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1.
Chlorophyll a fluorescence transients from mesophyll and single guard cell pairs of Vicia faba were measured by microspectrofluorometry. In both chloroplast types, fluorescence induction (O to P) was similar under actinic blue and green light. In slow transients from mesophyll cell chloroplasts, blue and green light induced identical, typical rapid quenching from P to S, and the M peak. In contrast, the P to S transient from guard cell (GC) chloroplasts irradiated with blue light showed a much slower quenching rate, and the P to T transition showed no M peak. Actinic green light induced mesophyll-like transients in GC chloroplasts, including rapid quenching from P to S and the M peak. Detection of these transients in single pairs of GC and isolated protoplasts ruled out mesophyll contamination as a signal source. Green light induced a rapid quenching and the M peak in GC chloroplasts from several species. The effect of CO2 concentration on the fluorescence transients was investigated in the presence of HCO3 at pH 6.8 and 10.0. In transients induced by green light in both chloroplast types, a pH increase concomitant with a reduction in CO2 concentration caused an increase in the initial rate of quenching and the elimination of the M peak. Actinic blue light induced mesophyll-like transients from GC chloroplasts in the presence of 10 micromolar KCN, a concentration at which the blue light-induced stomatal opening is inhibited. Addition of 100 to 200 micromolar phosphate also caused large increases in fluorescence quenching rates and a M peak. These results indicate that blue light modulates photosynthetic activity in GC chloroplasts. This blue light effect is not observed in the absence of transduction events connected with the blue light response and in the presence of high phosphate concentrations.  相似文献   

2.
The lack of detectable variable fluorescence from guard cell chloroplasts in both the albino and green portions of variegated leaves of St. Augustine grass (Stenotaphrum secundatum var variegatum A.S. Hitchc.) is reported. Fluorescence was measured either with a highly sensitive, modified fluorescence microscope which was capable of recording fluorescence induction curves from single chloroplasts, or with a spectrofluorometer. Both fast and slow fluorescence transients from S. secundatum guard cells showed a rapid rise and then remained at a steady level. Neither variable fluorescence increase (induction) nor decrease (quenching), properties normally associated with photosystem II, was observed from these chloroplasts. These fluorescence kinetics did not change either with alterations of the specimen preparation procedure or with alterations of the excitation light intensities and wavelengths. These results indicate that guard cell chloroplasts in this variety of S. secundatum do not conduct normal photosystem II electron transport. Light regulation of stomatal conductance in intact leaves of this plant did occur, however, and was similar to light regulation observed in other species. The conductance of the green portion of the leaves was much greater in the light than in the dark, and was much greater than the conductance of the albino portion of the leaves. Stomata in the green portion of the leaves also showed greater opening in blue light than in red light. These results provide evidence that stomatal regulation in this variety of S. secundatum does not rely on photosystem II electron transport in guard cell chloroplasts.  相似文献   

3.
Melis A  Zeiger E 《Plant physiology》1982,69(3):642-647
Chlorophyll fluorescence transients from mesophyll and guard cell chloroplasts of variegated leaves from Chlorophytum comosum were compared using high resolution fluorescence spectroscopy. Like their mesophyll counterparts, guard cell chloroplasts showed the OPS fluorescence transient indicating the operation of the linear electron transport and the possible generation of NADPH in these organelles. They also showed a slow fluorescence yield decrease, equivalent to the MT transition in mesophyll, suggesting the formation of the high energy state and photophosphorylation. Unlike the mesophyll chloroplasts, the fluorescence from guard cell chloroplasts lacked the increment of the SM transition, indicating that the two types of chloroplasts have some metabolic differences. The presence of CO2 (supplied as bicarbonate, pH 6.7) specifically inhibited the MT-equivalent transition while its absence accelerated it. These observations constitute the first specific evidence of a guard cell chloroplast response to CO2. Control of photosynthetic ATP levels in the guard cell cytoplasm by CO2 may provide a mechanism regulating the availability of high energy equivalents at the guard cell plasmalemma, thus affecting stomatal opening.  相似文献   

