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1.
Goc  J.  Klecha  K.  Waskowiak  A.  Miyake  J.  Frackowiak  D. 《Photosynthetica》2002,40(1):41-48
The polarized absorption, photoacoustic, fluorescence emission, and fluorescence excitation spectra of whole cells of cyanobacteria Synechocystis sp. embedded in a polymer film were measured. The bacteria cells, as it follows from anisotropy of absorption and fluorescence spectra, were even in a non-stretched polyvinyl alcohol film oriented to a certain extent. The measurements were done for such film in order to avoid the deformation of cyanobacteria shapes. Part of the samples was bleached by irradiation with strong polarized radiation with electric vector parallel to the orientation axis of cells. The anisotropy of photoacoustic spectra was higher than that of absorption spectra and it was stronger changed by the irradiation. Polarized fluorescence was excited in four wavelength regions characterised by different contribution to absorption from various bacteria pigments. The shapes of emission spectra were different depending on wavelength of excitation, polarization of radiation, and previous irradiation of the sample. The fluorescence spectra were analysed on Gaussian components belonging to various forms of pigments from photosystems (PS) 1 and 2. The results inform about excitation energy transfer between pools of pigments, differently oriented in the cells. Energy of photons absorbed by phycobilisomes was transferred predominantly to the chlorophyll of PS2, whereas photons absorbed by carotenoids to chlorophylls of PS1.  相似文献   

2.
Fluorometric determination of the chlorophyll (Chl) content of cyanobacteria is impeded by the unique structure of their photosynthetic apparatus, i.e., the phycobilisomes (PBSs) in the light-harvesting antennae. The problems are caused by the variations in the ratio of the pigment PC to Chl a resulting from adaptation to varying environmental conditions. In order to include cyanobacteria in fluorometric analysis of algae, a simplified energy distribution model describing energy pathways in the cyanobacterial photosynthetic apparatus was conceptualized. Two sets of mathematical equations were derived from this model and tested. Fluorescence of cyanobacteria was measured with a new fluorometer at seven excitation wavelength ranges and at three detection channels (650, 685 and 720 nm) in vivo. By employing a new fit procedure, we were able to correct for variations in the cyanobacterial fluorescence excitation spectra and to account for other phytoplankton signals. The effect of energy-state transitions on the PC fluorescence emission of PBSs was documented. The additional use of the PC fluorescence signal in combination with our recently developed mathematical approach for phytoplankton analysis based on Chl fluorescence spectroscopy allows a more detailed study of cyanobacteria and other phytoplankton in vivo and in situ.  相似文献   

3.
F Tanaka  N Tamai  I Yamazaki 《Biochemistry》1989,28(10):4259-4262
Protein dynamics of D-amino-acid oxidase in the picosecond region was investigated by measuring time-resolved fluorescence of the bound coenzyme, FAD. The observed nonexponential fluorescence decay curves were analyzed with four-exponential decay functions. The fluorescence lifetimes at the best fit were 26.6 +/- 0.7 ps, 44.0 +/- 4.2 ps, 177 +/- 11 ps, and 2.28 +/- 0.21 ns at 20 degrees C and 25.2 +/- 3.0 ps, 50.3 +/- 8.7 ps, 228 +/- 27 ps, and 2.75 +/- 0.33 ns at 5 degrees C. Component fractions with the shortest lifetime, ca. 26 ps, were always negative and close to -1. The other fluorescent components of the lifetimes, ca. 47 ps, 200 ps, and 2.6 ns, with positive fractions were assigned to different forms of the enzyme including the dimer, the monomer, and free FAD dissociated from the enzyme. Measurements of the time-resolved fluorescence spectra revealed that the maximum wavelengths of the spectra shifted toward shorter wavelength by 65 nm at 20 degrees C and 36 nm at 5 degrees C within 100 ps after pulsed excitation. The remarkable blue shift was not observed in free FAD. The first spectra immediately after the excitation of the enzyme exhibited maximum wavelengths of 584 nm at 20 degrees C and 557 nm at 5 degrees C. The fluorescence spectra obtained at times later than 100 ps are in good agreement with the one obtained under steady-state excitation of D-amino-acid oxidase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
Low temperature (-196C) and room temperature (25C) absorption spectra of a family of allophycocyanin spectral forms isolated from Nostoc sp. phycobilisomes as well as of the phycobilisomes themselves have been analyzed by Gaussian curve-fitting. Allophycocyanin I and B share long wavelength components at 668 and 679 nm, bands that are absent from allophycocyanin II and III. These long wavelength absorption components are apparently responsible for the 20 nm difference between the 680 nm fluorescence emission maximum of allophycocyanin I and B and the 660 nm maximum of II and III. This indicates that allophycocyanin I and B are the final acceptors of excitation energy in the phycobilisome and the excitation energy transfer bridge linking the phycobilisome with the chlorophyll-containing thylakoid membranes. These Gaussian components are also found in resolved spectra of phycobilisomes, are arguing against this family of allophycocyanin molecules being artifactual products of protein purification procedures.  相似文献   

