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1.
The psbP gene product, the so called 23 kDa extrinsic protein, is involved in water oxidation carried out by Photosystem II. However, the protein is not absolutely required for water oxidation. Here we have studied Photosystem II mediated electron transfer in a mutant of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, the FUD 39 mutant, that lacks the psbP protein. When grown in dim light the Photosystem II content in thylakoid membranes of FUD 39 is approximately similar to that in the wild-type. The oxygen evolution is dependent on the presence of chloride as a cofactor, which activates the water oxidation with a dissociation constant of about 4 mM. In the mutant, the oxygen evolution is very sensitive to photoinhibition when assayed at low chloride concentrations while chloride protects against photoinhibition with a dissociation constant of about 5 mM. The photoinhibition is irreversible as oxygen evolution cannot be restored by the addition of chloride to inhibited samples. In addition the inhibition seems to be targeted primarily to the Mn-cluster in Photosystem II as the electron transfer through the remaining part of Photosystem II is photoinhibited with slower kinetics. Thus, this mutant provides an experimental system in which effects of photoinhibition induced by lesions at the donor side of Photosystem II can be studied in vivo.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - DCIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - DPC 2,2-diphenylcarbonic dihydrazide - HEPES 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazinethanesulfonic acid - P680 the primary electron donor to PS II - PpBQ phenyl-p-benzoquinone - PS II Photosystem II - QA the first quinone acceptor of PS II - QB the second quinone acceptor of PS II - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate - Tris tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane - TyrD accessory electron donor on the D2-protein - TyrZ tyrosine residue, acting as electron carrier between P680 and the water oxidizing system  相似文献   

2.
Pea chloroplasts were treated with phospholipase A2 which hydrolysed approx. 75% phosphatidylglycerol and 60% phosphatidylcholine. The major effect of the treatment was an inhibition of Photosystem (PS) II electron transport together with an (approx. 30%) increase of initial chlorophyll fluorescence (F0) and a subsequent loss of variable fluorescence during induction, as well as an inhibition of the cation-induced rise in steady-state chlorophyll fluorescence. In contrast to the effects upon PS II activities, PS I activity was not depressed and increased slightly under certain conditions, while the coupling factor for photophosphorylation was inhibited to some extent. No significant increase in spillover was observed following the treatment with phospholipase A2. These results are discussed in relation to the ways in which phospholipid depletion may lead to the various effects observed. It is proposed that the site of PS II inhibition after phospholipase A2 treatment may be at the electron transfer from pheophytin to Q, the first quinone-type electron acceptor.  相似文献   

3.
Chimaeric mutants of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 have been generated carrying part or all of the spinach psbB gene, encoding CP47 (one of the chlorophyll-binding core antenna proteins in Photosystem II). The mutant in which the entire psbB gene had been replaced by the homologous gene from spinach was an obligate photoheterotroph and lacked Photosystem II complexes in its thylakoid membranes. However, this strain could be transformed with plasmids carrying selected regions of Synechocystis psbB to give rise to photoautotrophs with a chimaeric spinach/cyanobacterial CP47 protein. This process involved heterologous recombination in the cyanobacterium between psbB sequences from spinach and Synechocystis 6803; which was found to be reasonably effective in Synechocystis. Also other approaches were used that can produce a broad spectrum of chimaeric mutants in a single experiment. Functional characterization of the chimaeric photoautotrophic mutants indicated that if a decrease in the photoautotrophic growth rates was observed, this was correlated with a decrease in the number of Photosystem II reaction centers (on a chlorophyll basis) in the thylakoid membrane and with a decrease in oxygen evolution rates. Remaining Photosystem II reaction centers in these chimaeric mutants appeared to function rather normally, but thermoluminescence and chlorophyll a fluorescence measurements provided evidence for a destabilization of QB . This illustrates the sensitivity of the functional properties of the PS II reaction center to mild perturbations in a neighboring protein.Abbreviations diuron 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - Fv variable chlorophyll a fluorescence - HEPES N-(2-hydroxyethyl)piperazine-N-(2-ethanesulfonic acid) - (k)bp (kilo)base pairs - PS II Photosystem II - QA primary electron-accepting plastoquinone in Photosystem II - QB secondary electron-accepting plastoquinone in Photosystem II - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate  相似文献   

