首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Intact attached sun leaves of Helianthus annuus and shade leaves of Monstera deliciosa and Hedera helix were used to obtain light response curves of CO2 uptake, the content of the carotenoid zeaxanthin (formed by violaxanthin de-epoxidation), as well as nonphotochemical quenching (qNP), and the rate constant of radiationless energy dissipation (kD). The latter two parameters were calculated from the decrease of chlorophyll a fluorescence at closed photosystem II traps in saturating pulses in the light. Among the three species, the light-saturated capacity of CO2 uptake differed widely and light saturation of CO2 uptake occurred at very different photon flux densities. Fluorescence quenching and zeaxanthin content exhibited features which were common to all three species: below light-saturation of CO2 uptake nonphotochemical quenching occurred in the absence of zeaxanthin and was not accompanied by a decrease in the yield of instantaneous fluorescence. Nonphotochemical quenching, qNP, increased up to values which ranged between 0.35 and 0.5 when based on a control value of the yield of variable fluorescence determined after 12 hours of darkness. As light saturation of CO2 uptake was approached, qNP showed a secondary increase and the zeaxanthin content of the leaves began to rise. This was also the point from which the yield of instantaneous fluorescence began to decrease. The increase in zeaxanthin was paralleled by an increase in the rate constant for radiationless energy dissipation kD, which opens the possibility that zeaxanthin is related to the rapidly relaxing “high-energy-state quenching” in leaves.  相似文献   

2.
Leaves ofNerium oleander L. plants, which had been previously kept in a shaded glasshouse for at least two months, were fed 1 mM dithiothreitol (DTT) through their petioles, either for 12h in darkness (overnight) or for 2h in low light (28 μmol photons·m−2·s−1), in each case followed by a 3-h exposure to high light (1260 μmol photons·m−2·s−1). During exposure to high light, violaxanthin became converted to zeaxanthin in control leaves, to which water had been fed, whereas zeaxanthin did not accumulate in leaves treated with DTT. Total carbon gain was not reduced by DTT during the photoinhibitory treatment. Exposure to high light led to a decrease in the photochemical efficiency of photosystem II, measured as the ratio of variable over maximum fluorescence emission,F v/F M, at both 298 K and 77K. The decrease was much more pronounced in the presence of DTT, mainly owing to a sustained increase in the instantaneous fluorescence,F o. By contrast, in the control leaves,F o determined immediately after the high-light treatment showed a transient decrease below theF o value obtained before the onset of the photoinhibitory treatment (i.e. after 12 h dark adaptation), followed by a rapid return (within seconds) to this original level ofF o during the following recovery period in darkness. Incubation of leaves with DTT led to large, sustained decreases in the photon-use efficiency of photosynthetic O2 evolution by bright light, whilst the capacity of photosynthetic O2 evolution at light and CO2 saturation was less affected. In the control leaves, only small reductions in the photon yield and in the photosynthetic capacity were observed. These findings are consistent with previous suggestions that zeaxanthin, formed in the xanthophyll cycle by de-epoxidation of violaxanthin, is involved in protecting the photosynthetic apparatus against the adverse effects of excessive light.  相似文献   

3.
Leaves of Vitis californica Benth. (California wild grape) exposed to a photon flux density (PFD) equivalent to full sun exhibited temperature-dependent reductions in the rates or efficiencies of component photosynthetic processes. During high-PFD exposure, net CO2 uptake, photon yield of oxygen evolution, and photosystem II chlorophyll fluorescence at 77 Kelvin (Fm, Fv, and Fv/Fm) were more severely inhibited at high and low temperatures than at intermediate temperatures. Sun leaves tolerated high PFD more than growth chamber-grown leaves but exhibited qualitatively similar temperature-dependent responses to high-PFD exposures. Photosystem II fluorescence and net CO2 uptake exhibited different sensitivities to PFD and temperature. Fluorescence and gas exchange kinetics during exposure to high PFD suggested an interaction of multiple, temperature-dependent processes, involving both regulation of energy distribution and damage to photosynthetic components. Comparison of Fv/Fm to photon yield of oxygen evolution yielded a single, curvilinear relationship, regardless of growth condition or treatment temperature, whereas the relationship between Fm (or Fv) and photon yield varied with growth conditions. This indicated that Fv/Fm was the most reliable fluorescence indicator of PSII photochemical efficiency for leaves of different growth conditions and treatments.  相似文献   