5.
Fluorometric determination of the chlorophyll (Chl) content of cyanobacteria is impeded by the unique structure of their photosynthetic apparatus, i.e., the phycobilisomes (PBSs) in the light-harvesting antennae. The problems are caused by the variations in the ratio of the pigment PC to Chl a resulting from adaptation to varying environmental conditions. In order to include cyanobacteria in fluorometric analysis of algae, a simplified energy distribution model describing energy pathways in the cyanobacterial photosynthetic apparatus was conceptualized. Two sets of mathematical equations were derived from this model and tested. Fluorescence of cyanobacteria was measured with a new fluorometer at seven excitation wavelength ranges and at three detection channels (650, 685 and 720 nm) in vivo. By employing a new fit procedure, we were able to correct for variations in the cyanobacterial fluorescence excitation spectra and to account for other phytoplankton signals. The effect of energy-state transitions on the PC fluorescence emission of PBSs was documented. The additional use of the PC fluorescence signal in combination with our recently developed mathematical approach for phytoplankton analysis based on Chl fluorescence spectroscopy allows a more detailed study of cyanobacteria and other phytoplankton in vivo and in situ.  相似文献   

6.
Protochlorophyll forms in roots of dark-grown plants   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Protochlorophyll was found in roots of dark-grown plants of seven species investigated. It was identified by absorbance and fluorescence spectra of acetone and ether extracts. Chlorophyll was also found in roots of one pea species. The concentration of protochlorophyll was usually highest in young root tips and decreased upwards along the roots. The maxima of the in vivo absorbance spectra of the species studied varied between 634 and 638 nm. Low temperature in vivo fluorescence emission spectra had two maxima, one at ca 633 and the other at ca 642 nm, when the wavelengths of the excitation light were 440 and 460 nm, respectively. In vivo fluorescence excitation spectra displayed a shift of the excitation maximum from 438 to 445 nm, when emission varied from 620 to 647.5 nm. Deconvolution of these three types of spectra into Gaussian components made it possible to identify two spectral forms of protochlorophyll: protochlorophyll629–633 and protochlorophyll638–642.  相似文献   

7.
Exposure to blue light has previously been shown to induce the reversible quenching of fluorescence in cyanobacteria, indicative of a photoprotective mechanism responsible for the down regulation of photosynthesis. We have investigated the molecular mechanism behind fluorescence quenching by characterizing changes in excitation energy transfer through the phycobilin pigments of the phycobilisome to chlorophyll with steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence excitation and emission spectroscopy. Quenching was investigated in both a photosystem II-less mutant, and DCMU-poisoned wild-type Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. The action spectra for blue-light-induced quenching was identical in both cell types and was dominated by a band in the blue region, peaking at 480 nm. Fluorescence quenching and its dark recovery was inhibited by the protein cross-linking agent glutaraldehyde, which could maintain cells in either the quenched or the unquenched state. We found that high phosphate concentrations that inhibit phycobilisome mobility and the regulation of energy transfer by the light-state transition did not affect blue-light-induced fluorescence quenching. Both room temperature and 77 K fluorescence emission spectra revealed that fluorescence quenching was associated with phycobilin emission. Quenching was characterized by a decrease in the emission of allophycocyanin and long wavelength phycobilisome terminal emitters relative to that of phycocyanin. A global analysis of the room-temperature fluorescence decay kinetics revealed that phycocyanin and photosystem I decay components were unaffected by quenching, whereas the decay components originating from allophycocyanin and phycobilisome terminal emitters were altered. Our data support a regulatory mechanism involving a protein conformational change and/or change in protein-protein interaction which quenches excitation energy at the core of the phycobilisome.  相似文献   

