibited reduction in darkness as indicated by the increase in the apparent Fo level of chlorophyll fluorescence which could be quenched by far-red light. Application (for 1 min) of far-red light to heat-pretreated leaves also induced a reversible quenching of the maximal fluorescence level Fm, suggesting formation of a pH gradient in far-red light. Taken together, the presented data indicate that PS I responded to the heat-induced loss of PS II photochemical activity by catalyzing an electron flow from stromal reductants. Heat-stress-induced PS I electron transport independent of PS II seems to constitute a protective mechanism since block of this electron pathway in anaerobiosis was observed to result in a dramatic photoinactivation of PS I.Abbreviations PFD photon flux density - PS Photosystem - Apt and Aox amplitude of the photothermal and photobaric components of the photoacoustic signal, respectively - P700 reaction center pigment of PS I - Fo and Fm initial and maximal levels of chlorophyll fluorescence, respectively - Fv=Fm Fo-variable chlorophyll fluorescence - QA primary (stable) electron acceptor of PS II - DCMU (diuron) 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - Cyt cytochrome  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
The variation of the rate of cyclic electron transport around Photosystem I (PS I) during photosynthetic induction was investigated by illuminating dark-adapted spinach leaf discs with red + far-red actinic light for a varied duration, followed by abruptly turning off the light. The post-illumination re-reduction kinetics of P700+, the oxidized form of the photoactive chlorophyll of the reaction centre of PS I (normalized to the total P700 content), was well described by the sum of three negative exponential terms. The analysis gave a light-induced total electron flux from which the linear electron flux through PS II and PS I could be subtracted, yielding a cyclic electron flux. Our results show that the cyclic electron flux was small in the very early phase of photosynthetic induction, rose to a maximum at about 30 s of illumination, and declined subsequently to <10% of the total electron flux in the steady state. Further, this cyclic electron flow, largely responsible for the fast and intermediate exponential decays, was sensitive to 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethyl urea, suggesting an important role of redox poising of the cyclic components for optimal function. Significantly, our results demonstrate that analysis of the post-illumination re-reduction kinetics of P700+ allows the quantification of the cyclic electron flux in intact leaves by a relatively straightforward method.  相似文献   

11.
The light-response curves of P700 oxidation and time-resolved kinetics of P700+ dark re-reduction were studied in barley leaves using absorbance changes at 820 nm. Leaves were exposed to 45 °C and treated with either diuron or diuron plus methyl viologen (MV) to prevent linear electron flow from PS II to PSI and ferredoxin-dependent cyclic electron flow around PSI. Under those conditions, P700+ could accept electrons solely from soluble stromal reductants. P700 was oxidized under weak far-red light in leaves treated with diuron plus MV, while identical illumination was nearly ineffective in diuron-treated leaves in the absence of MV. When heat-exposed leaves were briefly illuminated with strong far-red light, which completely oxidized P700, the kinetics of P700+ dark reduction was fitted by a single exponential term with half-time of about 40 ms. However, two first-order kinetic components of electron flow to P700+ (fast and slow) were found after prolonged leaf irradiation. The light-induced modulation of the kinetics of P700+ dark reduction was reversed following dark adaptation. The fast component (half time of 80–90 ms) was 1.5 larger than the slow one (half time of about 1 s). No kinetic competition occurred between two pathways of electron donation to P700+ from stromal reductants. This suggests the presence of two different populations of PSI. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