4.
Srivastava A  Zeiger E 《Plant physiology》1992,100(3):1562-1566
Chlorophyll a fluorescence transients from isolated Vicia faba guard cell chloroplasts were used to probe the response of these organelles to light quality. Guard cell chloroplasts were isolated from protoplasts by passing them through a 10-μm nylon net. Intact chloroplasts were purified on a Percoll gradient. Chlorophyll a fluorescence transients induced by actinic red or blue light were measured with a fluorometer equipped with a measuring beam. Actinic red light induced a monophasic quenching, and transients induced by blue light showed biphasic kinetics having a slow and a fast component. The difference between the red and blue light-induced transients could be observed over a range of fluence rates tested (200-800 μmol m−2 s−1). The threshold fluence rate of blue light for the induction of the fast component of quenching was 200 μmol m−2 s−1, but in the presence of saturating red light, fluence rates as low as 25 μmol m−2 s−1 induced the fast quenching. These results indicate that guard cell chloroplasts have a specific response to blue light.  相似文献   

5.
The presence of chloroplasts in guard cells from leaf epidermis, coleoptile, flowers, and albino portions of variegated leaves was established by incident fluorescence microscopy, thus confirming the notion that guard cell chloroplasts are remarkably conserved. Room temperature emission spectra from a few chloroplasts in a single guard cell of Vicia faba showed one major peak at around 683 nanometers. Low-temperature (77 K) emission spectra from peels of albino portions of Chlorophytum comosum leaves and from mesophyll chloroplasts of green parts of the same leaves showed major peaks at around 687 and 733 nanometers, peaks usually attributed to photosystem II and photosystem I pigment systems, respectively. Spectra of peels of V. faba leaves showed similar peaks. However, fluorescence microscopy revealed that the Vicia peels, as well as those from Allium cepa and Tulipa sp., were contaminated with non-guard cell chloroplasts which were practically undetectable under bright field illumination. These observations pose restrictions on the use of epidermal peels as a source of isolated guard cell chloroplasts. Studies on the 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea-sensitive variable fluorescence kinetics of uncontaminated epidermal peels of C. comosum indicated that guard cell chloroplasts operate a normal, photosystem II-dependent, linear electron transport. The above properties in combination with their reported inability to fix CO2 photosynthetically may render the guard cell chloroplasts optimally suited to supply the reducing and high-energy phosphate equivalents needed to sustain active ion transport during stomatal opening in daylight.  相似文献   

6.
Fluorescence emission spectral peaks at 685, 695 and 730 nanometers (F685, F695, and F730) were recorded 77 K from diluted leaf tissue and epidermal powders prepared from Saxifraga cernua. The time course for state 1 to state 2 transitions was monitored as changes in the ratios of the three emission peaks. During illumination with light 2 (580 nm) the F730/F695 and F730/F685 ratios increased within minutes to establish a condition characteristic of state 2. A major difference between the two chloroplast types was the more rapid establishment of state 2 by mesophyll chloroplasts. An increase in light 2 intensity caused an increase in the magnitude of the F730/F695 ratio for both chloroplast types and, for guard cell chloroplasts, a decrease in the time required to establish the new ratio. The role of reversible phosphorylation of the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein complex in regulating state transitions for both mesophyll and guard cell chloroplasts was assessed using DCMU and sodium fluoride, a specific phosphatase inhibitor. DCMU-treated mesophyll and epidermal tissues failed to show a state 1-state 2 transition. NaF-treated tissues attained state 2 but lacked the ability to revert back to state 1.  相似文献   

