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1.
Photosynthetic electron transport can involve either a linear flow from water to NADP, via Photosystems (PS) II and I or a cyclic flow just involving PSI. Little is known about factors regulating the relative flow through each of these pathways. We have examined photosynthetic electron transport through each system in plants of Arabidopsis thaliana in which either the PSI-D1 or PSI-E1 subunits of PSI have been knocked out. In both cases, this results in an imbalance in the turnover of PSI and PSII, such that PSII electron transport is limited by PSI turnover. Phosphorylation of light-harvesting complex II (LHCII) and its migration to PSI is enhanced but only partially reversible and not sufficient to balance photosystem turnover. In spite of this, cyclic electron flow is able to compete efficiently with PSI across a range of conditions. In dark-adapted leaves, the efficiency of cyclic relative to linear flow induced by far-red light is increased, implying that the limiting step of cyclic flow lies in the re-injection of electrons into the electron transport chain. Illumination of leaves with white light resulted in transient induction of a significant non-photochemical quenching in knockout plants which is probably high energy state quenching induced by cyclic electron flow. At high light and at low CO(2), non-photochemical quenching was greater in the knockout plants than in the wildtype. Comparison of PSI and PSII turnover under such conditions suggested that this is generated by cyclic electron flow around PSI. We conclude that, when the concentration of PSI is limiting, cyclic electron flow is still able to compete effectively with linear flow to maintain a high DeltapH to regulate photosynthesis.  相似文献   

2.
Plants not only evolve but also reduce oxygen in photosynthesis. Considerable oxygen uptake occurs during photorespiration of C3 plants. Controversies exist on whether direct oxygen reduction in the Mehler reaction together with associated electron transport is also a major sink of electrons when leaves are exposed to sunlight. Here, preference is given to the view that it is not. Whereas photorespiration consumes ATP, the Mehler reaction does not. In isolated chloroplasts photosynthesizing in the presence of saturating bicarbonate, the Mehler reaction is suppressed. In the water – water cycle of leaves, which includes the Mehler reaction, water is oxidized and electrons flow through Photosystems II and I to oxygen producing water. The known properties of coupled electron transport suggest that the water – water cycle cannot act as an efficient electron sink. Rather, by contributing to thylakoid acidification it plays a role in the control of Photosystem II activity. Cyclic electron transport competes with the Mehler reaction for electrons. Both pathways can help to defray possible ATP deficiencies in the chloroplast stroma, but play a more important role by making intrathylakoid protein protonation possible. This is a necessary step for the dissipation of excess excitation energy as heat. Linear electron flow to oxygen relieves the inhibition of cyclic electron transport, which is observed under excessive reduction of intersystem electron carriers. In turn, cyclic electron transport replaces functions of the linear pathway in the control of Photosystem II when oxygen reduction is decreased at low temperatures or, experimentally, when the oxygen concentration of the gas phase is low. Thus, cyclic electron flow acts in flexible relationship with the water–water cycle to control Photosystem II activity. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

3.
Simon Hald  Dario Leister  Giles N. Johnson 《BBA》2008,1777(9):1173-1183
Photosynthetic electron transport can involve either a linear flow from water to NADP, via Photosystems (PS) II and I or a cyclic flow just involving PSI. Little is known about factors regulating the relative flow through each of these pathways. We have examined photosynthetic electron transport through each system in plants of Arabidopsis thaliana in which either the PSI-D1 or PSI-E1 subunits of PSI have been knocked out. In both cases, this results in an imbalance in the turnover of PSI and PSII, such that PSII electron transport is limited by PSI turnover. Phosphorylation of light-harvesting complex II (LHCII) and its migration to PSI is enhanced but only partially reversible and not sufficient to balance photosystem turnover. In spite of this, cyclic electron flow is able to compete efficiently with PSI across a range of conditions. In dark-adapted leaves, the efficiency of cyclic relative to linear flow induced by far-red light is increased, implying that the limiting step of cyclic flow lies in the re-injection of electrons into the electron transport chain. Illumination of leaves with white light resulted in transient induction of a significant non-photochemical quenching in knockout plants which is probably high energy state quenching induced by cyclic electron flow. At high light and at low CO2, non-photochemical quenching was greater in the knockout plants than in the wildtype. Comparison of PSI and PSII turnover under such conditions suggested that this is generated by cyclic electron flow around PSI. We conclude that, when the concentration of PSI is limiting, cyclic electron flow is still able to compete effectively with linear flow to maintain a high ΔpH to regulate photosynthesis.  相似文献   