12.
Recently, a number of techniques, some of them relatively new and many often used in combination, have given a clearer picture of the dynamic role of electron transport in Photosystem I of photosynthesis and of coupled cyclic photophosphorylation. For example, the photoacoustic technique has detected cyclic electron transport in vivo in all the major algal groups and in leaves of higher plants. Spectroscopic measurements of the Photosystem I reaction center and of the changes in light scattering associated with thylakoid membrane energization also indicate that cyclic photophosphorylation occurs in living plants and cyanobacteria, particularly under stressful conditions.In cyanobacteria, the path of cyclic electron transport has recently been proposed to include an NAD(P)H dehydrogenase, a complex that may also participate in respiratory electron transport. Photosynthesis and respiration may share common electron carriers in eukaryotes also. Chlororespiration, the uptake of O2 in the dark by chloroplasts, is inhibited by excitation of Photosystem I, which diverts electrons away from the chlororespiratory chain into the photosynthetic electron transport chain. Chlororespiration in N-starved Chlamydomonas increases ten fold over that of the control, perhaps because carbohydrates and NAD(P)H are oxidized and ATP produced by this process.The regulation of energy distribution to the photosystems and of cyclic and non-cyclic phosphorylation via state 1 to state 2 transitions may involve the cytochrome b 6-f complex. An increased demand for ATP lowers the transthylakoid pH gradient, activates the b 6-f complex, stimulates phosphorylation of the light-harvesting chlorophyll-protein complex of Photosystem II and decreases energy input to Photosystem II upon induction of state 2. The resulting increase in the absorption by Photosystem I favors cyclic electron flow and ATP production over linear electron flow to NADP and poises the system by slowing down the flow of electrons originating in Photosystem II.Cyclic electron transport may function to prevent photoinhibition to the photosynthetic apparatus as well as to provide ATP. Thus, under high light intensities where CO2 can limit photosynthesis, especially when stomates are closed as a result of water stress, the proton gradient established by coupled cyclic electron transport can prevent over-reduction of the electron transport system by increasing thermal de-excitation in Photosystem II (Weis and Berry 1987). Increased cyclic photophosphorylation may also serve to drive ion uptake in nutrient-deprived cells or ion export in salt-stressed cells.There is evidence in some plants for a specialization of Photosystem I. For example, in the red alga Porphyra about one third of the total Photosystem I units are engaged in linear electron transfer from Photosystem II and the remaining two thirds of the Photosystem I units are specialized for cyclic electron flow. Other organisms show evidence of similar specialization.Improved understanding of the biological role of cyclic photophosphorylation will depend on experiments made on living cells and measurements of cyclic photophosphorylation in vivo.Abbreviations CCCP carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone - cyt cytochrome - DBMIB 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone - DCCD dicyclohexylcarbodiimide - DCHC dicyclohexyl-18-crown-6 - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - FCCP carbonylcyanide 4-(trifluoromethoxy) phenylhydrazone - LHC light harvesting chlorophyll - LHCP II light harvesting chlorophyll protein of Photosystem II - PQ plastoquinone - PS I, II Photosystem I, II - SHAM salicyl hydroxamic acid - TBT Tri-n-butyltin CIW/DPB Publication No. 1146  相似文献   

13.
In addition to the linear electron transport, several alternative Photosystem I-driven (PS I) electron pathways recycle the electrons to the intersystem electron carriers mediated by either ferredoxin:NADPH reductase, NAD(P)H dehydrogenase, or putative ferredoxin:plastoquinone reductase. The following functions have been proposed for these pathways: adjustment of ATP/NADPH ratio required for CO(2) fixation, generation of the proton gradient for the down-regulation of Photosystem II (PS II), and ATP supply the active transport of inorganic carbon in algal cells. Unlike ferredoxin-dependent cyclic electron transport, the pathways supported by NAD(P)H can function in the dark and are likely involved in chlororespiratory-dependent energization of the thylakoid membrane. This energization may support carotenoid biosynthesis and/or maintain thylakoid ATPase in active state. Active operation of ferredoxin-dependent cyclic electron transport requires moderate reduction of both the intersystem electron carriers and the acceptor side of PS I, whereas the rate of NAD(P)H-dependent pathways under light depends largely on NAD(P)H accumulation in the stroma. Environmental stresses such as photoinhibition, high temperatures, drought, or high salinity stimulated the activity of alternative PS I-driven electron transport pathways. Thus, the energetic and regulatory functions of PS I-driven pathways must be an integral part of photosynthetic organisms and provides additional flexibility to environmental stress.  相似文献   

