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1.
It is known from previous investigations that dry lichens with green algae are able to recover net photosynthesis through rehydration with water vapor, whereas all blue-green lichens tested so far lack this ability. The REM micrographs of the present study show that the green phycobionts (Trebouxia spec.) of Ramalina maciformis become turgid only after water vapor uptake. In contrast, the blue-green phycobionts (Nostoc spec.) of Peltigera rufescens do not differ in appearance from the dry state, even when the thallus has reached equilibrium with the water vapor-saturated air; they require liquid water for turgidity. It is hypothesized that, after humidity hydration, water content is not sufficient for reestablishment of a functioning osmotic cell system in the blue-green phycobiont.  相似文献   

2.
W. Gsell  O. Kiirats  W. Hartung  U. Heber 《Planta》1989,177(3):367-376
The relationship between components of non-photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence yield (qNP) and dissipation of excessive excitation energy was determined in cotton leaves using concurrent measurements of fluorescence and gas-exchange at 2% and 20% O2 under a range of photon flux densities and CO2 pressures. A nearly stoichiometric relationship was obtained between dissipation of energy not used in photosynthetic CO2 fixation or photorespiration and qNP provided that a component, probably associated with state transitions, was not included in qNP. Although two distinct components of qNP were resolved on the basis of their relaxation kinetics, both components appear effective in energy dissipation. The photon yield of open photosystem-II reaction centers decreased linearly with increases in qNP, indicating that much of the energy dissipation occurs in the pigment bed. However, increases in qNP appear dependent on the redox state of these centers. The results are discussed in relation to current hypotheses of the molecular basis of non-radiative energy dissipation. It is concluded that determinations of qNP can provide a quantitative measure of the dissipation of excessive excitation energy if precautions are taken to ensure that the maximum fluorescence yield is measured under conditions that provide complete closure of the photosystem-II reaction centers. It is also concluded that such dissipation can prevent photoinhibitory damage in cotton leaves even under extreme conditions where as much as 80% of the excitation energy is excessive.Abbreviations and symbols F M, F O, F V, F S fluorescence yield when all PSII centers are closed, when all centers are open, FM-FO, at steady state in the light - PFD photon flux density (photon fluence rate) - P(CO2) sum of rates of CO2 uptake and dark respiration - P(ET) sum of P(CO2) and rate of oxygenation - PSI, PSII photosystem I, II - qNP, qP non-photochemical, photochemical fluorescence quenching - Q the acceptor for PSII - Q r/Q t the fraction of reduced Q or closed PSII centers - r/ t intrinsic photon yield of CO2 fixation in the absence of photorespiration of O2 evolution - a P(ET)/PFD (absorbed light) C.I.W. Publication No. 1016  相似文献   

3.
Lichens and phototolerant poikilohydric mosses differ from spinach leaves, fern fronds or photosensitive mosses in that they show strongly decreased Fo chlorophyll fluorescence after drying. This desiccation-induced fluorescence loss is rapidly reversible under rehydration. Fluorescence emission from Photosystem II at 685 nm was decreased more strongly by dehydration than 720 nm emission. Reaction centers of Photosystem II lose activity on dehydration and regain it on hydration. Heating of desiccated lichens increased Fo chlorophyll fluorescence. The activation energy for the reversible part of the temperature-dependent fluorescence increase was 0.045 eV, which corresponds to the energy difference between the 680 and 697 nm absorption bands. In desiccated chlorolichens such as Parmelia sulcata, heating induces the appearance of positive variable fluorescence related to the reversible reduction of QA due to overcoming the energy barrier. This is interpreted to provide information on the mechanism of photoprotection: energy is dissipated by changing Chl680 or P680 into a chlorophyll form, which absorbs at 700 nm and emits light at 720 nm (Chl-720 or P680(700)) with a low quantum yield. Dissipation of light energy in this trap is activated by desiccation.  相似文献   

