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1.
A newly developed nitrogen laser fluorimeter insensitive to actinic illumination was used to follow simultaneously the light induced changes in red and blue fluorescence of intact isolated spinach chloroplasts and leaf pieces. The recorded variable blue fluorescence was linked to a water soluble component of intact isolated chloroplasts, depended on Photosystem I, and was related to changes in carbon metabolism. From the comparison of changes in intact and broken chloroplasts and from fluorescence spectra under different conditions, it was concluded that the variation in NADPH was the major cause for the changes in blue fluorescence. This study opens a path towards continuous and non-destructive monitoring of NADPH redox state in chloroplasts and leaves.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - DHAP dihydroxyacetone phosphate - DLGA DL-glyceraldehyde - FNR ferredoxin-NADP reductase - FWHM full width at half maximum - LED light emitting diodes - OAA oxaloacetate - qN non-photochemical quenching - PGA 3-phosphoglycerate - Pi inorganic orthophosphate - qP photochemical quenching - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density - QA primary quinone acceptor of Photosystem II Preliminary results of this work were presented at the First Conference on the Physiology and Biochemistry of high Mountain Plants, 2–3 July 1992, Villar d'Arene, France.  相似文献   

2.
The modifications of the room temperature fluorescence spectrum during the photoactivation of the water-splitting system by continuous illumination were investigated in flashed barley leaves. A blue shift of the chlorophyll fluorescence band was detected during the first 2 min of illumination. During this shift, a decrease of the fluorescence intensity around 693 nm could be demonstrated in difference spectra and in second derivative spectra. This decrease is interpreted as a quenching of PS II fluorescence during the photoactivation. A relative fluorescence increase around 672 nm also occurred during the same period and is thought to reflect rapid light-induced chlorophyll formation. The flashed leaves contained small amounts of photoactive photochlorophyllide which could be removed by a short flash of intense white light given before continuous illumination. The fact that such flash had only weak effect on the 693 nm fluorescence decrease, whereas it strongly reduced the amplitude of the 672 nm fluorescence increase, favours the above interpretations.Abbreviations chl chlorophyll - PS II Photosystem II - PS I Photosystem I  相似文献   

3.
Michael Bradbury  Neil R. Baker 《BBA》1984,765(3):275-281
Estimations of the changes in the reduction-oxidation state of Photosystem II electron acceptors in Phaseolus vulgaris leaves were made during the slow decline in chlorophyll fluorescence emission from the maximal level at P to the steady-state level at T. The relative contributions of photochemical and non-photochemical processes to the fluorescence quenching were determined from these data. At a low photon flux density of 100 μmol · m?2 · s?1, non-photochemical quenching was the major contributor to the fluorescence decline from P to T, although large charges were observed in photochemical quenching immediately after P. On increasing the light intensity 10-fold, the contribution of photochemical processes to fluorescence quenching was markedly diminished, with nearly all the P-to-T fluorescence decline being attributable to changes in non-photochemical quenching. The possible factors responsible for changes in non-photochemical quenching within the leaves are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
The low-wave phenomenon, i.e., the transient drop of yield of modulated chlorophyll fluorescence shortly after application of a pulse of saturating light, was investigated in intact leaves of tobacco and Camellia by measuring fluorescence, CO(2) assimilation and absorption at 830 nm simultaneously. Limitations on linear electron flow, due to low electron acceptor levels that were induced by low CO(2), induced the low waves of chlorophyll fluorescence. Low-wave amplitudes obtained under different CO(2) concentrations and photon-flux densities yielded single-peak curves when plotted as functions of fluorescence parameters such as PhiPS II (quantum yield of Photosystem II) and qN (coefficient of non-photochemical quenching), suggesting that low-wave formation depends on the redox state of the electron transport chain. Low waves paralleled redox changes of P700, the reaction center of Photosystem I (PS I), and an additional electron flow through PS I was detected during the application of saturating pulses that induced low-waves. It is suggested that low waves of chlorophyll fluorescence are induced by increased non-photochemical quenching, as a result of the formation of a trans-thylakoid proton gradient due to cyclic electron flow around PS I.  相似文献   