7.
A modified fluorescence microscope system was used to measure chlorophyll fluorescence and delayed light emission from mesophyll and bundle sheath cells in situ in fresh-cut sections from leaves of Panicum miliaceum L. The fluorescence rise in 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethylurea (DCMU)-treated leaves and the slow fluorescence kinetics in untreated leaves show that mesophyll chloroplasts have larger photosystem II unit sizes than do bundle sheath chloroplasts. The larger photosystem II units imply more efficient noncyclic electron transport in mesophyll chloroplasts. Quenching of slow fluorescence also differs between the cell types with mesophyll chloroplasts showing complex kinetics and bundle sheath chloroplasts showing a relatively simple decline. Properties of the photosynthetic system were also investigated in leaves from plants grown in soil containing elevated NaCl levels. As judged by changes in both fluorescence kinetics in DCMU-treated leaves and delayed light emission in leaves not exposed to DCMU, salinity altered photosystem II in bundle sheath cells but not in mesophyll cells. This result may indicate different ionic distributions in the two cell types or, alternatively, different responses of the two chloroplast types to environmental change.  相似文献   

8.
High rates of both cyclic and noncyclic photophosphorylation were measured in chloroplast lamellae isolated from purified guard cell protoplasts from Vicia faba L. Typical rates of light-dependent incorporation of 32P into ATP were 100 and 190 micromoles ATP per milligram chlorophyll per hour for noncyclic (water to ferricyanide) and cyclic (phenazine methosulfate) photophosphorylation, respectively. These rates were 50 to 80% of those observed with mesophyll chloroplasts. Noncyclic photophosphorylation in guard cell chloroplasts was completely inhibited by 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea supporting the notion that photophosphorylation is coupled to linear electron flow from photosystem II to photosystem I. Several lines of evidence indicated that contamination by mesophyll chloroplasts cannot account for the observed photophosphorylation rates.

A comparison of the photon fluence dependence of noncyclic photophosphorylation in mesophyll and guard cell chloroplasts showed significant differences between the two preparations, with half saturation at 0.04 and 0.08 millimole per square meter per second, respectively.

  相似文献   

9.
Recent studies have shown that guard cell and coleoptile chloroplasts appear to be involved in blue light photoreception during blue light-dependent stomatal opening and phototropic bending. The guard cell chloroplast has been studied in detail but the coleoptile chloroplast is poorly understood. The present study was aimed at the characterization of the corn coleoptile chloroplast, and its comparison with mesophyll and guard cell chloroplasts. Coleoptile chloroplasts operated the xanthophyll cycle, and their zeaxanthin content tracked incident rates of solar radiation throughout the day. Zeaxanthin formation was very sensitive to low incident fluence rates, and saturated at around 800–1000 mol m–2 s–1. Zeaxanthin formation in corn mesophyll chloroplasts was insensitive to low fluence rates and saturated at around 1800 mol m–2 s–1. Quenching rates of chlorophyll a fluorescence transients from coleoptile chloroplasts induced by saturating fluence rates of actinic red light increased as a function of zeaxanthin content. This implies that zeaxanthin plays a photoprotective role in the coleoptile chloroplast. Addition of low fluence rates of blue light to saturating red light also increased quenching rates in a zeaxanthin-dependent fashion. This blue light response of the coleoptile chloroplast is analogous to that of the guard cell chloroplast, and implicates these organelles in the sensory transduction of blue light. On a chlorophyll basis, coleoptile chloroplasts had high rates of photosynthetic oxygen evolution and low rates of photosynthetic carbon fixation, as compared with mesophyll chloroplasts. In contrast with the uniform chloroplast distribution in the leaf, coleoptile chloroplasts were predominately found in the outer cell layers of the coleoptile cortex, and had large starch grains and a moderate amount of stacked grana and stroma lamellae. Several key properties of the coleoptile chloroplast were different from those of mesophyll chloroplasts and resembled those of guard cell chloroplasts. We propose that the common properties of guard cell and coleoptile chloroplasts define a functional pattern characteristic of chloroplasts specialized in photosensory transduction.Abbreviations Ant or A antheraxanthin - dv/dt fluorescence quenching rate - Fm maximum yield of fluorescence with all PS II reaction centers closed - Fo yield of instantaneous fluorescence with all PS II reaction centers open - Vio or V violaxanthin - Zea or Z zeaxanthin  相似文献   