8.
研究了螺旋藻藻胆体的吸收光谱,室温和液氮温度荧光发射光谱和激发光谱.完整藻胆体的室温荧光峰位于678nm,不完整藻胆体位于672nm.在完整藻胆体的液氮温度荧光光谱中只有一个发射峰,不完整藻胆作有两个峰.研究结果表明C-藻蓝蛋白与别藻蓝蛋白之间的连接和别藻蓝蛋白与别藻蓝蛋白-B之间的连接具有不同的稳定性;前者稳定性较差,易解离.对藻胆体内藻胆蛋白之间的光能传递进行了讨论.  相似文献   

9.
Direct and indirect methods are described to combine steady-state and picosecond time-resolved fluorescence decay data to generate decay-associated excitation spectra. The heterogeneous fluorescence from a fluorophore mixture that models protein fluorescence was resolved into individual component excitation spectra. The two methods were also used to determine the excitation spectra associated with each of the decay time components for the proteins subtilisin Carlsberg and BPN'. On the basis of associated spectra, the decay components of both proteins were assigned to individual (or groups of) emitting species. The two approaches used to generate the decay-associated excitation spectra are compared and their general application to protein fluorescence studies is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
We measured the steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence spectral properties of cadmium-enriched nanoparticles (CdS-Cd2+). These particles displayed two emission maxima, at 460 and 580 nm. The emission spectra were independent of excitation wavelength. Surprisingly, the intensity decays were strongly dependent on the observation wavelength, with longer decay times being observed at longer wavelengths. The mean lifetime increased from 150 to 370 ns as the emission wavelength was increased from 460 to 650 nm. The wavelength-dependent lifetimes were used to construct the time-resolved emission spectra, which showed a growth of the long-wavelength emission at longer times, and decay-associated spectra, which showed the longer wavelength emission associated with the longer decay time. These nanoparticles displayed anisotropy values as high as 0.35, depending on the excitation and emission wavelengths. Such high anisotropies are unexpected for presumably spherical nanoparticles. The anisotropy decayed with two correlation times near 5 and 370 ns, with the larger value probably due to overall rotational diffusion of the nanoparticles. Addition of a 32-base pair oligomer selectively quenched the 460-nm emission, with less quenching being observed at longer wavelengths. The time-resolved intensity decays were minimally affected by the DNA, suggesting a static quenching mechanism. The wavelength-selected quenching shown by the nanoparticles may make them useful for DNA analysis.  相似文献   

11.
Distribution of phycobilisomes between photosystem I (PSI) and photosystem II (PSII) complexes in the cyanobacterium Spirulina platensis has been studied by analysis of the action spectra of H2 and O2 photoevolution and by analysis of the 77 K fluorescence excitation and emission spectra of the photosystems. PSI monomers and trimers were spectrally discriminated in the cell by the unique 760 nm low-temperature fluorescence, emitted by the trimers under reductive conditions. The phycobilisome-specific 625 nm peak was observed in the action spectra of both PSI and PSII, as well as in the 77 K fluorescence excitation spectra for chlorophyll emission at 695 nm (PSII), 730 nm (PSI monomers), and 760 nm (PSI trimers). The contributions of phycobilisomes to the absorption, action, and excitation spectra were derived from the in vivo absorption coefficients of phycobiliproteins and of chlorophyll. Analyzing the sum of PSI and PSII action spectra against the absorption spectrum and estimating the P700:P680 reaction center ratio of 5.7 in Spirulina, we calculated that PSII contained only 5% of the total chlorophyll, while PSI carried the greatest part, about 95%. Quantitative analysis of the obtained data showed that about 20% of phycobilisomes in Spirulina cells are bound to PSII, while 60% of phycobilisomes transfer the energy to PSI trimers, and the remaining 20% are associated with PSI monomers. A relevant model of organization of phycobilisomes and chlorophyll pigment-protein complexes in Spirulina is proposed. It is suggested that phycobilisomes are connected with PSII dimers, PSI trimers, and coupled PSI monomers.  相似文献   