4.
Oxygen ist reduced by the electron transport chain of chloroplasts during CO2 reduction. The rate of electron flow to oxygen is low. Since antimycin A inhibited CO2-dependent oxygen evolution, it is concluded that cyclic photophosphorylation contributes ATP to photosynthesis in chloroplasts which cannot satisfy the ATP requirement of CO2 reduction by electron flow to NADP and to oxygen. Inhibition of photosynthesis by antimycin A was more significant at high than at low light intensities suggesting that cyclic photophosphorylation contributes to photosynthesis particularly at high intensities. Cyclic electron flow in intact chloroplasts is under the control of electron acceptors. At low light intensities or under far-red illumination it is decreased by substrates which accept electrons from photosystem I such as oxaloacetate, nitrite or oxygen. Obviously, the cyclic electron transport pathway is sensitive to electron drainage. In the absence of electron acceptors, cyclic electron flow is supported by far-red illumination and inhibited by red light. The inhibition by light exciting photosystem II demonstrated that the cyclic electron transport pathway is accessible to electrons from photosystem II. Inhibition can be relieved by oxygen which appears to prevent over-reduction of electron carriers of the cyclic pathway and thus has an important regulatory function. The data show that cyclic electron transport is under delicate redox control. Inhibition is caused both by excessive oxidation and by over-reduction of electron carriers of the pathway.  相似文献   

5.
In addition to linear electron transport from water to NADP+, alternative electron transport pathways are believed to regulate photosynthesis. In the two routes of photosystem I (PSI) cyclic electron transport, electrons are recycled from the stromal reducing pool to plastoquinone (PQ), generating additional ΔpH (proton gradient across thylakoid membranes). Plastid terminal oxidase (PTOX) accepts electrons from PQ and transfers them to oxygen to produce water. Although both electron transport pathways share the PQ pool, it is unclear whether they interact in vivo. To investigate the physiological link between PSI cyclic electron transport‐dependent PQ reduction and PTOX‐dependent PQ oxidation, we characterized mutants defective in both functions. Impairment of PSI cyclic electron transport suppressed leaf variegation in the Arabidopsis immutans (im) mutant, which is defective in PTOX. The im variegation was more effectively suppressed in the pgr5 mutant, which is defective in the main pathway of PSI cyclic electron transport, than in the crr2‐2 mutant, which is defective in the minor pathway. In contrast to this chloroplast development phenotype, the im defect alleviated the growth phenotype of the crr2‐2 pgr5 double mutant. This was accompanied by partial suppression of stromal over‐reduction and restricted linear electron transport. We discuss the function of the alternative electron transport pathways in both chloroplast development and photosynthesis in mature leaves.  相似文献   

6.
Ferredoxin-NADP(H) reductase (FNR) catalyzes the last step of photosynthetic electron transport in chloroplasts, driving electrons from reduced ferredoxin to NADP+. This reaction is rate limiting for photosynthesis under a wide range of illumination conditions, as revealed by analysis of plants transformed with an antisense version of the FNR gene. To investigate whether accumulation of this flavoprotein over wild-type levels could improve photosynthetic efficiency and growth, we generated transgenic tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) plants expressing a pea (Pisum sativum) FNR targeted to chloroplasts. The alien product distributed between the thylakoid membranes and the chloroplast stroma. Transformants grown at 150 or 700 micromol quanta m(-2) s(-1) displayed wild-type phenotypes regardless of FNR content. Thylakoids isolated from plants with a 5-fold FNR increase over the wild type displayed only moderate stimulation (approximately 20%) in the rates of electron transport from water to NADP+. In contrast, when donors of photosystem I were used to drive NADP+ photoreduction, the activity was 3- to 4-fold higher than the wild-type controls. Plants expressing various levels of FNR (from 1- to 3.6-fold over the wild type) failed to show significant differences in CO2 assimilation rates when assayed over a range of light intensities and CO2 concentrations. Transgenic lines exhibited enhanced tolerance to photooxidative damage and redox-cycling herbicides that propagate reactive oxygen species. The results suggest that photosynthetic electron transport has several rate-limiting steps, with FNR catalyzing just one of them.  相似文献   