4.
The mechanisms involved in desiccation tolerance of lichens and their photobionts are still poorly understood. To better understand these mechanisms we have studied dehydration rate and desiccation time in Trebouxia, the most abundant chlorophytic photobiont in lichen. Our findings indicate that the drying rate has a profound effect on the recovery of photosynthetic activity of algae after rehydration, greater than the effects of desiccation duration. The basal fluorescence (Fo) values in desiccated algae were significantly higher after rapid dehydration, than after slow dehydration, suggesting higher levels of light energy dissipation in slow-dried algae. Higher values of PSII electron transport were recovered after rehydration of slow-dried Trebouxia erici compared to rapid-dried algae. The main component of non-photochemical quenching after slow dehydration was energy dependent (q E), whereas after fast dehydration it was photoinhibition (q I). Although q E seems to play a role during desiccation recovery, no significant variations were detected in the xanthophyll cycle components. Desiccation did not affect PSI functionality. Classical antioxidant activities like superoxide dismutase or peroxidase decreased during desiccation and early recovery. Dehydrins were detected in the lichen-forming algae T. erici and were constitutively expressed. There is probably a minimal period required to develop strategies which will facilitate transition to the desiccated state in this algae. In this process, the xanthophyll cycle and classical antioxidant mechanisms play a very limited role, if any. However, our results indicate that there is an alternative mechanism of light energy dissipation during desiccation, where activation is dependent on a sufficiently slow dehydration rate.  相似文献   

5.
Summary The effect of high light levels on the two partners of a Pseudocyphellaria phycosymbiodeme (Pseudocyphellaria rufovirescens, with a green phycobiont, and P. murrayi with a blue-green phycobiont), which naturally occurs in deep shade, was examined and found to differ between the partners. Green algae can rapidly accumulate zeaxanthin, which we suggest is involved in photoprotection, through the xanthophyll cycle. Blue-green algae lack this cycle, and P. murrayi did not contain or form any zeaxanthin under our experimental conditions. Upon illumination, the thallus lobes with green algae exhibited strong nonphotochemical fluorescence quenching indicative of the radiationless dissipation of excess excitation energy, whereas thallus lobes with blue-green algae did not possess this capacity. The reduction state of photosystem II was higher by approximately 30% at each PFD beyond the light-limiting range in the blue-green algal partner compared with the green algal partner. Furthermore, a 2-h exposure to high light levels resulted in large reductions in the efficiency of photosynthetic energy conversion which were rapidly reversible in the lichen with green algae, but were long-lasting in the lichen with blue-green algae. Changes in fluorescence characteristics indicated that the cause of the depression in photosynthetic energy conversion was a reversible increase in radiationless dissipation in the green algal partner and photoinhibitory damage in the blue-green algal partner. These findings represent further evidence that zeaxanthin is involved in the photoprotective dissipation of excessive excitation energy in photosynthetic membranes. The difference in the capacity for rapid zeaxanthin formation between the two partners of the Pseudocyphellaria phycosymbiodeme may be important in the habitat selection of the two species when living separate from one another.Abbreviations F O yield of instantaneous fluorescence - F M maximum yield of fluorescence induced by pulses of saturating light - F V yield of variable fluorescence (F M -FO) induced by pulses of saturating light - PFD photon flux density (400–700 nm) - PS II photosystem II - q NP coefficient for nonphotochemical fluorescence quenching - q P (or 1-q P ) coefficient for photochemical fluorescence quenching  相似文献   

6.
The effect of freezing stress on chlorophyll fluorescence was examined in leaves of five genotypes of blackcurrant (Ribes nigrum L.). Minimum fluorescence (Fo), variable fluorescence (Fv) and the time for Fv to decay to half its maximum value (q1/2) all varied between genotypes. Freezing stress significantly reduced Fo in all genotypes, but the effect of freezing stress on Fv was non-significant. Freezing stress significantly increased q1/2, but the effect varied significantly between genotypes. The increase in q1/2 induced by freezing stress was greatest in the cultivar Baldwin and least in the accession Ri-74020-6. The effects of freezing on chlorophyll fluorescence, particularly q1/2, corresponded to the susceptibility of the genotypes to spring frosts. It is concluded that chlorophyll fluorescence can provide a rapid screening technique for assessing frost hardiness in blackcurrant.  相似文献   