14.
Ursula Ziem-Hanck  Ulrich Heber 《BBA》1980,591(2):266-274
In the absence of electron acceptors and of oxygen a proton gradient was supported across thylakoid membranes of intact spinach chloroplasts by far-red illumination. It was decreased by red light. Inhibition by red light indicates effective control of cyclic electron flow by Photosystem II. Inhibition was released by oxygen which supported a large proton gradient. Oxygen appeared to act as electron acceptor simultaneously preventing over-reduction of electron carriers of the cyclic electron transport pathway. It thus has an important regulatory function in electron transport. Under anaerobic conditions, the inhibition of electron transport caused by red illumination could also be released and a large proton gradient could be established by oxaloacetate, nitrite and 3-phosphoglycerate, but not by bicarbonate. In the absence of oxygen, ATP levels remained low in chloroplasts illuminated with red light even when bicarbonate was present. They increased when electron acceptors were added which could release the over-reduction of the electron transport chain. Inhibition of electron transport in the presence of bicarbonate was relieved and CO2-fixation was initiated by oxygen concentrations as low as about 10 μM. Once CO2 fixation was initiated, very low oxygen levels were sufficient to sustain it. The results support the assumption that pseudocyclic electron transport is necessary to poise the electron transport chain so that a proper balance of linear and cyclic electron transport is established to supply ATP for CO2 reduction.  相似文献   

15.
In experiments with barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) leaves, absorbance changes at 830 nm induced by far-red light were measured as indicator of redox conversions of primary electron donor (P700) of photosystem I (PSI). Using this method, the action of elevated temperature (45°C, 5 min) on PSI-driven electron transport through alternative pathways was examined. Thermally induced inactivation was found to transform nonmonotonic photooxidation of P700, induced by far-red light in untreated leaves, into a fast and monotonic process completed within 1-s illumination. The short-term heating of leaves fully eliminated the fast component in the kinetics of P700+ dark reduction, related to operation of ferredoxin-dependent cyclic electron transport around PSI. At the same time, thermoinactivation substantially accelerated the slow and middle components of dark P700+ reduction, i.e., the components determined by arrival of electrons to PSI from reductants located in the chloroplast stroma. The latter effect was also observed after heating of leaves pretreated with antimycin A or methyl viologen; both agents are known to inhibit the ferredoxin-dependent electron transport. It is concluded that the heat treatment of leaves inhibits the ferredoxin-dependent pathway of electron transport around PSI and activates electron transport through alternative routes providing reducing equivalents to PSI from stromal reductants.  相似文献   

16.
Oxygen requirement of photosynthetic CO2 assimilation   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
In the absence of electron acceptors and of oxygen a proton gradient was supported across thylakoid membranes of intact spinach chloroplasts by far-red illumination. It was decreased by red light. Inhibition by red light indicates effective control of cyclic electron flow by Photosystem II. Inhibition was released by oxygen which supported a large proton gradient. Oxygen appeared to act as electron acceptor simultaneously preventing over-reduction of electron carriers of the cyclic electron transport pathway. It thus has an important regulatory function in electron transport. Under anaerobic conditions, the inhibition of electron transport caused by red illumination could also be released and a large proton gradient could be established by oxaloacetate, nitrite and 3-phosphoglycerate, but not by bicarbonate. In the absence of oxygen, ATP levels remained low in chloroplasts illuminated with red light even when bicarbonate was present. They increased when electron acceptors were added which could release the over-reduction of the electron transport chain. Inhibition of electron transport in the presence of bicarbonate was relieved and CO2-fixation was initiated by oxygen concentrations as low as about 10 microM. Once CO2 fixation was initiated, very low oxygen levels were sufficient to sustain it. The results support the assumption that pseudocyclic electron transport is necessary to poise the electron transport chain so that a proper balance of linear and cyclic electron transport is established to supply ATP for CO2 reduction.  相似文献   