10.
Stomatal conductance is coupled to leaf photosynthetic rate over a broad range of environmental conditions. We have investigated the extent to which chloroplasts in guard cells may contribute to this coupling through their photosynthetic activity. Guard cells were isolated by sonication of abaxial epidermal peels of Vicia faba. The electrochromic band shift of isolated guard cells was probed in vivo as a means of studying the electric field that is generated across the thylakoid membranes by photosynthetic electron transport and dissipated by photophosphorylation. Both guard cells and mesophyll cells exhibited fast and slow components in the formation of the flash-induced electrochromic change. The spectrum of electrochromic absorbance changes in guard cells was the same as in the leaf mesophyll and was typical of that observed in isolated chloroplasts. This observation indicates that electron transport and photophosphorylation occur in guard cell chloroplasts. Neither the fast nor the slow component of the absorbance change was observed in the presence of the uncoupler carbonylcyanide p-trifluoromethoxy-phenylhydrazone which confirms that the absorbance change was caused by the electric field across the thylakoid membranes. The magnitude of the fast rise was reduced by half in the presence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea. Therefore, photosystem II is functional and roughly equal in concentration to photosystem I in guard cell chloroplasts. The slow rise was abolished by 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-1,4-benzoquinone indicating the involvement of the cytochrome b6/f complex in electron transport between the two photosystems. Relaxation of the absorbance change was irreversibly retarded in cells treated with the energy transfer inhibitor, N,N′-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide. The slowing of the rapid decay kinetics by N,N′-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide confirms that the electrical potential across the thyalkoid membrane is dissipated by photophosphorylation. These results show that guard cell chloroplasts conduct photosynthetic electron transport in a manner similar to that in mesophyll cells and provide the first evidence that photophosphorylation occurs in guard cells in vivo.  相似文献   

11.
Several photochemical and spectral properties of maize (Zea mays) bundle sheath and mesophyll chloroplasts are reported that provide a better understanding of the photosynthetic apparatus of C4 plants. The difference absorption spectrum at 298 K and the fluorescence excitation and emission spectra of chlorophyll at 298 K and 77 K provide new information on the different forms of chlorophyll a in bundle sheath and mesophyll chloroplasts: the former contain, relative to short wavelength chlorophyll a forms, more long wavelength chlorophyll a form (e.g. chlorophyll a 693 and chlorophyll a 705) and less chlorophyll b than the latter. The degree of polarization of chlorophyll a fluorescence is 6% in bundle sheath and 4% in mesophyll chloroplasts. This result is consistent with the presence of relatively high amounts of oriented long wavelength forms of chlorophyll a in bundle sheath compared to mesophyll chloroplasts. The relative yield of variable, with respect to constant, chorophyll a fluorescence in mesophyll chloroplasts is more than twice that in bundle sheath chloroplast. Furthermore, the relative yield of total chlorophyll a fluorescence is 40% lower in bundle sheath compared to that in mesophyll chloroplasts. This is in agreement with the presence of the higher ratio of the weakly fluorescent pigment system I to pigment system II in bundle sheath than in mesophyll chloroplast. The efficiency of energy transfer from chlorophyll b and carotenoids to chlorophyll a are calculated to be 100 and 50%, respectively, in both types of chloroplasts. Fluorescence quenching of atebrin, reflecting high energy state of chloroplasts, is 10 times higher in mesophyll chloroplasts than in bundle sheath chloroplasts during noncyclic electron flow but is equal during cyclic flow. The entire electron transport chain is shown to be present in both types of chloroplasts, as inferred from the antagonistic effect of red (650 nm) and far red (710 nm) lights on the absorbance changes at 559 nm and 553 nm, and the photoreduction of methyl viologen from H2O. (The rate of methyl viologen photoreduction in bundle sheath chloroplasts was 40% of that of mesophyll chloroplasts.)  相似文献   