7.
Exposure to high light induced a quantitatively similar decrease in the rate of photosynthesis at limiting photon flux density (PFD) and of photosystem II (PSII) photochemical efficiency, FV/FM, in both green and blue-green algal lichens which were fully hydrated. Such depressions in the efficiency of photochemical energy conversion were generally reversible in green algal lichens but rather sustained in blue-green algal lichens. This greater susceptibility of blue-green algal lichens to sustained photoinhibition was not related to differences in the capacity to utilize light in photosynthesis, since the light-and CO2-saturated rates of photosynthetic O2 evolution were similar in the two groups. These reductions of PSII photochemical efficiency were, however, largely prevented in lichen thalli which were fully desiccated prior to exposure to high PFD. Thalli of green algal lichens which were allowed to desiccate during the exposure to high light exhibited similar recovery kinetics to those which were kept fully hydrated, whereas bluegreen algal lichens which became desiccated during a similar exposure exhibited greatly accelerated recovery compared to those which were kept fully hydrated. Thus, green algal lichens were able to recover from exposure to excessive PFDs when thalli were in either the hydrated or desiccated state during such an exposure, whereas in blue-green algal lichens the decrease in photochemical efficiency was reversible in thalli illuminated in the desiccated state but rather sustained subsequent to illumination of thalli in the hydrated state.Abbreviations and Symbols Fo yield of instantaneous fluorescence - FM maximum yield of fluorescence induced by pulses of saturating light - FV variable yield of fluorescence - PFD photon flux density (400–700 nm) - PSII photosystem II This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgeneinschaft (Forscherguppe Ökophysiologic and Sonderforschungsbereich 251 of the University of Würzburg) and the Fonds der Chemischen Industrie. W.W.A. gratefully acknowledges the support of a fellowship from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation. We thank Professor T.G.A. Green for identifying and supplying all of the New Zealand lichen material and Professor F.-C. Czygan for advice concerning the chlorophyll analyses which were performed by Johanna Leisner.  相似文献   

8.
The possibility that zeaxanthin mediates the dissipation of an excess of excitation energy in the antenna chlorophyll of the photochemical apparatus has been tested through the use of an inhibitor of violaxanthin de-epoxidation, dithiothreitol (DTT), as well as through the comparison of two closely related organisms (green and blue-green algal lichens), one of which (blue-green algal lichen) naturally lacks the xanthophyll cycle. In spinach leaves, DTT inhibited a major component of the rapidly relaxing high-energy-state quenching' of chlorophyll fluorescence, which was associated with a quenching of the level of initial fluorescence (F0) and exhibited a close correlation with the zeaxanthin content of leaves when fluorescence quenching was expressed as the rate constant for radiationless energy dissipation in the antenna chlorophyll. Green algal lichens, which possess the xanthophyll cycle, exhibited the same type of fluorescence quenching as that observed in leaves. Two groups of blue-green algal lichens were used for a comparison with these green algal lichens. A group of zeaxanthin-free blue-green algal lichens did not exhibit the type of chlorophyll fluorescence quenching indicative of energy dissipation in the pigment bed. In contrast, a group of blue-green algal lichens which had formed zeaxanthin slowly through reactions other than the xanthophyll cycle, did show a very similar response to that of leaves and green algal lichens. Fluorescence quenching indicative of radiationless energy dissipation in the antenna chlorophyll was the predominant component of high-energy-state quenching in spinach leaves under conditions allowing for high rates of steady-state photosynthesis. A second, but distinctly different type of high-energy-state quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence, which was not inhibited by DTT (i.e., it was zeaxanthin independent) and which is possibly associated with the photosystem II reaction center, occurred in addition to that associated with zeaxanthin in leaves under a range of conditions which were less favorable for linear photosynthetic electron flow. In intact chloroplasts isolated from (zeaxanthin-free) spinach leaves a combination of these two types of rapidly reversible fluorescence quenching occurred under all conditions examined.Abbreviations DTT dithiothreitol - F0 (or F0) yield of instantaneous fluorescence at open PS II reaction centers in the dark (or during actinic illumination) - FM (or FM) yield of maximum fluorescence induced by a saturation pulse of light in the dark (or during actinic illumination) - FV (or FV) yield of variable fluorescence induced by a saturating pulse of light in the dark (or during actinic illumination) - k D rate constant for radiationless energy dissipation in the antenna chlorophyll - SV Stern-Volmer equation - PFD photon flux density - PS I photosystem I - PS II photosystem II - QA acceptor of photosystem II - qN coefficient of nonphotochemical chlorophyll fluorescence quenching - qP coefficient of photochemical chlorophyll fluorescence quenching  相似文献   