4.
5.
Xiao-Min Gong  Tal Lev  Chanoch Carmeli 《BBA》2009,1787(2):97-104
Photosystem I (PS I) mediates light-induced electron transfer from P700 through a chlorophyll a, a quinone and a [4Fe-4S] iron-sulfur cluster FX, located on the core subunits PsaA/B to iron-sulfur clusters FA/B on subunit PsaC. Structure function relations in the native and in the mutant (psaB-C565S/D566E) of the cysteine ligand of FX cluster were studied by X-ray absorption spectroscopy (EXAFS) and transient spectroscopy. The structure of FX was determined in PS I lacking clusters FA/B by interruption of the psaC2 gene of PS I in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp PCC 6803. PsaC-deficient mutant cells assembled the core subunits of PS I which mediated electron transfer mostly to the phylloquinone. EXAFS analysis of the iron resolved a [4Fe-4S] cluster in the native PsaC-deficient PS I. Each iron had 4 sulfur and 3 iron atoms in the first and second shells with average Fe-S and Fe-Fe distances of 2.27 Å and 2.69 Å, respectively. In the C565S/D566E serine mutant, one of the irons of the cluster was ligated to three oxygen atoms with Fe-O distance of 1.81 Å. The possibility that the structural changes induced an increase in the reorganization energy that consequently decreased the rate of electron transfer from the phylloquinone to FX is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
The properties of Photosystem II electron donation were investigated by EPR spectrometry at cryogenic temperatures. Using preparations from mutants which lacked Photosystem I, the main electron donor through the Photosystem II reaction centre to the quinone-iron acceptor was shown to be the component termed Signal II. A radical of 10 G line width observed as an electron donor at cryogenic temperatures under some conditions probably arises through modification of the normal pathway of electron donation. High-potential cytochrome b-559 was not observed on the main pathway of electron donation. Two types of PS II centres with identical EPR components but different electron-transport kinetics were identified, together with anomalies between preparations in the amount of Signal II compared to the quinone-iron acceptor. Results of experiments using cells from mutants of Scenedesmus obliquus confirm the involvement of the Signal II component, manganese and high-potential cytochrome b-559 in the physiological process leading to oxygen evolution.  相似文献   

7.
Electroluminescence   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
An overview is presented of research based on the observation by Arnold and Azzi (1971) (Photochem Photobiol 14: 233–240), that an electric field induces charge-recombination luminescence in a suspension of photosynthetic membrane vesicles. The electroluminescence signals from Photosystems I and II are discussed in relation to the shape of the vesicles and the membrane potentials generated by the externally applied electric field. The use of the electroluminescence amplitude as a probe to study the kinetics and energetics of charge separation, and of its kinetics to monitor the electric-field induced charge recombination process are reviewed. Currently unresolved issues regarding the emission yield of electroluminescence are briefly discussed and the properties are summarized of the unexplained Photosystem II luminescence which is not sensitive to the membrane potential.Abbreviations DCMU 3(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - EL electroluminescence - PS I, II Photosystem I, II - TPB tetraphenylboron, an artificial electron donor for PS II - P primary electron donor - Si Yz P680 Pheo QA QB sequence of electron transfer components in PS II - plastocyanin P700 A0 A1 Fx FA (or FB) sequence of electron transfer components in PS I  相似文献   

8.
《BBA》1986,850(2):226-233
The steady-state amplitude and flash-induced kinetics of EPR signal II in two Photosystem II (PS II) reaction center protein complexes from Synechococcus were measured to probe the organization of species involved in the PS II electron-transfer chain. A PS II reaction center complex (E-1) which has 47, 40, 31, 28 and 9 kDa subunits shows both fast decaying (signal IIf) and slowly decaying (signal IIs+u) EPR components. The amplitude of signal IIf, which represents Z (the donor to P-680), is about 1 spin per 30 Chl. This corresponds to one spin per reaction center in this preparation. Signal IIs+u, the slowly decaying component of signal II, reflects D, a donor to PS II on a side chain from the path of water oxidation in higher plants and algae. Signal IIs+u is present in the E-1 preparation in a ratio of about 1 spin per 40 Chl. Flash-induced signal IIf in E-1 shows biexponential decay with half-times of 20 ms and 300 ms. In a PS II reaction center complex (CP2b) which has 47, 31, 28 and 9 kDa subunits, but no 40 kDa subunit, an appreciable amount of signal IIf is observed (about 1 per 50 Chl). Less than 1 spin per 400 Chl of signal IIs+u is visible in this sample. The kinetics of Z+ reduction (signal IIf) in CP2b is similar to that seen in E-1 preparations, indicating that CP2b contains all of the molecules necessary for primary charge separation and secondary electron donation from Z.  相似文献   