12.
Antibodies were raised against individual polypeptides of the oxygen-evolving photosystem II (PSII) complex from mesophyll chloroplasts of Vicia faba (Long Pod). These antibodies were used to probe immunologically for the presence of the main structural components of the PSII complex in guard cell chloroplasts, using both immunofluorescence microscopy and Western blotting. Immunofluorescence of epidermal peels with antibodies raised against the extrinsic 33 kilodalton polypeptide, as well as the 47 and the 44 kilodalton subunits and the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein, resulted in intense fluorescence indicating the presence of these polypeptide components in guard cell chloroplasts. Results obtained with Western blot analysis showed that the relative amounts of the 33 kilodalton and light-harvesting complex protein polypeptides are between 60 and 80% of that found in mesophyll cells (on chlorophyll basis). These results provide evidence for the existence of structural components associated with PSII activity in guard cell similar to those of mesophyll chloroplasts.  相似文献   

13.
The light-induced decline of chlorophyll a fluorescence from a peak (P) to a low stationary level (S) in intact, physiologically active isolated chloroplasts and in intact Chlorella cells is shown to be predominantly composed of two components: (1) fluorescence quenching by partial reoxidation of the quencher Q, the primary acceptor of Photosystem II and (2) energy-dependent fluorescence quenching related to the photoinduced acidification of the intrathylakoid space. These two mechanisms of fluorescence quenching can be distinguished by the different kinetics of the relaxation of quenching observed upon addition of 3-(3′,4′-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU). The relaxation of quenching by addition of DCMU is biphasic. The fast phase with a half-time of about 1 s is attributed to the reversal of Q-dependent quenching. The slow phase with a half-time of about 15 s in chloroplasts and 5 s in Chlorella cells is ascribed to relaxation of energy-dependent quenching. As shown by fluorescence spectroscopy at 77 K, the energy-dependent fluorescence quenching essentially is not caused by increased transfer of excitation energy to Photosystem I. By analyzing the energy- and Q-dependent components of quenching, information on the energy state of the thylakoid membranes and on the redox state of Q under various physiological conditions is obtained.  相似文献   

14.
We analyzed the chlorophyll fluorescence parameters in a 3Dcellular arrangement in vivo by using a modified Nipkow disk-typeconfocal laser scanning microscope (CLSM). We first definedthe 3D values of PSII (photochemical yield of PSII) and NPQ(non-photochemical quenching) in mesophyll, epidermal and guardcell chloroplasts from the leaf surface to several tens of micronsin depth. We also used this CLSM method to analyze the relationshipsbetween actinic light intensity and the chlorophyll fluorescenceparameters for Boston fern and broad bean leaf specimens. Asthe actinic light intensity increased, the mean PSII valuesdecreased and the NPQ values increased in all chloroplasts ofBoston fern and broad bean leaf. These values differed withcell type and species. The Boston fern chloroplasts had lowerPSII values than the broad bean chloroplasts, and vice versafor the NPQ values. The PSII values of Boston fern chloroplastsdecreased in the order mesophyll, epidermal and guard cell chloroplasts.The NPQ values decreased in the order guard cell, mesophylland epidermal chloroplasts, except at 12 µmol m–2s–1 actinic light, when the mesophyll value was slightlylower than that of the epidermis. The trend in the PSII andNPQ values of broad bean mesophyll and guard cell chloroplastswas opposite to that of Boston fern chloroplasts. As 3D CLSMcan provide the PSII and NPQ values of each chloroplast in a3D cellular arrangement, this method has potential for investigatingdifferences in the functions of chloroplasts in vivo.  相似文献   