7.
Zhang L  Happe T  Melis A 《Planta》2002,214(4):552-561
Sulfur deprivation in green algae causes reversible inhibition of photosynthetic activity. In the absence of S, rates of photosynthetic O2 evolution drop below those of O2 consumption by respiration. As a consequence, sealed cultures of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii become anaerobic in the light, induce the "Fe-hydrogenase" pathway of electron transport and photosynthetically produce H2 gas. In the course of such H2-gas production cells consume substantial amounts of internal starch and protein. Such catabolic reactions may sustain, directly or in directly, the H2-production process. Profile analysis of selected photosynthetic proteins showed a precipitous decline in the amount of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase (Rubisco) as a function of time in S deprivation, a more gradual decline in the level of photosystem (PS) II and PSI proteins, and a change in the composition of the PSII light-harvesting complex (LHC-II). An increase in the level of the enzyme Fe-hydrogenase was noted during the initial stages of S deprivation (0-72 h) followed by a decline in the level of this enzyme during longer (t >72 h) S-deprivation times. Microscopic observations showed distinct morphological changes in C. reinhardtii during S deprivation and H2 production. Ellipsoid-shaped cells (normal photosynthesis) gave way to larger and spherical cell shapes in the initial stages of S deprivation and H2 production, followed by cell mass reductions after longer S-deprivation and H2-production times. It is suggested that, under S-deprivation conditions, electrons derived from a residual PSII H2O-oxidation activity feed into the hydrogenase pathway, thereby contributing to the H2-production process in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Interplay between oxygenic photosynthesis, mitochondrial respiration, catabolism of endogenous substrate, and electron transport via the hydrogenase pathway is essential for this light-mediated H2-production process.  相似文献   

8.
Ferredoxin-NADP(+)-oxidoreductase (FNR) mediates electron transfer between ferredoxin (Fd) and NADP(+); therefore, it is a key enzyme that provides the reducing power used in the Calvin cycle. Other than FNR, nitrite reductase, sulfite reductase, glutamate synthase, and Fd-thioredoxin reductase also accept electrons from Fd, an electron carrier protein in the stroma. Therefore, the regulation of electron partitioning in the chloroplast is important for photosynthesis and other metabolic pathways. The regulatory mechanism of electron partitioning, however, remains to be elucidated. We found, by taking advantage of a gain-of-function approach, that expression of two rice (Oryza sativa) full-length cDNAs of leaf-type FNRs (OsLFNR1 and OsLFNR2) led to altered chlorophyll fluorescence and growth in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) and rice. We revealed that overexpression of the OsLFNR1 and OsLFNR2 full-length cDNAs resulted in distinct phenotypes despite the high sequence similarity between them. Expression of OsLFNR1 affected the nitrogen assimilation pathway without inhibition of photosynthesis under normal conditions. On the other hand, OsLFNR2 expression led to the impairment of photosynthetic linear electron transport as well as Fd-dependent cyclic electron flow around photosystem I. The endogenous protein level of OsLFNR was found to be suppressed in both OsLFNR1- and OsLFNR2-overexpressing rice plants, leading to changes in the stoichiometry of the two LFNR isoforms within the thylakoid and soluble fractions. Thus, we propose that the stoichiometry of two LFNR isoforms plays an important role in electron partitioning between carbon fixation and nitrogen assimilation.  相似文献   