9.
The enzyme lactoperoxidase was used to specifically iodinate the surface-exposed proteins of chloroplast lamellae. This treatment had two effects on Photosystem II activity. The first, occurring at low levels of iodination, resulted in a partial loss of the ability to reduce 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol (DCIP), even in the presence of an electron donor for Photosystem II. There was a parallel loss of Photosystem II mediated variable yield fluorescence which could not be restored by dithionite treatment under anaerobic conditions. The same pattern of inhibition was observed in either glutaraldehyde-fixed or unfixed membranes. Analysis of the lifetime of fluorescence indicated that iodination changes the rate of deactivation of the excited state chlorophyll. We have concluded that iodination results in the introduction of iodine into the Photosystem II reaction center pigment-protein complex and thereby introduces a new quenching. The data indicate that the reaction center II is surface exposed.At higher levels of iodination, an inhibition of the electron transport reactions on the oxidizing side of Photosystem II was observed. That portion of the total rate of photoreduction of DCIP which was inhibited by this action could be restored by addition of an electron donor to Photosystem II. Loss of activity of the oxidizing side enzymes also resulted in a light-induced bleaching of chlorophyll a680 and carotenoid pigments and a dampening of the sequence of O2 evolution observed during flash irradiation of treated chloroplasts. All effects on electron transport on the oxidizing side of Photosystem II could be eliminated by glutaraldehyde fixation of the chloroplast lamellae prior to lactoperoxidase treatment. It is concluded that the electron carriers on the oxidizing side of Photosystem II are not surface localized; the functioning of these components is impaired by structural disorganization of the membrane occurring at high levels of iodination.Our data are in agreement with previously published schemes which suggest that Photosystem II mediated electron transport traverses the membrane.  相似文献   

10.
A model is presented describing the relationship between chlorophyll fluorescence quenching and photoinhibition of Photosystem (PS) II-dependent electron transport in chloroplasts. The model is based on the hypothesis that excess light creates a population of inhibited PS II units in the thylakoids. Those units are supposed to posses photochemically inactive reaction centers which convert excitation energy to heat and thereby quench variable fluorescence. If predominant photoinhibition of PS II and cooperativity in energy transfer between inhibited and active units are presumed, a quasi-linear correlation between PS II activity and the ratio of variable to maximum fluorescence, FVFM, is obtained. However, the simulation does not result in an inherent linearity of the relationship between quantum yield of PS II and FVFM ratio. The model is used to fit experimental data on photoinhibited isolated chloroplasts. Results are discussed in view of current hypotheses of photoinhibition.Abbreviations FM maximum total fluorescence - F0 initial fluorescence - FV maximum variable fluorescence - PS Photosystem - QA, QB primary and secondary electron acceptors of Photosystem II  相似文献   

11.
The Chl-protein complexes of three maize (Zea mays L.) mutants and one barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) mutant were analyzed using low temperature Chl fluorescence emissions spectroscopy and LDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The maize mutants hcf-3, hcf-19, and hcf-114 all exhibited a high Chl fluorescence (hcf) phenotype indicating a disruption of the energy transfer within the photosynthetic apparatus. The mutations in each of these maize mutants affects Photosystem II. The barley mutant analyzed was the well characterized Chl b-less mutant chlorina-f2, which did not exhibit the hcf phenotype. Chlorina-f2 was used because no complete Chl b-less mutant of maize is available. Analysis of hcf-3, hcf-19, and hcf-114 revealed that in the absence of CP43, LHC II can still transfer excitation energy to CP47. These results suggest that in mutant membranes LHC II can interact with CP47 as well as CP43. This functional interaction of LHC II with CP47 may only occur in the absence of CP43, however, it is possible that LHC II is positioned in the thylakoid membranes in a manner which allows association with both CP43 and CP47.Abbreviations hcf high chlorophyll fluorescence - LDS lithium dodecyl sulfate - LHC II light-harvesting complex of Photosystem II - LHC I light-harvesting complex of Photosystem I - CPIa chlorophyll-protein complex consisting of LHC I and the PS I core complex - CPI chlorophyll-protein complex consisting of the PS I core complex - CP47 47 kDa chlorophyll-protein of the Photosystem II core - CP43 43 kDa chlorophyll-protein of the Photosystem II core - CP29 29 kDa chlorophyll-protein of Photosystem II - CP26 26 kDa chlorophyll-protein of Photosystem II - CP24 24 kDa chlorophyll-protein of Photosystem II - fp free pigments  相似文献   