4.
Dithiothreitol, which completely inhibits the de-epoxidation of violaxanthin to zeaxanthin, was used to obtain evidence for a causal relationship between zeaxanthin and the dissipation of excess excitation energy in the photochemical apparatus in Spinicia oleracea L. In both leaves and chloroplasts, inhibition of zeaxanthin formation by dithiothreitol was accompanied by inhibition of a component of nonphotochemical fluorescence quenching. This component was characterized by a quenching of instantaneous fluorescence (Fo) and a linear relationship between the calculated rate constant for radiationless energy dissipation in the antenna chlorophyll and the zeaxanthin content. In leaves, this zeaxanthin-associated quenching, which relaxed within a few minutes upon darkening, was the major component of nonphotochemical fluorescence quenching determined in the light, i.e. it represented the `high-energy-state' quenching. In isolated chloroplasts, the zeaxanthin-associated quenching was a smaller component of total nonphotochemical quenching and there was a second, rapidly reversible high-energy-state component of fluorescence quenching which occurred in the absence of zeaxanthin and was not accompanied by Fo quenching. Leaves, but not chloroplasts, were capable of maintaining the electron acceptor, Q, of photosystem II in a low reduction state up to high degrees of excessive light and thus high degrees of nonphotochemical fluorescence quenching. When ascorbate, which serves as the reductant for violaxanthin de-epoxidation, was added to chloroplast suspensions, zeaxanthin formation at low photon flux densities was stimulated and the relationship between nonphotochemical fluorescence quenching and the reduction state in chloroplasts then became more similar to that found in leaves. We conclude that the inhibition of zeaxanthin-associated fluorescence quenching by dithiothreitol provides further evidence that there exists a close relationship between zeaxanthin and potentially photoprotective dissipation of excess excitation energy in the antenna chlorophyll.  相似文献   

5.
The role of the xanthophyll cycle in regulating the energy flow to the PS II reaction centers and therefore in photoprotection was studied by measurements of light-induced absorbance changes, Chl fluorescence, and photosynthetic O2 evolution in sun and shade leaves of Hedera canariensis. The light-induced absorbance change at 510 nm (A510) was used for continuous monitoring of zeaxanthin formation by de-epoxidation of violaxanthin. Non-radiative energy dissipation (NRD) was estimated from non-photochemical fluorescence quenching (NPQ).High capacity for zeaxanthin formation in sun leaves was accompanied by large NRD in the pigment bed at high PFDs as indicated by a very strong NPQ both when all PS II centers are closed (F'm) and when all centers are open (F'o). Such Fo quenching, although present, was less pronounced in shade leaves which have a much smaller xanthophyll cycle pool.Dithiothreitol (DTT) provided through the cut petiole completely blocked zeaxanthin formation. DTT had no detectable effect on photosynthetic O2 evolution or the photochemical yield of PS II in the short term but fully inhibited the quenching of Fo and 75% of the quenching of Fm, indicating that NRD in the antenna was largely blocked. This inhibition of quenching was accompanied by an increased closure of the PS II reaction centers.In the presence of DTT a photoinhibitory treatment at a PFD of 200 mol m-2 s-1, followed by a 45 min recovery period at a low PFD, caused a 35% decrease in the photon yield of O2 evolution, compared to a decrease of less than 5% in the absence of DTT. The Fv/Fm ratio, measured in darkness showed a much greater decrease in the presence than in the absence of DTT. In the presence of DTT Fo rose by 15–20% whereas no change was detected in control leaves.The results support the conclusion that the xanthophyll cycle has a central role in regulating the energy flow to the PS II reaction centers and also provide direct evidence that zeaxanthin protects against photoinhibitory injury to the photosynthetic system.Abbreviations F, Fm, Fo, Fv Fluorescence yield at actual degree of PS II center closure, when all centers are closed, when all centers are open, variable fluorescence - NPQ non-photochemical fluorescence quenching - NRD non-radiative energy dissipation - PFD photon flux density - QA primary acceptor PS II  相似文献   