9.
In photosynthetically competent chloroplasts from spinach the quantum requirements for oxygen evolution during CO2 reduction were higher, by a factor often close to 1.5, than for oxygen evolution during reduction of phosphoglycerate. Mass spectrometer experiments performed under rate-limiting light indicated that an oxygen-reducing photoreaction was responsible for the consumption of extra quanta during carbon dioxide assimilation. Uptake of 18O2 during reduction of CO2 was considerably higher than could be accounted for by oxygen consumption during glycolate formation and by the Mehler reaction of broken chloroplasts which were present in the preparations of intact chloroplasts. The oxygen reducing reaction occurring during CO2 assimilation resulted in the formation of H2O2. This was indicated by a large stimulation of CO2 reduction by catalase, but not of phosphoglycerate reduction. Catalase could be replaced as a stimulant of photosynthesis by dithiothreitol or ascorbate, compounds known to react with superoxide radicals. There was no effect of dithiothreitol and ascorbate on phosphoglycerate reduction. A main effect of superoxide radicals and/or H2O2 was shown to be at the level of phosphoglycerate formation. Evidence for electron transport of oxygen was also obtained from 14CO2 experiments. The oxidation of dihydroxyacetonephosphate during a dark period or after addition of carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenyl-hydrazone in the light was studied. The results indicated a link between the chloroplast pyridine nucleotide system and oxygen. Oxygen reduction during photosynthesis under conditions where light is rate limiting is seen as important in supplying the ATP which is needed for CO2 reduction but is not provided during electron transport to NADP. A mechanism is discussed which would permit proper distribution of electrons between CO2 and oxygen during photosynthesis.  相似文献   

10.
Microalgae have a valuable potential for biofuels production. As a matter of fact, algae can produce different molecules with high energy content, including molecular hydrogen (H(2)) by the activity of a chloroplastic hydrogenase fueled by reducing power derived from water and light energy. The efficiency of this reaction, however, is limited and depends from an intricate relationships between oxygenic photosynthesis and mitochondrial respiration. The way toward obtaining algal strains with high productivity in photobioreactors requires engineering of their metabolism at multiple levels in a process comparable to domestication of crops that were derived from their wild ancestors through accumulation of genetic traits providing improved productivity under conditions of intensive cultivation as well as improved nutritional/industrial properties. This holds true for the production of any biofuels from algae: there is the need to isolate multiple traits to be combined and produce organisms with increased performances. Among the different limitations in H(2) productivity, we identified three with a major relevance, namely: (i) the light distribution through the mass culture; (ii) the strong sensitivity of the hydrogenase to even very low oxygen concentrations; and (iii) the presence of alternative pathways, such as the cyclic electron transport, competing for reducing equivalents with hydrogenase and H(2) production. In order to identify potentially favorable mutations, we generated a collection of random mutants in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii which were selected through phenotype analysis for: (i) a reduced photosynthetic antenna size, and thus a lower culture optical density; (ii) an altered photosystem II activity as a tool to manipulate the oxygen concentration within the culture; and (iii) State 1-State 2 transition mutants, for a reduced cyclic electron flow and maximized electrons flow toward the hydrogenase. Such a broad approach has been possible thanks to the high throughput application of absorption/fluorescence optical spectroscopy methods. Strong and weak points of this approach are discussed.  相似文献   

11.
The effects of reversible managanese extraction on NADP(+) photoreduction were studied with higher plant subchloroplast preparations of photosystem II (PS II). Under anaerobic conditions, when the reaction centers (RCs) of PS II are "closed" (i.e. in the state [P680 Pheo] Qā), and in the presence of ferredoxin-ferredoxin-NADP(+) reductase, NADP(+) reduction is observed at a rate of 0.8-1.1 μmol/mg x chlorophyII x h. After complete removal of manganese from PS II, the rate of NADP(+) reduction is reduced 40-5- fold. Upon the addition of Mn at a concentration of approx. 4 Mn atoms per reaction center, the NADP reduction is restored up to 85-90% of the initial value, When half of this amount of Mn is combined with about 40 times of the equivalent concentration of other divalent ions (Ca2?, Sr2?, Mg2? etc) the reaction is also reactivated. Dinoseb (10??M) an inhibitor of electron transfer in PS II prevents NADP(+) photoreduction. It is concluded that under conditions when the first quinone acceptor, Q(A), is in its reduced state (Qā), electrons are transferred from reduced pheophytin (Pheo(-)) to NADP(+), indicating that PS II can reduce NADP(+) without the participation of PS I. On the basis of these and literature data, and alternate pathway for electron phototransfer in PS II reaction centers of higher plants is suggested. Some problems concerning the Z-scheme are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
In this Review we focus on the conversion of linear photosynthetic electron transport from water to NADP to the cyclic pathway around Photosystem I in the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. We discuss the strict relationship that exists between the changes in pathways of electron transport and state transitions, i.e., the reversible functional association of light harvesting proteins with one of the two photosystems of oxygenic photosynthesis. Such a link has not been reported in the case of other photosynthetic organisms, where the state transitions do not affect the pathway of electron transport. Rather, they provide a tool to optimise the rate of linear flow. We propose a kinetic-structural model that explains the mechanism of this particular relationship in Chlamydomonas, and discuss the advantages that this peculiar situation gives to the energetic metabolism of this alga. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