9.
Summary A convenient system for the rapid simultaneous measurement of both chlorophyll fluorescence quenching using a modulated light system, and of CO2, and water vapour exchange by leaves is described. The system was used in a study of the effects of water deficits on the photosynthesis by apple leaves (Malus x domestica Borkh.). Apple leaves were found to have low values of steady-state variable fluorescence, and the existence of significant fluorescence with open traps (Fo) quenching necessitated the measurement and use of a corrected Fo in the calculation of quenching components. Long-term water stress had a marked effect on both gas-exchange and chlorophyll fluorescence quenching. Non-photochemical quenching (qn) in particular was increased in water-stressed leaves, and it was particularly sensitive to incident radiation in such leaves. In contrast, rapid dehydration only affected gas exchange. Relaxation of qn quenching in the dark was slow, taking approximately 10 min for a 50% recovery, in well-watered and in draughted plants, and whether or not the plants had been exposed to high light.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Green lichens have been shown to attain positive net photosynthesis in the presence of water vapour while blue-green lichens require liquid water (Lange et al. 1986). This behaviour is confirmed not only for species with differing photobionts in the genusPseudocyphellaria but for green and blue-green photobionts in a single joined thallus (photosymbiodeme), with a single mycobiont, and also when adjacent as co-primary photobionts. The different response is therefore a property of the photobiont. The results are consistent with published photosynthesis/water content response curves. The minimum thallus water content for positive net photosynthesis appears to be much lower in green lichens (15% to 30%, related to dry weight) compared to blue-greens (85% to 100%). Since both types of lichen rehydrate to about 50% water content by water vapour uptake only green lichens will show positive net photosynthesis. It is proposed that the presence of sugar alcohols in green algae allow them to retain a liquid pool (concentrated solution) in their chloroplasts at low water potentials and even to reform it by water vapour uptake after being dried. The previously shown difference in δ13C values between blue-green and green lichens is also retained in a photosymbiodeme and must be photobiont determined. The wide range of δ13C values in lichens can be explained by a C3 carboxylation system and the various effects of different limiting processes for photosynthetic CO2 fixation. If carboxylation is rate limiting, there will be a strong discrimination of13CO2, at high internal CO2 partial pressure. The resulting very low δ13C values (-31 to-35‰) have been found only in green lichens which are able to photosynthesize at low thallus water content by equilibraiton with water vapour. When the liquid phase diffusion of CO2 becomes more and more rate limiting and the internal CO2 pressure decreases, the13C content of the photosynthates increases and less negative δ13C values results, as are found for blue-green lichens.  相似文献   