6.
When leaves of a mangrove, Rhizophora mangle, were exposed to an excess of light at chilling temperatures, synthesis of zeaxanthin through violaxanthin de-epoxidation as well as nonphotochemical fluorescence quenching were markedly reduced. The results suggest a protective role of energy dissipation against the adverse effects of high light and chilling temperatures: leaves of R. mangle that had been preilluminated in 2% O2, 0% CO2 at low photon flux density and showed a high level of zeaxanthin, and leaves that had been kept in the dark and contained no zeaxanthin, were both exposed to high light and chilling temperatures (5°C leaf temperature) in air and then held under control conditions in low light in air at 25°C. Measurements of chlorophyll a fluorescence at room temperature showed that the photochemical efficiency of PSII and the yield of maximum fluorescence of the preilluminated leaf recovered completely within 1 to 3 hours under the control conditions. In contrast, the fluorescence responses of the predarkened leaf in high light at 5°C did not recover at all. During a dark/light transient in 2% O2, 0% CO2 in low light at 5°C, nonphotochemical fluorescence quenching increased linearly with an increase in the zeaxanthin content in leaves of R. mangle. In soybean (Glycine max) leaves, which contained a background level of zeaxanthin in the dark, a similar treatment with excess light induced a level of nonphotochemical fluorescence quenching that was not paralleled by an increase in the zeaxanthin content.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Summary Leaves from two species, Euonymus kiautschovicus and Arctostaphylos uva-ursi, with a variety of different orientations and exposures, were examined in the field with regard to the xanthophyll cycle (the interconversion of three carotenoids in the chloroplast thylakoid membranes). East-, south-, and west-facing leaves of E. kiautschovicus were sampled throughout the day and all exhibited a pronounced and progressive conversion of violaxanthin to zeaxanthin, followed by a reconversion of zeaxanthin to violaxanthin later in the day. Maximal levels of zeaxanthin and minimal levels of violaxanthin were observed at the time when each leaf (orientation) received the maximum incident light, which was in the morning in east-facing, midday in southfacing, and in the afternoon in west-facing leaves. A very slight degree of hysteresis in the removal of zeaxanthin compared to its formation with regard to incident light was observed. Leaves with a broader range of orientations were sampled from A. uva-ursi prior to sunrise and at midday. All of the examined pigments (carotenoids and chlorophylls) increased somewhat per unit leaf area with increasing total daily photon receipt. The sum of the carotenoids involved in the xanthophyll cycle, violaxanthin + antheraxanthin + zeaxanthin, increased more strongly with increasing growth light than any other pigment. In addition, the amounts of zeaxanthin present at midday also increased markedly with increasing total daily photon receipt. The percentage of the xanthophyll cycle that was converted to zeaxanthin (and antheraxanthin) at peak irradiance was very large (approximately 80%) in the leaves of both E. kiautschovicus and A. uva-ursi. The daily changes in the components of the xanthophyll cycle that paralleled the daily changes in incident light in the leaves of E. kiautschovicus, and the increasing levels of the xanthophyll cycle components with total daily photon receipt in the leaves of A. uva-ursi, are both consistent with the involvement of zeaxanthin (i.e. the xanthophyll cycle) in the photoprotection of the photosynthetic apparatus against damage due to excessive light.Abbreviations A antheraxanthin - EPS epoxidation state of the xanthophyll cycle=(V+0.5A)/(V+A+Z) - PFD photon flux density (400–700 nm) - PFDi photon flux density incident upon the upper leaf surface - Tair air temperature - TL leaf temperature - V violaxanthin - Z zeaxanthin  相似文献   