12.
Chlorella was used to study the effects of dehydration on photosynthetic activities. The use of unicellular green algae assured that the extent of dehydration was uniform throughout the whole cell population during the course of desiccation. Changes in the activities of the cells were monitored by measurements of fluorescence induction kinetics. It was found that inhibition of most of the photosynthetic activities started at a similar level of cellular water content. They included CO2 fixation, photochemical activity of Photosystem II and electron transport through Photosystem I. The blockage of electron flow through Photosystem I was complete and the whole transition occurred within a relative short time of dehydration. On the other hand, the suppression of Photosystem II activity was incomplete and the transition took a longer time of dehydration. Upon rehydration, the inhibition of Photosystem II activity was fully reversible when samples were in the middle of the transition, but was not thereafter. The electron transport through Photosystem I was also reversible during the transition, but was only partially afterward.Abbreviations DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethyl urea - Fm maximum fluorescence yield - F0 non-variable fluorescence level emitted when all PS II centers are open - Fv variable part of fluorescence - PS photosystem - QA primary quinone acceptor of Photosystem II  相似文献   

13.
Haijun Liu 《BBA》2009,1787(8):1029-1038
The Arabidopsis thaliana mutant psbo1 has recently been described and characterized. Loss of expression of the PsbO-1 protein leads to a variety of functional perturbations including elevated levels of the PsbO-2 protein and defects on both the oxidizing- and reducing-sides of Photosystem II. In this communication, two plant lines were produced using the psbo1 mutant as transgenic host, which contained an N-terminally histidine6-tagged PsbO-1 protein. This protein was expressed and correctly targeted into the thylakoid lumen. Immunological analysis indicated that different levels of expression of the modified PsbO-1 protein were obtained in different transgenic plant lines and that the level of expression in each line was stable over several generations. Examination of the Photosystem II closure kinetics demonstrated that the defective double reduction of QB and the delayed exchange of QBH2 with the plastoquinone pool which were observed during the characterization of the psbo1 mutant were effectively restored to wild-type levels by the His6-tagged PsbO-1 protein. Flash fluorescence induction and decay were also examined. Our results indicated that high expression of the modified PsbO-1 was required to increase the ratio of PS IIα/PS IIβ reaction centers to wild-type levels. Fluorescence decay kinetics in the absence of DCMU indicated that the expression of the His6-tagged PsbO-1 protein restored efficient electron transfer to QB, while in the presence of DCMU, charge recombination between QA and the S2 state of the oxygen-evolving complex occurred at near wild-type rates. Our results indicate that high expression of the His6-tagged PsbO-1 protein efficiently complements nearly all of the photochemical defects observed in the psbo1 mutant. Additionally, this study establishes a platform on which the in vivo consequences of site-directed mutagenesis of the PsbO-1 protein can be examined.  相似文献   

14.
A biochemical and structural analysis is presented of fractions that were obtained by a quick and mild solubilization of thylakoid membranes from spinach with the non-ionic detergent n-dodecyl-α,D-maltoside, followed by a partial purification using gel filtration chromatography. The largest fractions consisted of paired, appressed membrane fragments with an average diameter of about 360 nm and contain Photosystem II (PS II) and its associated light-harvesting antenna (LHC II), but virtually no Photosystem I, ATP synthase and cytochrome b 6 f complex. Some of the membranes show a semi-regular ordering of PS II in rows at an average distance of about 26.3 nm, and from a partially disrupted grana membrane fragment we show that the supercomplexes of PS II and LHC II represent the basic structural unit of PS II in the grana membranes. The numbers of free LHC II and PS II core complexes were very high and very low, respectively. The other macromolecular complexes of the thylakoid membrane occurred almost exclusively in dispersed forms. Photosystem I was observed in monomeric or multimeric PS I-200 complexes and there are no indications for free LHC I complexes. An extensive analysis by electron microscopy and image analysis of the CF0F1 ATP synthase complex suggests locations of the δ (on top of the F1 headpiece) and ∈ subunits (in the central stalk) and reveals that in a substantial part of the complexes the F1 headpiece is bended considerably from the central stalk. This kinking is very likely not an artefact of the isolation procedure and may represent the complex in its inactive, oxidized form. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