12.
The effects of hydrostatic pressure on the excited state reactions of the photosynthetic system of cyanobacteria were studied with the use of stationary and dynamic fluorescence spectroscopy. When the cells were excited with blue light (442 nm), hydrostatic pressure promoted a large increase in the fluorescence emission of the phycobilisomes (PBS). When PBS were excited at 565 nm, the shoulder originating from photosystem II (PSII) emission (F685) disappeared under 2.4 kbar compression, suggesting suppression of the energy transfer from PBS to PSII. At atmospheric pressure, the excited state decay was complex due to energy transfer processes, and the best fit to the data consisted of a broad Lorentzian distribution of short lifetimes. At 2.4 kbar, the decay data changed to a narrower distribution of longer lifetimes, confirming the pressure-induced suppression of the energy transfer between the PBS and PSII. When the cells were excited with blue light, the decay at atmospheric pressure was even more complex and the best fit to the data consisted of a two-component Lorentzian distribution of short lifetimes. Under compression, the broad distribution of lifetimes spanning the region 100-1,000 ps disappeared and gave rise to the appearance of a narrow distribution characteristic of the PBS centered at 1.2 ns. The emission of photosystem I underwent 2.2-fold increase at 2.4 kbar and room temperature. A decrease in temperature from 20 to -10 degrees C at 2.4 kbar promoted a further increase in the fluorescence emission from photosystem I to a level comparable with that obtained at temperatures below 120 degrees K and atmospheric pressure. On the other hand, when the temperature was decreased under pressure, the PBS emission diminished to very low value at blue or green excitation, suggesting the disassembly into the phycobiliprotein subunits.  相似文献   

13.
The polarized photoacoustic, absorption and fluorescence spectra of chloroplasts and thylakoids in unstretched and stretched polyvinyl alcohol films were measured. The intensity ratios of fluorescence bands at 674 nm, 700 nm, 730 nm and 750 nm, and the polarized fluorescence excitation spectra are strongly dependent on light polarization and film stretching. In stretched films, thylakoids exhibit predominantly 674 nm emission. The ratio of photoacoustic signal to absorption is different for light polarized parallel and perpendicular to film stretching. This difference is large in the region of chlorophyll a and carotenoids absorption in which the fluorescence excitation spectra are also strongly dependent on light polarization and film stretching. The observed spectral changes are explained by reorientation of pigment molecules influencing the yield of excitation transfer between different pigments.  相似文献   

14.
Cyanobacteria use chlorophyll and phycobiliproteins to harvest light. The resulting excitation energy is delivered to reaction centers (RCs), where photochemistry starts. The relative amounts of excitation energy arriving at the RCs of photosystem I (PSI) and II (PSII) depend on the spectral composition of the light. To balance the excitations in both photosystems, cyanobacteria perform state transitions to equilibrate the excitation energy. They go to state I if PSI is preferentially excited, for example after illumination with blue light (light I), and to state II after illumination with green-orange light (light II) or after dark adaptation. In this study, we performed 77-K time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy on wild-type Synechococcus elongatus 7942 cells to measure how state transitions affect excitation energy transfer to PSI and PSII in different light conditions and to test the various models that have been proposed in literature. The time-resolved spectra show that the PSII core is quenched in state II and that this is not due to a change in excitation energy transfer from PSII to PSI (spill-over), either direct or indirect via phycobilisomes.  相似文献   

15.
Nanosecond time-resolved emission spectra (TRES) are fluorescence emission spectra obtained at discrete times during the fluorescence decay. The complete data-set obtainable is a surface representing the intensity at all wavelengths and times during the emission decay time. When 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulfonate (2,6 p-TNS) is adsorbed to egg lecithin vesicles, an excited-state reaction associated with energetic changes of the emitting species occurs on the nanosecond time scale. Convolution of the fluorescence decay with the excitation response introduces an artifact in the time-dependent spectra. A precedure is described by which this artifact can be eliminated. The data for the generation of time-resolved emission spectra are obtained with a computer-interfaced instrument based on the single-photon counting method.  相似文献   

16.
The action spectra for phycocyanin production by the cyanophyte Fremyella diplosiphon shows maxima at 463 and 641 nm. The action spectrum for phycoerythrin production includes maxima at 387 and 550 nm. The maxima are based on a relative response rate well within the linear ascending portion of the dose response curves; the positions of the maxima are independent of the relative response rates chosen for reference over a 3-fold range although the comparative effectiveness of light at pairs of wavelengths varies with the standard used for comparison. These action spectra differ from those reported previously for Tolypothrix tenuis by Fujita and Hattori (Plant Cell Physiol. 3: 209-220) and by Diakoff and Scheibe (Plant Physiol. 51: 382-385) in that blue light strongly promotes phycobiliprotein synthesis in F. diphosiphon but has been reported to have little or no effect on T. tenuis.  相似文献   