9.
The possible role of zeaxanthin formation and antenna proteins in energy-dependent chlorophyll fluorescence quenching (qE) has been investigated. Intermittent-light-grown pea (Pisum sativum L.) plants that lack most of the chlorophyll a/b antenna proteins exhibited a significantly reduced qE upon illumination with respect to control plants. On the other hand, the violaxanthin content related to the number of reaction centers and to xanthophyll cycle activity, i.e. the conversion of violaxanthin into zeaxanthin, was found to be increased in the antenna-protein-depleted plants. Western blot analyses indicated that, with the exception of CP 26, the content of all chlorophyll a/b-binding proteins in these plants is reduced to less than 10% of control values. The results indicate that chlorophyll a/b-binding antenna proteins are involved in the energy-dependent fluorescence quenching but that only a part of qE can be attributed to quenching by chlorophyll a/b-binding proteins. It seems very unlikely that xanthophylls are exclusively responsible for the qE mechanism.Abbreviations CAB chlorophyll a/b-binding - Chl chlorophyll - FV variable fluorescence - IML intermittent light - LHC light harvesting complex - PFD photon flux density - qP photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluoresence - qN non-photochemical quenching - qE energy-dependent quenching - qI photoinhibitory quenching - qT quenching by state transition  相似文献   

10.
The effect of exposing intact leaves and isolated chloroplast membranes of Nerium oleander L. to excessive light levels under otherwise favorable conditions was followed by measuring photosynthetic CO2 uptake, electron transport and low-temperature (77K=-196°C) fluorescence kinetics. Photoinhibition, as manifested by a reduced rate and photon (quantum) yield of photosynthesis and a reduced electron transport rate, was accompanied by marked changes in fluorescence characteristics of the exposed upper leaf surface while there was little effect on the shaded lower surface. The most prominent effect of photoinhibitory treatment of leaves and chloroplasts was a strong quenching of the variable fluorescence emission at 692 nm (Fv,692) while the instantaneous fluorescence (Fo,692) was slightly increased. The maximum and the variable fluorescence at 734 nm were also reduced but not as much as FM,692 and Fv,692. The results support the view that photoinhibition involves an inactivation of the primary photochemistry of photosystem II by damaging the reaction-center complex. In intact leaves photoinhibition increased with increased light level, increased exposure time, and with decreased temperature. Increased CO2 pressure or decreased O2 pressure provided no protection against photoinhibition. With isolated chloroplasts, inhibition of photosystem II occurred even under essentially anaerobic conditions. Measurements of fluorescence characteristics at 77K provides a simple, rapid, sensitive and reproducible method for assessing photoinhibitory injury to leaves. The method should prove especially useful in studies of the occurrence of photoinhibition in nature and of interactive effects between high light levels and major environmental stress factors.Abbreviations and symbols PFD photon flux area density - PSI, PSII photosystem I, II - FM, FO, FV maximum, instantaneous, variable fluorescence emission C.I.W.-D.P.B. Publication No. 773  相似文献   

11.
Kalanchoë daigremontiana, a CAM plant grown in a greenhouse, was subjected to severe water stress. The changes in photosystem II (PSII) photochemistry were investigated in water‐stressed leaves. To separate water stress effects from photoinhibition, water stress was imposed at low irradiance (daily peak PFD 150 μmol m?2 s?1). There were no significant changes in the maximal efficiency of PSII photochemistry (Fv/Fm), the traditional fluorescence induction kinetics (OIP) and the polyphasic fluorescence induction kinetics (OJIP), suggesting that water stress had no direct effects on the primary PSII photochemistry in dark‐adapted leaves. However, PSII photochemistry in light‐adapted leaves was modified in water‐stressed plants. This was shown by the decrease in the actual PSII efficiency (ΦPSII), the efficiency of excitation energy capture by open PSII centres (Fv′/Fm′), and photochemical quenching (qP), as well as a significant increase in non‐photochemical quenching (NPQ) in particular at high PFDs. In addition, photoinhibition and the xanthophyll cycle were investigated in water‐stressed leaves when exposed to 50% full sunlight and full sunlight. At midday, water stress induced a substantial decrease in Fv/Fm which was reversible. Such a decrease was greater at higher irradiance. Similar results were observed in ΦPSII, qP, and Fv′/Fm′. On the other hand, water stress induced a significant increase in NPQ and the level of zeaxanthin via the de‐epoxidation of violaxanthin and their increases were greater at higher irradiance. The results suggest that water stress led to increased susceptibility to photoinhibition which was attributed to a photoprotective process but not to a photodamage process. Such a photoprotection was associated with the enhanced formation of zeaxanthin via de‐epoxidation of violaxanthin. The results also suggest that thermal dissipation of excess energy associated with the xanthophyll cycle may be an important adaptive mechanism to help protect the photosynthetic apparatus from photoinhibitory damage for CAM plants normally growing in arid and semi‐arid areas where they are subjected to a combination of water stress and high light.  相似文献   