13.
Addition of NADP(+) to thylakoid membranes or isolated photosystem I (PSI) submembrane fractions quenched chlorophyll fluorescence by up to 40% at low or room temperature. This quenching was reversed by NADPH. Similar quenching was also observed with the addition of heparin or thenoyltrifluoroacetone (TTFA), inhibitors that bind ferredoxin:NADP(+) reductase (FNR) and prevent reduction of NADP(+). The NADP(+)-induced quenching coincided with a reversible conformational change of the secondary protein structure in the PSI submembrane fractions where 20% of the alpha-helix conformations were transformed mainly into beta-sheet-like structures. Further, P700 photooxidation was retarded due to this conformational change, and about 25% of the centers could not be photooxidized, these changes being also reversible with addition of NADPH. The above modifications in the presence of NADP(+) also increased photodamage processes under strong illumination, and NADPH protected it. Conformational modification of FNR upon binding of NADP(+) or NADPH is proposed to trigger the macromolecular changes in a larger part of the protein complex of PSI. The conformational changes must increase the intermolecular distances and change the mutual orientation between the various cofactors in the PSI complex. This new control mechanism of energy dissipation and photochemical activity by NADP(+)/NADPH is proposed to increase the turnover rate of PSI under conditions when both linear and cyclic electron transport activities must be supported.  相似文献   

14.
To adapt to different light intensities, photosynthetic organisms manipulate the flow of electrons through several alternative pathways at the thylakoid membrane. The enzyme ferredoxin:NADP(+) reductase (FNR) has the potential to regulate this electron partitioning because it is integral to most of these electron cascades and can associate with several different membrane complexes. However, the factors controlling relative localization of FNR to different membrane complexes have not yet been established. Maize (Zea mays) contains three chloroplast FNR proteins with totally different membrane association, and we found that these proteins have variable distribution between cells conducting predominantly cyclic electron transport (bundle sheath) and linear electron transport (mesophyll). Here, the crystal structures of all three enzymes were solved, revealing major structural differences at the N-terminal domain and dimer interface. Expression in Arabidopsis thaliana of maize FNRs as chimeras and truncated proteins showed the N-terminal determines recruitment of FNR to different membrane complexes. In addition, the different maize FNR proteins localized to different thylakoid membrane complexes on expression in Arabidopsis, and analysis of chlorophyll fluorescence and photosystem I absorbance demonstrates the impact of FNR location on photosynthetic electron flow.  相似文献   