5.
A newly developed fluorescence measuring system is employed for the recording of chlorophyll fluorescence induction kinetics (Kautsky-effect) and for the continuous determination of the photochemical and non-photochemical components of fluorescence quenching. The measuring system, which is based on a pulse modulation principle, selectively monitors the fluorescence yield of a weak measuring beam and is not affected even by extremely high intensities of actinic light. By repetitive application of short light pulses of saturating intensity, the fluorescence yield at complete suppression of photochemical quenching is repetitively recorded, allowing the determination of continuous plots of photochemical quenching and non-photochemical quenching. Such plots are compared with the time courses of variable fluorescence at different intensities of actinic illumination. The differences between the observed kinetics are discussed. It is shown that the modulation fluorometer, in combination with the application of saturating light pulses, provides essential information beyond that obtained with conventional chlorophyll fluorometers.  相似文献   

6.
A brief reversible lowering of chlorophyll fluorescence yield (so called low-waves) immediately after application of a saturating light pulse in parallel with a short-time enhancement of the P700 oxidation level was observed in the green alga Haematococcus pluvialis. The phenomenon occurred in the steady-state time region of fluorescence induction kinetics under mild acidic conditions, and was eliminated by bicarbonate. Shortly after expression of low-waves, the photosynthetic oxygen evolution rate decreased and the non-photochemical chlorophyll fluorescence quenching component increased. The enhancement of the non-photochemical chlorophyll fluorescence quenching component was nigericin-sensitive indicating its dependence on the transthylakoid proton gradient. On the other hand, the formation of low-waves was not removed by the uncoupler. Only when bicarbonate was applied additionally, the reversible short-term decrease in fluorescence yield following each saturating light flash was abolished. Dimethyl-4-nitroso-aniline as an artificial electron acceptor of Photosystem I did not limit the brief drops in fluorescence. However, formate as a competitive inhibitor of bicarbonate binding in Photosystem II induced low-wave formation. Therefore, our results suggest that low-waves in chlorophyll fluorescence kinetics indicate deprivation of bicarbonate in the reaction centre of Photosystem II. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Dissipation of absorbed excitation energy as heat, measured by its effect on the quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence, is induced under conditions of excess light in order to protect the photosynthetic apparatus of plants from light-dependent damage. The spectral characteristics of this quenching have been compared to that due to photochemistry in the Photosystem II reaction centre using leaves of Guzmania monostachia. This was achieved by making measurements at 77K when fluorescence emission bands from each type of chlorophyll protein complex can be distinguished. It was demonstrated that photochemistry and non-photochemical dissipation preferentially quench different emission bands and therefore occur by dissimilar mechanisms at separate sites. It was found that photochemistry was associated with a preferential quenching of emission at 688 nm whereas the spectrum for rapidly reversible non-photochemical quenching had maxima at 683 nm and 698 nm, suggesting selective quenching of the bands originating from the light harvesting complexes of Photosystem II. Further evidence that this was occurring in the light harvesting system was obtained from the fluorescence excitation spectra recorded in the quenched and relaxed states.Abbreviations pH transthylakoid pH gradient - Fo minimum level of chlorophyll fluorescence when Photosystem II reaction centres are open - Fm maximum level of fluorescence when Photosystem II reaction centres are closed - Fv variable fluorescence Fm minus Fo - F'o Fo in any quenched state - Fm Fm in any quenched state - LHCII light harvesting complexes of Photosystem II - PSI Photosystem I - PS II Photosystem II - qN non-photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence - qE non-photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence that occurs in the presence of a pH  相似文献   

9.
10.
In photosynthetic chains, the kinetics of fluorescence yield depends on the photochemical rates at the level of both Photosystem I and II and thus on the absorption cross section of the photosynthetic units as well as on the coupling between light harvesting complexes and photosynthetic traps. A new set-up is described which, at variance with the commonly used set-ups, uses of a weakly absorbed light source (light-emitting diodes with maximum output at 520 nm) to excite the photosynthetic electron chain and probe the resulting fluorescence yield changes and their time course. This approach optimizes the homogeneity of the exciting light throughout the leaf and we show that this homogeneity narrows the distribution of the photochemical rates. Although the exciting light is weakly absorbed, the possibility to tune the intensity of the light emitting diodes allows one to reach photochemical rates ranging from 10(4) s(-1) to 0.25 s(-1) rendering experimentally accessible different functional regimes. The variations of the fluorescence yield induced by the photosynthetic activity are qualitatively and quantitatively discussed. When illuminating dark-adapted leaves by a weak light, the kinetics of fluorescence changes displays a pronounced plateau which precedes the fluorescence increase reflecting the full reduction of the plastoquinone pool. We ascribe this plateau to the time delay needed to reduce the photosystem I electron acceptors.  相似文献   