17.
Iron deficiency was found to affect the redox state of the Photosystem II acceptor side in dark-adapted, attached leaves of sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L.). Dark-adapted iron-deficient leaves exhibited relatively high Fo and Fpl levels in the Kautsky chlorophyll fluorescence induction curve when compared to the iron-sufficient controls. However, far-red illumination led to marked decreases in the apparent Fo and Fpl levels. Modulated fluorescence showed that far-red light decreased the fluorescence yield to the true Fo levels by increasing photochemical quenching, without inducing changes in the level of non-photochemical quenching. In dark-adapted, iron-deficient leaves, far-red illumination induced a faster fluorescence decay in the µs-ms time domain, indicating an improvement in the electron transport after the primary quinone acceptor in the reducing side of Photosystem II. All these data indicate that in iron-deficient leaves the plastoquinone pool was reduced in the dark. The extent of the plastoquinone reduction in sugar beet depended on the chlorophyll concentration of the leaf, on the time of preillumination and on the duration of dark adaptation. The dark reduction of plastoquinone was observed not only in sugar beet but also in other plant species affected by iron deficiency both in controlled conditions and in the field.  相似文献   

18.
W. Rühle  A. Wild 《Planta》1979,146(4):377-385
The oxidation and reduction of cytochrome f and P-700 is measured spectrophotometrically in leaves of low-light and high-light plants. After illumination with red light, an induction phenomenon for cytochrome f oxidation is observed which indicates a regulation of photosystem I activity through energy distribution between the pigment systems by the energy state of the membrane. After far-red excitation the reduction of cytochrome f in the dark is much slower in low-light leaves. This shows that cyclic electron transport is not improved in low-light plants under these conditions. P-700 is oxidized on excitation with far-red light. However, with high intensities of far-red light, P-700 is partially reduced again which is due to a low extent of photosystem II excitation with the far-red used in the experiments. The low-light leaves show greater sensitivity of photosystem II to this excitation. The initial rate of the cytochrome f oxidation-rate is the same in low-light and high-light leaves. This shows that several P-700 are connected with only one electron transport chain. The consequences of these results concerning the tripartite concept and the photosynthetic unit are discussed. In the high-light plants the experimental data can be well explained by the tripartite organization of the photosynthetic unit. In low-light plants, however, a multipartite organization has to be postulated. In the partition regions of the grana, several antennae systems I, antennae systems II, and light-harvesting complexes can communicate with one electron transport chain.Abbreviations CP I P-700-chlorophyll a-protein - Cyt f cytochrome f - DCMU 3-(3,4 dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DBMIB 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone - LA leaf-area - PhAR photosynthetically active radiation - PS photosystem  相似文献   

19.
Effects on oxygen evolution of the storage of detached cucumber (Cucumis sativus) leaves at 0°C in the dark were investigated with thylakoids and oxygen-evolving photosystem II membranes isolated from stored leaves. The cold and dark treatment of leaves selectively inactivated electron transport on the oxidizing side of photosystem II. Photosystem II membranes isolated from treated leaves were largely depleted of two proteins of 20 and 14 kilodaltons, which correspond to the extrinsic 23- and 17- kilodalton proteins of spinach functioning in oxygen evolution. The manganese content of photosystem II membranes was also markedly reduced by the treatment. Thus, the inactivation of oxygen evolution induced by the dark, chilling treatment is ascribed to solubilization of the 20- and 14-kilodalton proteins and extraction of manganese.  相似文献   

20.
S. Izawa  R. Kraayenhof  E.K. Ruuge  D. Devault 《BBA》1973,314(3):328-339
Treatment of chloroplasts with high concentrations of KCN inhibits reactions which involve Photosystem I (e.g. electron transport from water or diaminodurene to methylviologen), but not those assumed to by-pass Photosystem I (e.g. electron transport from water to quinonediimides). The spectrophotometric experiments described in this paper showed that KCN inhibits the oxidation of cytochrome f by far-red light without blocking its reduction by red light. Both optical and EPR experiments indicated that KCN does not inhibit the photooxidation of P700 but markedly slows down the subsequent dark decay (reduction). Reduction of P700 by Photosystem II is prevented by KCN. It is concluded that KCN blocks electron transfer between cytochrome f and P700, i.e. the reaction step which is believed to be mediated by plastocyanin. In KCN-poisoned chloroplasts the slow dark reduction of P700 following photooxidation is greatly accelerated by reduced 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol or by reduced N-methylphenazonium methosulfate (PMS), but not by diaminodurene. It appears that the reduced indophenol dye and reduced PMS are capable of donating electrons directly to P700, at least partially by-passing the KCN block.  相似文献   

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