11.
Jensen  M.  Chakir  Samira  Feige  G.B. 《Photosynthetica》1999,37(3):393-404
Inactivation of photosynthesis during atmospheric and osmotic (highly concentrated NaCl or sucrose solutions) dehydration was monitored by measurement of chlorophyll fluorescence induction (OIP-phase, Kautsky-curves) in three lichen species. The induction curves were changed in a very similar way by all three treatments. All dehydration effects were rapidly reversible after rehydration. At relatively mild water stress, the rise time to the transient peak Fp was prolonged, and the variable part of fluorescence was diminished. In addition, at severe water stress, a considerable decline of the F0 value was observed. For NaCl treatment this effect started at water potentials <-8.5 MPa in P. aphthosa, <-12 MPa in H. physodes, and <-21 MPa in L. pulmonaria. Above these water potentials, our observations are in agreement with values from desiccation-tolerant algae, higher plants, and lichens, where an inactivation on the photosystem 2 (PS2) donor side has been postulated. At very low water potentials, the decrease in F0 probably monitors changes in the organization of the antenna apparatus of PS2. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

12.
Heber U  Bilger W  Bligny R  Lange OL 《Planta》2000,211(6):770-780
 Adaptation to excessive light is one of the requirements of survival in an alpine environment particularly for poikilohydric organisms which in contrast to the leaves of higher plants tolerate full dehydration. Changes in modulated chlorophyll fluorescence and 820-nm absorption were investigated in the lichens Xanthoria elegans (Link) Th. Fr. and Rhizocarpon geographicum (L.) DC, in the moss Grimmia alpestris Limpr. and the higher plants Geum montanum L., Gentiana lutea L. and Pisum sativum L., all collected at altitudes higher than 2000 m above sea level. In the dehydrated state, chlorophyll fluorescence was very low in the lichens and the moss, but high in the higher plants. It increased on rehydration in the lichens and the moss, but decreased in the higher plants. Light-induced charge separation in photosystem II was indicated by pulse-induced fluorescence increases only in dried leaves, not in the dry moss and dry lichens. Strong illumination caused photodamage in the dried leaves, but not in the dry moss and dry lichens. Light-dependent increases in 820-nm absorption revealed formation of potential quenchers of chlorophyll fluorescence in all dehydrated plants, but energy transfer to quenchers decreased chlorophyll fluorescence only in the moss and the lichens, not in the higher plants. In hydrated systems, coupled cyclic electron transport is suggested to occur concurrently with linear electron transport under strong actinic illumination particularly in the lichens because far more electrons became available after actinic illumination for the reduction of photo-oxidized P700 than were available in the pool of electron carriers between photosystems II and I. In the moss Grimmia, but not in the lichens or in leaves, light-dependent quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence was extensive even under nitrogen, indicating anaerobic thylakoid acidification by persistent cyclic electron transport. In the absence of actinic illumination, acidification by ca. 8% CO2 in air quenched the initial chlorophyll fluorescence yield Fo only in the hydrated moss and the lichens, not in leaves of the higher plants. Under the same conditions, 8% CO2 reduced the maximal fluorescence yield Fm strongly in the poikilohydric organisms, but only weakly or not at all in leaves. The data indicate the existence of deactivation pathways which enable poikilohydric organisms to avoid photodamage not only in the hydrated but also in the dehydrated state. In the hydrated state, strong nonphotochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence indicated highly sensitive responses to excess light which facilitated the harmless dissipation of absorbed excitation energy into heat. Protonation-dependent fluorescence quenching by cyclic electron transport, P700 oxidation and, possibly, excitation transfer between the photosystems were effectively combined to produce phototolerance. Received: 10 December 1999 / Accepted: 13 April 2000  相似文献   