11.
A bioreactor system was developed for the cultivation of the microalgae Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 under controlled physiological conditions. The determination of the actual physiological state of the microalgae was provided by inline recording of chlorophyll fluorescence parameters. A feed-back loop was employed to keep the microalgae in a defined physiological state. For the construction of this feed-back loop, the temporal behaviour of the system was investigated using changes in light conditions (as caused by modulated UVB radiation) as input signal and chlorophyll fluorescence as output signal. The reproducibility of the responses was high. Kinetic analysis based on curve fitting revealed two time constants in the UVB-induced responses. The knowledge of these time constants was utilised for the development of an efficient feed-back loop which allows the cultivation of the microalgae in a defined physiological state. This new process strategy (called physiostat) was successfully tested. The performance in a culture of growing microalgae is shown.  相似文献   

12.
We present a chlorophyll fluorometer module system which adapts the intensity to the individual leaf sample by adjusting the quantum flux density of the excitation light so that the fluorescence signal is kept constant. This is achieved by means of a feedback power adjustment of the fluorescence exciting laser diode. Thus, the intensity of the excitation light is adapted to the actual need of a particular sample for quantum conversion without applying exaggeratedly high quantum flux density. We demonstrate the influence of the initial laser power chosen at the onset of irradiation and kept constant during fluorescence rise transient within the first second. Examples are shown for measuring upper and lower leaf sides, a single leaf with different pre-darkening periods, as well as yellow, light green and dark green leaves. The novel excitation kinetics during the induction of chlorophyll fluorescence can be used to study the yield and regulation of photosynthesis and its related non-photochemical processes for an individual leaf. It allows not only to sense the present state of pre-darkening or pre-irradiation but also the light environment the leaf has experienced during its growth and development. Thus, the individual physiological capacity and plasticity of each leaf sample can be sensed being of high importance for basic and applied ecophysiological research which makes this new methodology both innovative and informative.  相似文献   

13.
A detailed study of the photo-induced decline in chlorophyll a fluorescence intensity (Kautsky phenomenon) in coupled isolated chloroplasts from a high level (P) to a low stationary level (S) is presented. 1. A linear relationship between P leads to S quenching and intrathylakoid H+ concentration was found. When the light-induced proton gradient was abolished by uncoupling, the fluorescence emission at room temperature was lowered proportionally to increased H+ concentration in the medium. 2. Fluorescence spectra at -196 degrees C of samples frozen at the P and S states showed no significant differences in the Photosystem I/Photosystem II ratio of fluorescence emission. Furthermore, freezing to -196 degrees C reversed the P leads to S quenching. This indicates that the P leads to S quenching is not related to an increase of spillover of excitation energy from Photosystem II to Photosystem I. 3. When Mg2+ was added to thylakoids suspended in a medium free of divalent cations, the inhibition of spillover required lower Mg2+ concentrations (half saturation at 0.6 mM). Increased proton concentration in the medium also inhibited spillover. 4. The results are interpreted in terms of two sites of Mg2+ and H+ effects on excitation deactivation in Photosystem II. One site is located on the outer face of the thylakoid membrane; action of both Mg2+ and H+ at this side diminishes spillover. The second site is located on the inner face of the membrane; as Mg2+ is displaced there by protons, a non-photochemical quenching of Photosystem II fluorescence is induced, which is manifested by the P leads to S decline.  相似文献   