15.
Jane M. Bowes  Peter Horton 《BBA》1982,680(2):127-133
Fluorescence induction curves in 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU)-inhibited Photosystem (PS) II particles isolated from the blue-green alga Phormidium laminosum have been analysed as a function of redox potential. Redox titration of the initial fluorescence indicated a single component with Em,7.5 = +30 mV (n = 1) (Bowes, J., Horton, P. and Bendall, D.S. (1981) FEBS Lett. 135, 261–264). Despite this simplified electron acceptor system and the small number of chlorophylls per reaction centre, a sigmoidal induction curve was nevertheless seen. Sigmoidicity decreased as Q was reduced potentiometrically prior to induction such that the induction was exponential when the ratio FiFm = 0.64. These particles also showed a slow (β) phase of induction which titrated with an Em value slightly more positive than that of the major quencher. It is concluded that the sigmoidal shape of the fluorescence induction curve observed in Phormidium PS II particles is not a consequence of a requirement for two photons to close the PS II reaction centre, but is generated as a result of energy transfer between photosynthetic units comprising one reaction centre per approx. 50 chlorophylls. Also, the existence of PS II heterogeneity (PS IIα, PS IIβ centres) does not require a structurally differentiated chloroplast, but may only indicate the extent of aggregation of PS II centres.  相似文献   

16.
S Acker  A Picaud  J Duranton 《BBA》1976,440(2):269-277
Photosynthetic activity in the absence of the CP1 and CP2 pigmentary complexesVarious photochemical activities were tested on chloroplasts of Zea mays that received 4 s of light every 4 h during the culture period. Photosystem I and Photosystem II were functioning, as well as the photosynthetic electron transport. These chloroplasts exhibited upon sodium dodecyl sulphate gel electrophoresis neither Complex 1 (Mr 70 000) generally associated with Photosystem I nor Complex 2 Mr 25 000) generally associated with Photosystem II. Chlorophyll is indeed attached to polypeptides of molecular weight 21 000 and 29 000.These results lead us to question the functional role of chloroplast protein-pigment complexes observed by sodium dodecyl sulphate gel electrophoresis.  相似文献   

17.
Tobacco rbcL deletion mutant, which lacks the key enzyme Rubisco for photosynthetic carbon assimilation, was characterized with respect to thylakoid functional properties and protein composition. The ΔrbcL plants showed an enhanced capacity for dissipation of light energy by non-photochemical quenching which was accompanied by low photochemical quenching and low overall photosynthetic electron transport rate. Flash-induced fluorescence relaxation and thermoluminescence measurements revealed a slow electron transfer and decreased redox gap between QA and QB, whereas the donor side function of the Photosystem II (PSII) complex was not affected. The 77 K fluorescence emission spectrum of ΔrbcL plant thylakoids implied a presence of free light harvesting complexes. Mutant plants also had a low amount of photooxidisible P700 and an increased ratio of PSII to Photosystem I (PSI). On the other hand, an elevated level of plastid terminal oxidase and the lack of F0 ‘dark rise’ in fluorescence measurements suggest an enhanced plastid terminal oxidase-mediated electron flow to O2 in ΔrbcL thylakoids. Modified electron transfer routes together with flexible dissipation of excitation energy through PSII probably have a crucial role in protection of PSI from irreversible protein damage in the ΔrbcL mutant under growth conditions. This protective capacity was rapidly exceeded in ΔrbcL mutant when the light level was elevated resulting in severe degradation of PSI complexes.  相似文献   