13.
Green algal lichens, which were able to form zeaxanthin rapidly via the de-epoxidation of violaxanthin, exhibited a high capacity to dissipate excess excitation energy nonradiatively in the antenna chlorophyll as indicated by the development of strong nonphotochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence (FM, the maximum yield of fluorescence induced by pulses of saturating light) and, to a lesser extent, FO (the yield of instantaneous fluorescence). Blue-green algal lichens which did not contain any zeaxanthin were incapable of such radiationless energy dissipation and were unable to maintain the acceptor of photosystem II in a low reduction state upon exposure to excessive photon flux densities (PFD). Furthermore, following treatment of the thalli with an inhibitor of the violaxanthin de-epoxidase, dithiothreitol, the response of green algal lichens to light became very similar to that of the blue-green algal lichens. Conversely, blue-green algal lichens which had accumulated some zeaxanthin following long-term exposure to higher PFDs exhibited a response to light which was intermediate between that of zeaxanthin-free blue-green algal lichens and zeaxanthin-containing green algal lichens. Zeaxanthin can apparently be formed in blue-green algal lichens (which lack the xanthophyll epoxides, i.e. violaxanthin and antheraxanthin) as part of the normal biosynthetic pathway which leads to a variety of oxygenated derivatives of β-carotene during exposure to high light over several days. We conclude that the pronounced difference in the capacity for photoprotective energy dissipation in the antenna chlorophyll between (zeaxanthin-containing0 green algal lichens and (zeaxanthin-free) blue-green algal lichens is related to the presence or absence of zeaxanthin, and that this difference can explain the greater susceptibility to high-light stress in lichens with blue-green phycobionts.  相似文献   

14.
Intact attached sun leaves of Helianthus annuus and shade leaves of Monstera deliciosa and Hedera helix were used to obtain light response curves of CO2 uptake, the content of the carotenoid zeaxanthin (formed by violaxanthin de-epoxidation), as well as nonphotochemical quenching (qNP), and the rate constant of radiationless energy dissipation (kD). The latter two parameters were calculated from the decrease of chlorophyll a fluorescence at closed photosystem II traps in saturating pulses in the light. Among the three species, the light-saturated capacity of CO2 uptake differed widely and light saturation of CO2 uptake occurred at very different photon flux densities. Fluorescence quenching and zeaxanthin content exhibited features which were common to all three species: below light-saturation of CO2 uptake nonphotochemical quenching occurred in the absence of zeaxanthin and was not accompanied by a decrease in the yield of instantaneous fluorescence. Nonphotochemical quenching, qNP, increased up to values which ranged between 0.35 and 0.5 when based on a control value of the yield of variable fluorescence determined after 12 hours of darkness. As light saturation of CO2 uptake was approached, qNP showed a secondary increase and the zeaxanthin content of the leaves began to rise. This was also the point from which the yield of instantaneous fluorescence began to decrease. The increase in zeaxanthin was paralleled by an increase in the rate constant for radiationless energy dissipation kD, which opens the possibility that zeaxanthin is related to the rapidly relaxing “high-energy-state quenching” in leaves.  相似文献   

15.

A, net CO2 assimilation rate
E, leaf transpiration
ETR, electron transport rate
Fs, fluorescence yield at steady state
Fm and Fm', maximal fluorescence levels when all PSII reaction centres are closed in dark- and light-acclimated leaves, respectively
Fo and Fo', initial fluorescence levels when all PSII reaction centres are closed in dark- and light-acclimated leaves, respectively
Fv/Fm, efficiency of excitation capture by open PSII in dark-adapted leaves
ΔF/Fm', actual photochemical efficiency of PSII
g, stomatal conductance
NPQ, non-photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence
PPFD, photosynthetic photon flux density
ΨPD and ΨMD, leaf water potential at pre-dawn and midday, respectively
Rl, estimated photorespiration rate
I1 and I2, Irrigation treatments
R, Recovery treatment
D1 and D2, drought treatments
HD1 and HD2, hard drought treatments