15.
A cell-free preparation of heterocysts from Anabaena variabilis showed high nitrogenase activities with several physiological electron donors, dependent on addition of an ATP-generating system. Light-induced acetylene reduction with the artificial electron donor to photosystem I, diaminodurol, exhibited the same light saturation as with hydrogen as donor. Inhibitors of electron flow through plastoquinone affected light-induced, hydrogen- or NADH-dependent nitrogenase activity in a similar way. Several uncoupling agents were without effect, indicating that energized membranes are not a prerequisite for nitrogen fixation. We conclude that NADH or hydrogen deliver electrons to nitrogenase via photosystem I and ferredoxin, feeding in at the plastoquinone site.In the light, addition of NADP induced a lag in H2- or NADH-supported acetylene reduction apparently by competing with nitrogenase for electrons at the reducing side of photosystem I. Time reversal of this inibition reflects a regulation of photosystem I-dependent nitrogenase activity by the NADPH/NADP ratio in the cell. This was directly demonstrated by differently adjusted NADPH/NADP ratios.NADPH donates electrons to nitrogenase in the dark and in the light, the light reaction being DBMIB-sensitive. NADPH-supported acetylene reduction was inhibited by NADP. This inhibition was not reversed with time, pointing to an involvement of ferredoxin: NADP oxidoreductase (EC 1.18.1.2) in this pathway. Apparently, in the dark, this enzyme is able to directly reduce ferredoxin, whereas in the light electrons from NADPH first have to pass through photosystem I before reducing ferredoxin, hence nitrogenase.Intermediates of glycolysis, like glucose-6-phosphate, fructose-1,6-bisphosphate, and dihydroxyacetone phosphate supported nitrogenase activity in the dark, each with catalytic amounts of both NAD and NADP as equally effective cofactors.We conclude that in heterocysts electrons for nitrogen fixation are essentially supplied by dark reactions, mainly by glycolysis. NADH (and hydrogen) contribute electrons via photosystem I in the light, whereas the NADPH/NADP ratio regulates linear and cyclic electron flow at the reducing side of photosystem I to provide a ratio of ATP/electrons most effective for nitrogenase.Abbvreviations ATCC American Type Culture Collection - Diaminodurol (DAD) 2,3,5,6-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine dihydrochloride - DBMIB 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone - DNP-INT 2,4-dinitrophenyl ether of 2-iodo-4-nitrothymol - E Einstein (mol photons) - FNR ferredoxin - NADP oxidoreductase (EC 1.18.1.2) - HEPES N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N-2-ethanesulfonic acid - Metronidazole 1-(2-hydroxyethyl)-2-methyl-5-nitroimidazole  相似文献   

16.
Lemna gibba L. B3 was grown under heterotrophic, photoheterotrophic, and autotrophic conditions in water having a variety of hydrogen and oxygen isotopic compositions. The slopes of the linear regression lines between the isotopic composition of water and leaf cellulose indicated that under the three growth conditions about 40, 70, and 100% of oxygens and carbon-bound hydrogens of cellulose exchanged with those of water prior to cellulose formation. Using the equations of the linear relationships, we estimated the overall fractionation factors between water and the exchanged oxygen and carbon bound-hydrogen of cellulose. At least two very different isotope effects must determine the hydrogen isotopic composition of Lemna cellulose. One reflects the photosynthetic reduction of NADP, while the second reflects exchange reactions that occur subsequent to NADP reduction. Oxygen isotopic composition of cellulose apparently is determined by a single type of exchange reaction with water. Under different growth conditions, variations in metabolic fluxes affect the hydrogen isotopic composition of cellulose by influencing the extent to which the two isotope effects mentioned above are recorded. The oxygen isotopic composition of cellulose is not affected by such changes in growth conditions.  相似文献   