12.
The relationships among the leaf adenylate energy charge, the xanthophyll-cycle components, and photosystem II (PSII) fluorescence quenching were determined in leaves of cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L. cv. Acala) under different leaf temperatures and different intercellular CO2 concentrations (Ci). Attenuating the rate of photosynthesis by lowering the Ci at a given temperature and photon flux density increased the concentration of high-energy adenylate phosphate bonds (adenylate energy charge) in the cell by restricting ATP consumption (A.M. Gilmore, O. Björkman 1994, Planta 192, 526–536). In this study we show that decreases in photosynthesis and increases in the adenylate energy charge at steady state were both correlated with decreases in PSII photo-chemical efficiency as determined by chlorophyll fluorescence analysis. Attenuating photosynthesis by decreasing Ci also stimulated violaxanthin-de-epoxidation-dependent nonradiative dissipation (NRD) of excess energy in PSII, measured by nonphotochemical fluorescence quenching. However, high NRD levels, which indicate a large trans-thylakoid proton gradient, were not dependent on a high adenylate energy charge, especially at low temperatures. Moreover, dithiothreitol at concentrations sufficient to fully inhibit violaxanthin de-epoxidation and strongly inhibit NRD, affected neither the increased adenylate energy charge nor the decreased PSII photo-chemical efficiency that result from inhibiting photosynthesis. The build-up of a high adenylate energy charge in the light that took place at low Ci and low temperatures was accompanied by a slowing of the relaxation of non-photochemical fluorescence quenching after darkening. This slowly relaxing component of nonphotochemical quenching was also correlated with a sustained high adenylate energy charge in the dark. These results indicate that hydrolysis of ATP that accumulated in the light may acidify the lumen and thus sustain the level of NRD for extended periods after darkening the leaf. Hence, sustained nonphotochemical quenching often observed in leaves subjected to stress, rather than being indicative of photoinhibitory damage, apparently reflects the continued operation of NRD, a photoprotective process.Abbreviations A antheraxanthin - adenylate kinase (myokinase), ATP:AMPphosphotransferase - Ci intercellular CO2 concentration - DPS de-epoxidation state of violaxanthin, ([Z+A]/[V+A+Z]) - DTT dithiothreitol - pH trans-thylakoid proton gradient - [2ATP+ADP] - F steady-state fluorescence in the presence of NRD - FM maximal fluorescence in the absence of NRD - FM maximal fluorescence in the presence of NRD - NRD nonradiative energy dissipation - PET photosynthetic electron transport rate - PFD photon flux density - PSII photon yield of PSII photochemistry at the actual reduction state in the light or dark - QA the primary electron acceptor of PSII - [ATP+ADP+AMP] - SVN Stern-Volmer nonphotochemical quenching - V violaxanthin - Z zeaxanthin We thank Connie Shih for skillful assistance in growing plants and for conducting HPLC analyses. A Carnegie Institution Fellowship to A.G. is also gratefully acknowledged.  相似文献   