Diurnal time courses of chlorophyll fluorescence and gas-exchange rates were measured in young potted grapevines (Vitis vinifera L. cv. Tempranillo) subjected to different conditions of water supply under Mediterranean summer conditions. The irrigated plants exhibited typical diurnal patterns for all measured parameters, showing a correspondence between electron transport rate, net CO2 assimilation and stomatal conductance. Mild decreases in soil-water availability led to different degrees of down-regulation of photosynthesis and increased nonphotochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence. A good correspondence between electron transport rate and CO2 assimilation was still maintained, suggesting a coregulation of both photosynthetic processes. In contrast, a severe water deficit induced a drastic down-regulation of photosynthesis and breakage of the above-mentioned link. Both midday net CO2 assimilation and electron transport rate significantly correlated with pre-dawn water potential (ΨPD) (r2 = 0·65 and r2 = 0·92, P < 0·001, respectively). However, when field data were analysed, the relationship between electron transport rate and ΨPD was not maintained, although net CO2 assimilation was similarly correlated with ΨPD. Interestingly, the steady-state chlorophyll fluorescence yield was a good indicator of plant water stress.  相似文献   

16.
Summary Dry lichen thalli were enclosed in gas exchange chambers and treated with an air stream of high relative humidity (96.5 to near 100%) until water potential equilibrium was reached with the surrounding air (i.e., no further increase of weight through water vapor uptake). They were then sprayed with liquid water. The treatment took place in the dark and was interrupted by short periods of light. CO2 exchange during light and dark respiration was monitored continuously. With no exception water uptake in all of the lichen species with green algae as phycobionts lead to reactivation of the photosynthetic metabolism. Further-more, high rates of CO2 assimilation were attained without the application of liquid water. To date 73 species with different types of Chlorophyceae phycobionts have been tested in this and other studies. In contrast, hydration through high air humidity alone failed to stimulate positive net photosynthesis in any of the lichens with blue-green algae (Cyanobacteria). These required liquid water for CO2 assimilation. So far 33 species have been investigated, and all have behaved similarly. These have included gelatinous as well as heteromerous species, most with Nostoc phycobionts but in addition some with three other Cyanophyceae phycobionts. The same phycobiont performance differences existed even within the same genus (e.g. Lobaria, Peltigera) between species pairs containing green or blue-green phycobionts respectively. Free living algae also seem to behave in a similar manner. Carbon isotope ratios of the lichen thalli suggest that a definite ecological difference exists in water status-dependent photosynthesis of species with green and blue-green phycobionts. The underlying biochemical or biophysical mechanisms are not yet understood. Apparently, a fundamental difference in the structure of the two groups of algae is involved.  相似文献   

17.
Rehmannia glutinosa seedlings were pretreated with choline chloride (CC) in concentrations of 0, 0.7, 2.1 and 3.5 mM, and then subjected to drought and rewatering treatment to study the effects of CC on the generation of reactive oxygen species (O2, H2O2), lipid peroxidation, proline accumulation, water status and photosynthesis. The results showed that pretreatment with CC alleviated the inhibition of SOD and APX activity caused by drought stress, and therefore, the rate of O2 production and H2O2 concentration were reduced and lipid peroxidation decreased in pretreated plants. CC pretreatment also accelerated accumulation of proline, maintained higher Ψw and RWC, deferred leaf water loss during drought stress and retarded the drop in proline concentration after rewatering. Consequently, drought-induced decreases in Fm/F0, Fv/Fm, ΦPS2, qP, and A and increase in qNP were inhibited and the recovery of photosynthesis after rewatering was quicker in pretreated plants. Although differences in Fv/Fm, ΦPS2 and qP between treatments were not significant, there was a general trend that the effects of CC increased with the rise of its concentrations. The data suggested that 2.1 mM of CC be suitable for alleviating lipid peroxidation, promoting proline accumulation, retarding leaf water loss and improving photosynthesis of R. glutinosa seedlings under drought stress.  相似文献   