18.
A time-resolved study of the effects of heat stress (23 to 50°C) on Fo level of chlorophyll fluorescence of leaves having different antenna content has been performed in order to elucidate the causes of heat induced increase of Fo in vivo. The multi-exponential deconvolution of the decays after a picosecond flash at Fo have shown that the best fit in both wild-type and the mutant chlorina F2 of barley leaves is obtained with three components in the temperature range utilized (100, 400 and 1200 ps at 23°C). In intermittent light greened pea leaves, a fourth long lifetime component (4 ns at 23°C) is needed. The comparison of the three types of leaves at 23°C shows that the content of the LHCII b complex does not affect the lifetimes of the two main components (100 and 400 ps) and affects their preexponential factors. This result suggests that in the PS II unit the exciton transfer from LHC IIb to the rest of the antenna is irreversible. The effects of heat stress on individual lifetime components, Ti, included several changes. Utilizing for PS II unit an extended ‘Reversible Radical Pair’ model, having three compartments, to interpret the variations of Ti and Ai induced by temperature increases, it can be inferred that heat determines: (i) an irreversible disconnection of a monor antenna complex which is not the LHC IIb complex, this effect is induced by temperatures higher than 40°C; (ii) a decrease of the quantum efficiency of Photosystem II photochemistry which is due to several effects: a decrease of the rate of charge separation, an increase of P+I- recombination rate constant and a decrease of the stabilization of charges. These effects on Photosystem II photochemistry start to occur above 30°C and are partially reversible.  相似文献   

19.
Dvorah Ish-Shalom  Itzhak Ohad 《BBA》1983,722(3):498-507
The polypeptide pattern, chlorophyll-protein complexes, fluorescence emission spectra and light intensity required for saturation of electron flow via Photosystem (PS) II and PS I in a pale-green photoautotrophic mutant, y-lp, were compared to those of the parent strain, Chlamydomonas reinhardii y-1 cells. The mutant exhibits a 686 nm fluorescence yield at 25°C and 77 K 2–6-fold higher than that of the parent strain cells, and is deficient in thylakoid polypeptides 14, 17.2, 18 and 22 according to the nomenclature of Chua (Chua, N.-H. (1980) Methods Enzymol. 60C, 434–446). All chlorophyll-protein complexes ascribed to PS II and the CP I complex were present in both type of cells. However, a chlorophyll-protein complex CP Ia containing — in the parent strain — the 66–68 kDa polypeptides of CP I and the four above-mentioned polypeptides, was absent in the mutant. It was previously reported that a chlorophyll-protein complex, CP O, obtained from C. reinhardii contains five polypeptides, namely, 14, 15, 17.2, 18 and 22 (Wollman, F.A. and Bennoun, P. (1982) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 680, 352–360). A CP O-like complex was present also in the mutant y-lp cells but it contains only one polypeptide, 15. Energy transfer from PS II to PS I was not impaired in the mutant, although a 4-fold higher light intensity was required for the saturation of PS I electron flow in the y-lp cells as compared with the parent strain. No difference was found in the light saturation curves for PS II activity between the mutant and parent strain cells. Based on these and additional data (Gershoni, J.M., Shochat, S., Malkin, S. and Ohad, I. (1982) Plant Physiol. 70, 637–644), it is concluded that the chlorophyll-protein complexes of PS I in Chlamydomonas comprise a reaction center-core antenna complex containing the 66–68 kDa polypeptides (CP I), a connecting antenna consisting of four polypeptides (14, 17.2, 18 and 22), and a light-harvesting antenna containing one polypeptide, 15. These appear to be organized as a complex, CP Ia. The interconnecting antenna is deficient in the y-lp mutant and thus the CP Ia complex is unstable and energy is not transferred from CP O to CP I. The effective cross-section of PS I antenna is thus reduced and a high fluorescence is emitted at 686 nm.  相似文献   

20.
To investigate the effects of a membrane potential on excitation trapping and charge separation in Photosystem II we have studied the chlorophyll fluorescence yield in osmotically swollen chloroplasts subjected to electrical field pulses. Significant effects were observed only in those membrane regions where a large membrane potential opposing the photochemical charge separation was built up. When the fluorescence yield was low, close to F0, a much higher yield, up to Fmax, was observed during the presence of the membrane potential. This is explained by an inhibition by the electrical field of electron transfer to the quinone acceptor Q, resulting in a decreased trapping of excitations. A field pulse applied when the fluorescence yield was high, Q and the donor side being in the reduced state, had the opposite effect: the fluorescence was quenched nearly to F0. This field-induced fluorescence quenching is ascribed to reversed electron transfer from Q? to the intermediate acceptor, pheophytin. Its field strength dependence suggests that the midpoint potential difference between pheophytin and Q is at most about 300 mV. Even then it must be assumed that electron transfer between pheophytin and Q spans 90% of the potential difference across the membrane.  相似文献   

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