14.
Photosynthetic organisms exposed to a dynamic light environment exhibit complex transients of photosynthetic activities that are strongly dependent on the temporal pattern of the incident irradiance. In a harmonically modulated light of intensity I approximately const.+sin(omegat), chlorophyll fluorescence response consists of a steady-state component, a component modulated with the angular frequency of the irradiance omega and several upper harmonic components (2omega, 3omega and higher). Our earlier reverse engineering analysis suggests that the non-linear response can be caused by a negative feedback regulation of photosynthesis. Here, we present experimental evidence that the negative feedback regulation of the energetic coupling between phycobilisome and Photosystem II (PSII) in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 indeed results in the appearance of upper harmonic modes in the chlorophyll fluorescence emission. Dynamic changes in the coupling of the phycobilisome to PSII are not accompanied by corresponding antiparallel changes in the Photosystem I (PSI) excitation, suggesting a regulation limited to PSII. Strong upper harmonic modes were also found in the kinetics of the non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) of chlorophyll fluorescence, of the P700 redox state and of the CO(2) assimilation in tobacco (Nicotiana tabaccum) exposed to harmonically modulated light. They are ascribed to negative feedback regulation of the reactions of the Calvin-Benson cycle limiting the photosynthetic electron transport. We propose that the observed non-linear response of photosynthesis may also be relevant in a natural light environment that is modulated, e.g., by ocean waves, moving canopy or by varying cloud cover. Under controlled laboratory conditions, the non-linear photosynthetic response provides a new insight into dynamics of the regulatory processes.  相似文献   

15.
Thylakoids of the prokaryote Prochloron, present as a symbiont in ascidians isolated from the Red Sea at Eilat (Israel), showed polypeptide electrophoretic patterns comparable to those of thylakoids from eukaryotic oxygen-evolving organisms. Low temperature, fluorescence spectroscopy of Prochloron, having a chlorophyll a/b ratio of 3.8–5, and frozen in situ, demonstrated the presence of Photosystem II chlorophyll-protein complex emitting at 686 and 696 nm, as well as the emission band of Photosystem I at 720 nm which was so far not observed in Prochloron species. The latter emission was absent, if the cells or thylakoids were isolated prior to freezing. Energy transfer from chlorophyll b to chlorophyll a could be demonstrated to occur in vivo. The chlorophyll a,b-protein complex of Photosystem II, isolated by non-denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, contained one major polypeptide of 34 kDa. The polypeptide was phosphorylated in vitro by a membrane-bound protein kinase which was not stimulated by light. A light-independent protein kinase activity was also found in isolated thylakoids of another prokaryote, the cyanophyte Fremyella diplosiphon. State I–State II transition could not be demonstrated in Prochloron by measurements of modulated fluorescence intensity in situ. We suggest that the presence of a light-independent thylakoid protein kinase of Prochloron, collected in the Red Sea at not less than 30 m depth, might be the result of an evolutionary process whereby this organism has adapted to an environment in which light, absorbed preferentially by Photosystem II, prevails.  相似文献   

16.
The chlorophyll-protein CP43' (isiA gene) induced by stress conditions in cyanobacteria is shown to serve as an antenna for Photosystem II (PSII), in addition to its known role as an antenna for Photosystem I (PSI). At high light intensity, this antenna is converted to an efficient trap for chlorophyll excitations that protects system II from photo-inhibition. In contrast to the 'energy-dependent non-photochemical quenching' (NPQ) in chloroplasts, this photoprotective energy dissipation in cyanobacteria is triggered by blue light. The induction is proportional to light intensity. Induction and decay of the quenching exhibit the same large temperature-dependence.  相似文献   