17.
The light-dependent quenching of 9-aminoacridine fluorescence was used to monitor the state of the transthylakoid proton gradient in illuminated intact chloroplasts in the presence or absence of external electron acceptors. The absence of appreciable light-dependent fluorescence quenching under anaerobic conditions indicated inhibition of coupled electron transport in the absence of external electron acceptors. Oxygen relieved this inhibition. However, when DCMU inhibited excessive reduction of the plastoquinone pool in the absence of oxygen, coupled cyclic electron transport supported the formation of a transthylakoid proton gradient even under anaerobiosis. This proton gradient collapsed in the presence of oxygen. Under aerobic conditions, and when KCN inhibited ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase and ascorbate peroxidase, fluorescence quenching indicated the formation of a transthylakoid proton gradient which was larger with oxygen in the Mehler reaction as electron acceptor than with methylviologen at similar rates of linear electron transport. Apparently, cyclic electron transport occured simultaneously with linear electron transport, when oxygen was available as electron acceptor, but not when methylviologen accepted electrons from Photosystem I. The ratio of cyclic to linear electron transport could be increased by low concentrations of DCMU. This shows that even under aerobic conditions cyclic electron transport is limited in isolated intact chloroplasts by excessive reduction of electron carriers. In fact, P700 in the reaction center of Photosystem I remained reduced in illuminated isolated chloroplasts under conditions which resulted in extensive oxidation of P700 in leaves. This shows that regulation of Photosystem II activity is less effective in isolated chloroplasts than in leaves. Assuming that a Q-cycle supports a H+/e ratio of 3 during slow linear electron transport, vectorial proton transport coupled to Photosystem I-dependent cyclic electron flow could be calculated. The highest calculated rate of Photosystem I-dependent proton transport, which was not yet light-saturated, was 330 mol protons (mg chlorophyll h)–1 in intact chloroplasts. If H+/e is not three but two proton transfer is not 330 but 220 mol (mg Chl H)–1. Differences in the regulation of cyclic electron transport in isolated chloroplasts and in leaves are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
H. Egneus  U. Heber  U. Matthiesen  M. Kirk 《BBA》1975,408(3):252-268
In photosynthetically competent chloroplasts from spinach the quantum requirements for oxygen evolution during CO2 reduction were higher, by a factor often close to 1.5, than for oxygen evolution during reduction of phosphoglycerate. Mass spectrometer experiments performed under rate-limiting light indicated that an oxygen-reducing photoreaction was responsible for the consumption of extra quanta during carbon dioxide assimilation. Uptake of 18O2 during reduction of CO2 was considerably higher than could be accounted for by oxygen consumption during glycolate formation and by the Mehler reaction of broken chloroplasts which were present in the preparations of intact chloroplasts. The oxygen reducing reaction occurring during CO2 assimilation resulted in the formation of H2O2. This was indicated by a large stimulation of CO2 reduction by catalase, but not of phosphoglycerate reduction. Catalase could be replaced as a stimulant of photosynthesis by dithiothreitol or ascorbate, compounds known to react with superoxide radicals. There was no effect of dithiothreitol and ascorbate on phosphoglycerate reduction. A main effect of superoxide radicals and/or H2O2 was shown to be at the level of phosphoglycerate formation. Evidence for electron transport to oxygen was also obtained from 14CO2 experiments. The oxidation of dihydroxyacetonephosphate during a dark period or after addition of carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone in the light was studied. The results indicated a link between the chloroplast pyridine nucleotide system and oxygen. Oxygen reduction during photosynthesis under conditions where light is rate limiting is seen as important in supplying the ATP which is needed for CO2 reduction but is not provided during electron transport to NADP. A mechanism is discussed which would permit proper distribution of electrons between CO2 and oxygen during photosynthesis.  相似文献   

19.
Effects of oxygen and photosynthesis and respiration inhibitors on the electron transport in photosystem I (PSI) of the cyanobacterium Arthrospira platensis cells were studied. Redox transients of P700 were induced by illumination at 730 nm and monitored as kinetics of the absorption changes at 810 nm; to block electron influx from PSII, the measurements were performed in the presence of 30 microM 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU). Inhibitors of terminal oxidases (potassium cyanide and pentachlorophenol) insignificantly influenced the fast oxidation of P700 under aerobic conditions, whereas removal of oxygen significantly decelerated the accumulation of P700(+). In the absence of oxygen the slow oxidation of P700 observed on the first illumination was accelerated on each subsequent illumination, suggesting an activation of the carbon cycle enzymes. Under the same conditions, pentachlorophenol (an uncoupler) markedly accelerated the P700 photooxidation. Under anaerobic conditions, potassium cyanide (an inhibitor of carbon dioxide assimilation) failed to influence the kinetics of redox transients of P700, whereas iodoacetamide (an inhibitor of NADP(H)-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase) completely prevented the photooxidation of P700. Thus, the fast photooxidation of P700 in the A. platensis cells under aerobic conditions in the presence of DCMU was caused by electron transport from PSI onto oxygen, and complicated transient changes in the P700 photooxidation kinetics under anaerobic conditions (in the presence of DCMU) were due to involvement of NADP+ generated during the reducing phase of the carbon cycle.  相似文献   

20.
光合作用氧释放机理研究进展   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
植物在光合作用过程中不仅为同化CO2提供能量和还原力,同时裂解水放出氧气。放氧反应主要由光系统Ⅱ(PSⅡ)氧化侧的4个锰原子组成的锰簇催化完成的。因此,锰簇在光合放氧过程中起看至关重要的作用。文章概述了对锰簇及其微环境的结构和功能的研究进展。  相似文献   

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