15.
Vaughn KC 《Plant physiology》1987,84(1):188-196
Two immunological approaches were used to determine if ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase oxygenase (RuBisCo) is present in guard cell chloroplasts. Immunocytochemistry on thin plastic sections using tissue samples that were processed using traditional glutaraldehyde/osmium fixation and then restored to antigenicity with metaperiodate treatment, resulted in labeling over wild-type mesophyll and guard cell plastids of several green and white variegated Pelargonium chimeras. The density of immunogold labeling in guard cell chloroplasts was only about one-seventh of that noted in mesophyll chloroplasts on a square micron basis. Because guard cell chloroplasts are much smaller than mesophyll chloroplasts, and occur at lower quantities/cell, the relative differences in RuBisCo concentration between the cell types indicate that guard cells have only 0.48% of the RuBisCo of mesophyll cells. No reaction was noted over 70S ribosomeless plastids of these chimeras even though adjacent green chloroplasts were heavily stained, indicating the high specificity of the reaction for RuBisCo. Spurr's resin gave the most successful colloidal gold labeling in terms of low background staining and structural detail but L. R. White's resin appeared to be superior for antigen retention. In the white leaf edges of the white and green Pelargonium chimeras, the only green, functional chloroplasts are in the guard cells. When either whole tissue or plastid enriched extracts from this white tissue were electrophoresed, blotted, and probed with anti-RuBisCo a large subunit band was detected, identical to that in the green tissue. These data indicate that a low, but detectable, level of RuBisCo is present in guard cell chloroplasts.  相似文献   

16.
High-resolution images of the chlorophyll fluorescence parameter Fq'/Fm' from attached leaves of commelina (Commelina communis) and tradescantia (Tradescantia albiflora) were used to compare the responses of photosynthetic electron transport in stomatal guard cell chloroplasts and underlying mesophyll cells to key environmental variables. Fq'/Fm' estimates the quantum efficiency of photosystem II photochemistry and provides a relative measure of the quantum efficiency of non-cyclic photosynthetic electron transport. Over a range of light intensities, values of Fq'/Fm' were 20% to 30% lower in guard cell chloroplasts than in mesophyll cells, and there was a close linear relationship between the values for the two cell types. The responses of Fq'/Fm' of guard and mesophyll cells to changes of CO2 and O2 concentration were very similar. There were similar reductions of Fq'/Fm' of guard and mesophyll cells over a wide range of CO2 concentrations when the ambient oxygen concentration was decreased from 21% to 2%, suggesting that both cell types have similar proportions of photosynthetic electron transport used by Rubisco activity. When stomata closed after a pulse of dry air, Fq'/Fm' of both guard cell and mesophyll showed the same response; with a marked decline when ambient CO2 was low, but no change when ambient CO2 was high. This indicates that photosynthetic electron transport in guard cell chloroplasts responds to internal, not ambient, CO2 concentration.  相似文献   

17.
Lysenko V 《Planta》2012,235(5):1023-1033
Residual chlorophyll in chlorophyll-deficient (albino) areas of variegated leaves of Ficus benjamina originates from guard cell chloroplasts. Photosynthetic features of green and albino sectors of F. benjamina were studied by imaging the distribution of the fluorescence decrease ratio Rfd within a leaf calculated from maximum (Fm) and steady-state leaf chlorophyll fluorescence (Fs) at 690 and 740 nm. Local areas of albino sectors demonstrated an abnormally high Rfd740/Rfd690 ratio. Fluorescence transients excited in albino sectors at red (640 and 690 nm) wavelengths showed an abrupt decrease of the Rfd values (0.4 and 0.1, correspondingly) as compared with those excited at blue wavelengths (1.7–2.4). This “Red Drop” was not observed for green sectors. Normal and chlorophyll-deficient leaf sectors of F. benjamina were also tested for linear and cyclic electron transport in thylakoids. The tests have been performed studying fluorescence at a steady-state phase with CO2-excess impulse feeding, photoacoustic signal generated by pulse light source at wavelengths selectively exciting PSI, fluorescence kinetics under anaerobiosis and fluorescence changes observed by dual-wavelength excitation method. The data obtained for albino sectors strongly suggest the possibility of a cyclic electron transport simultaneously occurring in guard cell thylakoids around photosystems I and II under blue light, whereas linear electron transport is absent or insufficient.  相似文献   