17.
Yasusi Yamamoto  Bacon Ke 《BBA》1981,636(2):175-184
Surface charge density of subchloroplast fragments fractionated from spinach by Triton X-100 treatment was estimated from cation-induced quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence, with the premise that the fluorescence yield is dependent on the surface electric potential of the preparations. Application of the Gouy-Chapman theory of diffuse double layer to the subchloroplast preparations, or treating the surface of the preparations under electric charge regulation conditions yielded a result suggesting the Photosystem II reaction-center preparation (TSF-IIa) to be more negatively charged than the Photosystem I reaction-center preparation (TSF-I). Isoelectric points of the subchloroplast fragments were determined by measuring 90° light scattering and more directly by gel isoelectric focusing. Isoelectric points of TSF-I and -IIa were estimated to be 4.8 and 4.0 from light-scattering experiments, and 4.5 and 4.1 from gel electrophoresis, respectively. The TSF-II preparation that contains both a light-harvesting complex and the reaction-center (core) complex showed a small cation-induced quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence. This fluorescence quenching may be ascribed mostly to the regulation of energy transfer in the preparation (Yamamoto, Y. and Ke, B. (1980) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 592, 296–302). Furthermore, the TSF-II preparation showed a broad and indefinite peak in light scattering in the pH range 3–8, suggesting that the complex probably carries a small amount of charge in this pH range. The physiological role of the membrane surface charge of the subchloroplast preparations in membrane structure and cation regulated processes in chloroplast is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Under excess illumination, the Photosystem II light-harvesting antenna of higher plants has the ability to switch into an efficient photoprotective mode, allowing safe dissipation of excitation energy into heat. In this study, we show induction of the energy dissipation state, monitored by chlorophyll fluorescence quenching, in the isolated major light-harvesting complex (LHCII) incorporated into a solid gel system. Removal of detergent caused strong fluorescence quenching, which was totally reversible. Singlet-singlet annihilation and gel electrophoresis experiments suggested that the quenched complexes were in the trimeric not aggregated state. Both the formation and recovery of this quenching state were inhibited by a cross-linker, implying involvement of conformational changes. Absorption and CD measurements performed on the samples in the quenched state revealed specific alterations in the spectral bands assigned to the red forms of chlorophyll a, neoxanthin, and lutein 1 molecules. The majority of these alterations were similar to those observed during LHCII aggregation. This suggests that not the aggregation process as such but rather an intrinsic conformational transition in the complex is responsible for establishment of quenching. 77 K fluorescence measurements showed red-shifted chlorophyll a fluorescence in the 690-705 nm region, previously observed in aggregated LHCII. The fact that all spectral changes associated with the dissipative mode observed in the gel were different from those of the partially denatured complex strongly argues against the involvement of protein denaturation in the observed quenching. The implications of these findings for proposed mechanisms of energy dissipation in the Photosystem II antenna are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract An instrument for the generation and measurement of modulated chlorophyll fluorescence signals from leaves exposed to continuous, highintensity white light is described. Modulated fluorescence is generated in the leaf by pulsed diodes emitting low-intensity yellow radiation and is detected with a photodiode whose output is fed to an amplifier locked in to the frequency of the lightemitting diodes. Comparisons are made between the modulated fluorescence signals measured with this instrument and the continuous fluorescence signals emitted from dark-adapted leaf tissue and isolated thylakoids when photosynthetic activity is induced by exposure to a range of intensities of continuous broad-band, blue-green light. The modulated fluorescence signals were similar to the continuous fluorescence signals, but they were not always identical. The small differences between the two signals are mainly attributable to differences in the populations of chloroplasts being monitored in the two measurements as a result of differential penetration of the modulated and actinic light sources into the sample.  相似文献   

20.
The relation between photosynthetic oxygen evolution and Photosystem II electron transport was investigated for the marine algae t Phaeodactylum tricornutum, Dunaliella tertiolecta, Tetraselmis sp., t Isochrysis sp. and t Rhodomonas sp.. The rate of Photosystem II electron transport was estimated from the incident photon flux density and the quantum efficiency of Photosystem II electron transport as determined by chlorophyll fluorescence. The relation between the estimated rate of Photosystem II electron transport and the rate of oxygen evolution was investigated by varying the ambient light intensity. At limiting light intensities a linear relation was found in all species. At intensities approaching light saturation, the relation was found to deviate from linearity. The slope of the line in the light-limited range is species dependent and related to differences in absorption cross-section of Photosystem II. The observed non-linearity at high irradiances is not caused by photorespiration but probably by a Mehler-type of oxygen reduction. The relationship could be modelled by including a redox-state dependent oxygen uptake. In the diatom t Phaeodactylum tricornutum, the photochemical efficiency of dark adapted open Photosystem II centers was found to be temperature-dependent with an optimum near 10°C.  相似文献   

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