18.
Pulse amplitude modulation fluorescence was used to investigate whether abscisic acid (ABA) pretreatment increases the desiccation tolerance of photosynthesis in the moss Atrichum undulatum. In unstressed plants, ABA pretreatment decreased the F V/F m ratio, largely as a result of an increase in F o. This indicated a reduction in energy transfer between LHCII and PSII, possibly hardening the moss to subsequent stress by reducing the production of the reactive oxygen species near PSII. During desiccation, F 0, F m, F v/F m, PSII, and NPQ and F 0 quenching declined in ABA-treated and nontreated mosses. However, during rehydration, F 0, F m, F v/F m, and PSII recovered faster in ABA-treated plants, suggesting that ABA improved the tolerance of photosystem II to desiccation. NPQ increased upon rehydration in mosses from both treatments, but much more rapidly in ABA-treated plants; during the first hour of rehydration, NPQ was two-fold greater in plants treated with ABA. F 0quenching followed a similar pattern, indicating that ABA treatment stimulated zeaxanthin-based quenching. The implications of these results for the mechanisms of ABA-induced desiccation tolerance in A. undulatum are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Photosystem II chlorophyll fluorescence and leaf net gas exchanges (CO2 and H2O) were measured simultaneously on bean leaves (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) submitted either to different ambient CO2 concentrations or to a drought stress. When leaves are under photorespiratory conditions, a simple fluorescence parameter F/ Fm (B. Genty et al. 1989, Biochem. Biophys. Acta 990, 87–92; F = difference between maximum, Fm, and steady-state fluorescence emissions) allows the calculation of the total rate of photosynthetic electron-transport and the rate of electron transport to O2. These rates are in agreement with the measurements of leaf O2 absorption using 18O2 and the kinetic properties of ribulose-1,5bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase. The fluorescence parameter, F/Fm, showed that the allocation of photosynthetic electrons to O2 was increased during the desiccation of a leaf. Decreasing leaf net CO2 uptake, either by decreasing the ambient CO2 concentration or by dehydrating a leaf, had the same effect on the partitioning of photosynthetic electrons between CO2 and O2 reduction. It is concluded that the decline of net CO2 uptake of a leaf under drought stress is only due, at least for a mild reversible stress (causing at most a leaf water deficit of 35%), to stomatal closure which leads to a decrease in leaf internal CO2 concentration. Since, during the dehydration of a leaf, the calculated internal CO2 concentration remained constant or even increased we conclude that this calculation is misleading under such conditions.Abbreviations Ca, Ci ambient, leaf internal CO2 concentrations - Fm, Fo, Fs maximum, minimal, steady-state fluorescence emission - Fv variable fluorescence emission - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density - qp, qN photochemical, non-photochemical fluorescence quenching - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase  相似文献   

20.
《Fungal biology》2020,124(10):903-913
Although water is essential for photosynthetic activation in lichens, rates of vapor uptake and activation in humid air, which likely influence their niche preferences and distribution ranges, are insufficiently known. This study simultaneously quantifies rehydration kinetics and PSII reactivation in sympatric, yet morphologically and functionally distinct cephalolichens (Lobaria amplissima, Lobaria pulmonaria, Lobaria virens). High-temporal resolution monitoring of rehydrating thalli by automatic weighing combined with chlorophyll fluorescence imaging of maximal PSII efficiency (FV/FM) was applied to determine species-specific rates of vapor uptake and photosynthetic activation. The thin and loosely attached growth form of L. pulmonaria rehydrates and reactivates faster in humid air than the thick L. amplissima, with L. virens in between. This flexible hydration strategy is consistent with L. pulmonaria’s wide geographical distribution stretching from rainforests to continental forests. By contrast, the thick and resupinate L. amplissima reactivates slowly in humid air but stores much water when provided in abundance. This prolongs active periods after rain, which could represent an advantage where abundant rain and stem flow alternates with long-lasting drying. Understanding links between morphological traits and functional responses, and their ecological implications for species at risk, is crucial to conservation planning and for modelling populations under various climate scenarios.  相似文献   

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