18.
Cardon ZG  Berry J 《Plant physiology》1992,99(3):1238-1244
A procedure for following changes in the steady-state yield of chlorophyll a fluorescence (Fs) from single guard cell pairs in variegated leaves of Tradescantia albiflora is described. As an indicator of photosynthetic electron transport, Fs is a very sensitive indirect measure of the balance of adenosine 5′-triphosphate (ATP) and reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH), producing reactions with the sink reactions that utilize those light-generated products. We found that Fs under constant light is sensitive to manipulation of ambient CO2 concentrations, as would be expected if either phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase or ribulose-1, 5 bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco)-dependent CO2 fixation is the sink for photosynthetic ATP and NADPH in guard cells. However, we also found that changing O2 concentration had a strong effect on fluorescence yield, and that O2 sensitivity was only evident when the concentration of CO2 was low. This finding provides evidence that both O2 and CO2 can serve as sinks for ATP and NADPH produced by photosynthetic electron transport in guard cell chloroplasts. Identical responses were observed with mesophyll cell chloroplasts in intact leaves. This finding is difficult to reconcile with the view that guard cell chloroplasts have fundamentally different pathways of photosynthetic metabolism from other chloroplasts in C3 plants. Indeed, Rubisco has been detected at low levels in guard cell chloroplasts, and our studies indicate that it is active in the pathways for photosynthetic carbon reduction and photorespiration in guard cells.  相似文献   

19.
Dithiothreitol, which completely inhibits the de-epoxidation of violaxanthin to zeaxanthin, was used to obtain evidence for a causal relationship between zeaxanthin and the dissipation of excess excitation energy in the photochemical apparatus in Spinicia oleracea L. In both leaves and chloroplasts, inhibition of zeaxanthin formation by dithiothreitol was accompanied by inhibition of a component of nonphotochemical fluorescence quenching. This component was characterized by a quenching of instantaneous fluorescence (Fo) and a linear relationship between the calculated rate constant for radiationless energy dissipation in the antenna chlorophyll and the zeaxanthin content. In leaves, this zeaxanthin-associated quenching, which relaxed within a few minutes upon darkening, was the major component of nonphotochemical fluorescence quenching determined in the light, i.e. it represented the `high-energy-state' quenching. In isolated chloroplasts, the zeaxanthin-associated quenching was a smaller component of total nonphotochemical quenching and there was a second, rapidly reversible high-energy-state component of fluorescence quenching which occurred in the absence of zeaxanthin and was not accompanied by Fo quenching. Leaves, but not chloroplasts, were capable of maintaining the electron acceptor, Q, of photosystem II in a low reduction state up to high degrees of excessive light and thus high degrees of nonphotochemical fluorescence quenching. When ascorbate, which serves as the reductant for violaxanthin de-epoxidation, was added to chloroplast suspensions, zeaxanthin formation at low photon flux densities was stimulated and the relationship between nonphotochemical fluorescence quenching and the reduction state in chloroplasts then became more similar to that found in leaves. We conclude that the inhibition of zeaxanthin-associated fluorescence quenching by dithiothreitol provides further evidence that there exists a close relationship between zeaxanthin and potentially photoprotective dissipation of excess excitation energy in the antenna chlorophyll.  相似文献   

20.
The nonchromosomal stripe 2 (NCS2) mutant of maize (Zea mays L.) has a DNA rearrangement in the mitochondrial genome that segregates with the abnormal growth phenotype. Yet, the NCS2 characteristic phenotype includes striped sectors of pale-green tissue on the leaves. This suggests a chloroplast abnormality. To characterize the chloroplasts present in the mutant sectors, we examined the chloroplast structure by electron microscopy, chloroplast function by radiolabeled carbon dioxide fixation and fluorescence induction kinetics, and thylakoid protein composition by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The data from these analyses suggest abnormal or prematurely arrested chloroplast development. Deleterious effects of the NCS2 mutant mitochondria upon the cells of the leaf include structural and functional alterations in the both the bundle sheath and mesophyll chloroplasts.  相似文献   

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