13.
The carotenoid content of thylakoids and envelopes isolated from dark-or light-treated spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) chloroplasts was compared. In thylakoids, light induced a decrease of violaxanthin parallel with a stoichiometric increase of zeaxanthin due to violaxanthin deepoxidation. In envelopes, violaxanthin was also decreased and the relative decrease was similar to thylakoids, but zeaxanthin increase was small resulting in an over-all decrease of the amount of envelope carotenoids. When violaxanthin deepoxidation in thylakoids was partly inhibited by 10 nm nigericin, violaxanthin decrease in the envelope was inhibited to a similar degree.  相似文献   

14.
Changes in the photobiology and photosynthetic pigments of the seagrass Zostera marina from Chesapeake Bay (USA) were examined under a range of natural and manipulated irradiance regimes. Photosynthetic activity was assessed using chlorophyll-a fluorescence, and photosynthetic pigments were measured by HPLC. Large changes in the violaxanthin, zeaxanthin, and antheraxanthin content were concomitant with the modulation of non-photochemical quenching (NPQ). Photokinetics (Fv/Fm, rapid light curves (RLC), and non-photochemical quenching) varied as a result of oscillating irradiance and were highly correlated to xanthophyll pigment content. Zeaxanthin and antheraxanthin concentrations increased under elevated light conditions, while violaxanthin increased in darkened conditions. Unusually high concentrations of antheraxanthin were found in Z. marina under a wide range of light conditions, and this was associated with the partial conversion of violaxanthin to zeaxanthin. These results support the idea that xanthophyll intermediate pigments induce a photoprotective response during exposure to high irradiances in this seagrass.  相似文献   

15.
The relationship between the carotenoid zeaxanthin, formed by violaxanthin de-epoxidation, and nonphotochemical fluorescence quenching (qNP) in the light was investigated in leaves of Glycine max during a transient from dark to light in 2% O2, 0% CO2 at 100 to 200 micromoles of photons per square meter per second. (a) Up to a qNP (which can vary between 0 and 1) of about 0.7, the zeaxanthin content of leaves was linearly correlated with qNP as well as with the rate constant for radiationless energy dissipation in the antenna chlorophyll (kD). Beyond this point, at very high degrees of fluorescence quenching, only kD was directly proportional to the zeaxanthin content. (b) The relationship between zeaxanthin and kD was quantitatively similar for the rapidly relaxing quenching induced in 2% O2, 0% CO2 at 200 micromoles of photons per square meter per second and for the sustained quenching induced by long-term exposure of Nerium oleander to drought in high light (B Demmig, K Winter, A Krüger, F-C Czygan [1988] Plant Physiol 87: 17-24). These findings suggest that the same dissipation process may be induced by very different treatments and that this particular dissipation process can have widely different relaxation kinetics. (c) A rapid induction of strong nonphotochemical fluorescence quenching within about 1 minute was observed exclusively in leaves which already contained a background level of zeaxanthin.  相似文献   

16.
Green algal lichens, which were able to form zeaxanthin rapidly via the de-epoxidation of violaxanthin, exhibited a high capacity to dissipate excess excitation energy nonradiatively in the antenna chlorophyll as indicated by the development of strong nonphotochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence (FM, the maximum yield of fluorescence induced by pulses of saturating light) and, to a lesser extent, FO (the yield of instantaneous fluorescence). Blue-green algal lichens which did not contain any zeaxanthin were incapable of such radiationless energy dissipation and were unable to maintain the acceptor of photosystem II in a low reduction state upon exposure to excessive photon flux densities (PFD). Furthermore, following treatment of the thalli with an inhibitor of the violaxanthin de-epoxidase, dithiothreitol, the response of green algal lichens to light became very similar to that of the blue-green algal lichens. Conversely, blue-green algal lichens which had accumulated some zeaxanthin following long-term exposure to higher PFDs exhibited a response to light which was intermediate between that of zeaxanthin-free blue-green algal lichens and zeaxanthin-containing green algal lichens. Zeaxanthin can apparently be formed in blue-green algal lichens (which lack the xanthophyll epoxides, i.e. violaxanthin and antheraxanthin) as part of the normal biosynthetic pathway which leads to a variety of oxygenated derivatives of β-carotene during exposure to high light over several days. We conclude that the pronounced difference in the capacity for photoprotective energy dissipation in the antenna chlorophyll between (zeaxanthin-containing0 green algal lichens and (zeaxanthin-free) blue-green algal lichens is related to the presence or absence of zeaxanthin, and that this difference can explain the greater susceptibility to high-light stress in lichens with blue-green phycobionts.  相似文献   