17.
Phycobiliproteins produced in dark-grown cells of Tolypothrix tenuis Kützing formed Phycobilisomes functionally capable of energy transfer. The phycobilisomes could be recovered in high yield (80% of extracted phycobiliproteins). Phycobilisomes from cells grown without light and in red light had the same size, morphology, and spectral characteristics. They had a phycocyanin to allophycocyanin malar ratio of 3:1. Phycocyanin and allophycocyanin in phycobilisomes were energetically coupled as indicated by their fluorescence emission (maximum of ca. 690 nm at –196° C) and excitation spectra. Phycobilisomes were attached to the outer surface of thylakoids and were hemidiscoidal in shape. In thin sections they had a diameter of 42 ± 3nm, a height of 24 ± 4 nm and a thickness of 10 ± 2 nm. Isolated and negatively stained Phycobilisomes were larger with a diameter of 51 ± 2 nm and height of 33 ± 2 nm, Isolated phycobilisomes in face view had a central core of three units and six peripheral rods. Each rod appeared to be composed of three hexamers (three double discs), consistent with the observed dimensions and substructure. After Phycoerythria synthesis was induced by a 15 min green light exposure, phycobilisomes of dark-grown cells exhibited energy transfer from phycoerythrin to a long wavelength allophycocyanin, indicating that phycoerythrin synthesized in darkness was incorporated into functional phycobilisomes.  相似文献   

18.
W. Yu  F. Pellegrino  R.R. Alfano 《BBA》1977,460(1):171-181
Picosecond fluorescent kinetics and time-resolved spectra of spinach chloroplast were measured at room temperature and low temperatures. The measurement is conducted with 530 nm excitation at an average intensity of 2 · 1014 photons/cm2, pulse and at a pulse separation of 6 ns for the 100 pulses used. The 685 nm fluorescent kinetics was found to decay with two components, a fast component with a 56 ps lifetime, and a slow component with a 220 ps lifetime. The 730 nm fluorescent kinetics at room temperature is a single exponential decay with a 100 ps lifetime. The 730 nm fluorescence lifetime was found to increase by a factor of 6 when the temperature was lowered from room temperature to 90 K, while the 685 and 695 nm fluorescent kinetics were unchanged. The time-resolved spectra data obtained within 10 ps after excitation is consistent with the kinetic data reported here. A two-level fluorescence scheme is proposed to explain the kinetics. The effect of excitation with high light intensity and multiple pulses is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
To determine the mechanism of carotenoid-sensitized non-photochemical quenching in cyanobacteria, the kinetics of blue-light-induced quenching and fluorescence spectra were studied in the wild type and mutants of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 grown with or without iron. The blue-light-induced quenching was observed in the wild type as well as in mutants lacking PS II or IsiA confirming that neither IsiA nor PS II is required for carotenoid-triggered fluorescence quenching. Both fluorescence at 660 nm (originating from phycobilisomes) and at 681 nm (which, upon 440 nm excitation originates mostly from chlorophyll) was quenched. However, no blue-light-induced changes in the fluorescence yield were observed in the apcE(-) mutant that lacks phycobilisome attachment. The results are interpreted to indicate that interaction of the Slr1963-associated carotenoid with--presumably--allophycocyanin in the phycobilisome core is responsible for non-photochemical energy quenching, and that excitations on chlorophyll in the thylakoid equilibrate sufficiently with excitations on allophycocyanin in wild type to contribute to quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence.  相似文献   

20.
完整藻胆体和不完整藻胆体的吸收峰都在618nm。完整藻胆体的室温荧光峰位于670nm 以上,而不完整藻胆体则在670nm以下。完整藻胆体的77K荧光发射光谱中只有648nm一个荧光发射带;而在不完整藻胆体,则有2个或3个发射带,它们位于684nm,666nm和648nm, 依次属于别藻蓝蛋白 — B,别藻蓝蛋白和C — 藻蓝蛋白的荧光。  相似文献   

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