17.
Peter Jahns  Birgit Miehe 《Planta》1996,198(2):202-210
The generation of non-photochemical fluorescence quenching under photoinhibitory illumination and its relaxation under subsequent low light illumination in leaves from intermittent-light-grown pea (Pisum sativum L.) plants (IML-plants) has been investigated. In parallel, we studied (i) the activity of the xanthophyll cycle with emphasis on zeaxanthin formation and reconversion to violaxanthin and (ii) the degradation rate of D1 protein. In comparison to control plants grown in continuous light, IML-plants were much more susceptible to photoinhibition as determined from the increase of slowly (halftimes > 20 min) relaxing quenching (qI) of variable chlorophyll fluorescence. The relaxation (recovery) kinetics of qI (under weak light) in both types of plant depended on the photon flux density, temperature and duration of pre-illumination. The recovery time generally increased with an increasing degree of qI. In IML-plants, relaxation of qI was kinetically closely related to the epoxidation of zeaxanthin. At high degrees of photosystem II inhibition the kinetics resembled those of D1 degradation. The results are discussed in terms of the mechanisms of photosystem II inactivation in vivo.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of temperature on the dark relaxation kinetics of nonradiative energy dissipation in photosystem II were compared in lettuce (Lactuca sativa L.) chloroplasts and leaves of Aegialitis annulata R. Br. After high levels of violaxanthin de-epoxidation in the light, Aegialitis leaves showed a marked delay in the dark relaxation of nonradiative dissipation, measured as non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) of photosystem II chlorophyll a fluorescence. Aegialitis leaves also maintained a moderately high adenylate energy charge at low temperatures during and after high-light exposure, presumably because of their limited carbon-fixation capacity. Similarly, dark-sustained NPQ could be induced in lettuce chloroplasts after de-epoxidizing violaxanthin and light-activating the ATP synthase. The duration and extent of dark-sustained NPQ were strongly enhanced by low temperatures in both chloroplasts and leaves. Further, the NPQ sustained at low temperatures was rapidly reversed upon warming. In lettuce chloroplasts, low temperatures sharply decreased the ATP-hydrolysis rate while increasing the duration and extent of the resultant trans-thylakoid proton gradient that elicits the NPQ. This was consistent with a higher degree of energy-coupling, presumably due to reduced proton diffusion through the thylakoid membrane at the lower temperatures. The chloroplast adenylate pool was in equilibrium with the adenylate kinase and therefore both ATP and ADP contributed to reverse coupling. The low-temperature-enhanced NPQ quenched the yields of the dark level (Fo) and the maximal (Fm) fluorescence proportionally in both chloroplasts and leaves. The extent of NPQ in the dark was inversely related to the efficiency of photosystem II, and very similar linear relationships were obtained over a wide temperature range in both chloroplasts and leaves. Likewise, the dark-sustained absorbance changes, caused by violaxanthin de-epoxidation (A508nm) and energy-dependent light scattering (A536nm) were strikingly similar in chloroplasts and leaves. Therefore, we conclude that the dark-sustained, low-temperature-stimulated NPQ in chloroplasts and leaves is apparently directly dependent on lumen acidification and chloroplastic ATP hydrolysis. In leaves, the ATP required for sustained NPQ is evidently provided by oxidative phosphorylation in the mitochondria. The functional significance of this quenching process and implications for measurements of photo-protection versus photodamage in leaves are discussed.Abbreviations and Symbols A antheraxanthin - Chl chlorophyll - DPS de-epoxidation state of the xanthophyll cycle, ([Z+A]/[V+A+Z]) - F, F steady-state fluorescence in the absence, presence of thylakoid energization - Fo, Fo dark fluorescence level in the absence, presence of thylakoid energization - Fm, Fm maximal fluorescence in absence, presence of thylakoid energization - NPQ nonphotochemical quenching (Fm/Fm)–1 - V violaxanthin - Z zeaxanthin - NRD nonradiative dissipation - PFD photon flux density - [2ATP+ADP] - pH trans-thylakoid proton gradient - S pH-dependent light scattering - PSII (Fm–F)/Fm, photon yield of PSII photochemistry at the actual reduction state in the light or dark - [ATP+ADP+AMP] We thank Connie Shih for skillful assistance in growing plants and for conducting HPLC analyses. Support from an NSF/USDA/DOE postdoctoral training grant to A.G. is gratefully acknowledged. A.G. also wishes to thank Prof. Govindjee for valuable discussions. C.I.W.-D.P.B. Publication No. 1197.  相似文献   

19.
Upon termination of watering of plants of Nerium oleander exposed to high light, photochemical efficiency became reduced as leaf water content decreased. Evidence is presented that this type of photoinhibition reflects to a substantial degree radiationless dissipation of excitation energy, probably mediated by the carotenoid zeaxanthin. During the imposition of water stress, the zeaxanthin content of leaves increased at the expense of violaxanthin and β-carotene as a water deficit developed over a period of several days. The increase in zeaxanthin content was linearly related to an increase in the rate of radiationless energy dissipation in the antenna chlorophyll as calculated from the characteristics of chlorophyll a fluorescence measured with a pulse amplitude modulated fluorometer at room temperature. The increase in the rate of radiationless dissipation was also linearly related to a decrease in PSII photochemical efficiency as indicated by the ratio of variable to maximum fluorescence. Leaves of well-watered shade plants of N. oleander exposed to strong light showed a similar increase in zeaxanthin content as sun leaves of the same species subjected to drought in strong light. Shade leaves possessed the same capacity as sun leaves to form zeaxanthin at the expense of both violaxanthin and β-carotene. The resistance of this species to the destructive effects of excess light appears to be related to interconversions between β-carotene and the three carotenoids of the xanthophyll cycle.  相似文献   

20.
Damage to primary photosynthetic reactions by drought, excess light and heat in leaves of Macroptilium atropurpureum Dc. cv. Siratro was assessed by measurements of chlorophyll fluorescence emission kinetics at 77 K (-196°C). Paraheliotropic leaf movement protected waterstressed Siratro leaves from damage by excess light (photoinhibition), by heat, and by the interactive effects of excess light and high leaf temperatures. When the leaves were restrained to a horizontal position, photoinhibition occurred and the degree of photoinhibitory damage increased with the time of exposure to high levels of solar radiation. Severe inhibition was followed by leaf death, but leaves gradually recovered from moderate damage. This drought-induced photoinhibitory damage seemed more closely related to low leaf water potential than to low leaf conductance. Exposure to leaf temperatures above 42°C caused damage to the photosynthetic system even in the dark and leaves died at 48°C. Between 42 and 48°C the degree of heat damage increased with the time of exposure, but recovery from moderate heat damage occurred over several days. The threshold temperature for direct heat damage increased with the growth temperature regime, but was unaffected by water-stress history or by current leaf water status. No direct heat damage occurred below 42°C, but in water-stressed plants photoinhibition increased with increasing leaf temperature in the range 31–42°C and with increasing photon flux density up to full sunglight values. Thus, water stress evidently predisposes the photosynthetic system to photoinhibition and high leaf temperature exacerbates this photoinhibitory damage. It seems probable that, under the climatic conditions where Siratro occurs in nature, but in the absence of paraheliotropic leaf movement, photoinhibitory damage would occur more frequently during drought than would direct heat damage.Abbreviations and symbols PFD photon flux area density - PSI, PSII photosyntem I, II - F M, F O, F V maximum, instantaneous, variable fluorescence emission - PLM paraheliotropic leaf movement; all data of parameter of variation are mean ± standard error  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号