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1.
The effects of changes in growth temperature on photosynthesis and carotenoid composition were examined in Zea mays L. leaves of different age and different developmental history. The plants were first grown at sub-optimal temperature (14°C) until the full development of the third leaf. At that time, the mature third leaf and the immature fourth leaf had a low chlorophyll (Chl) content, a low Chl a/b ratio, a high carotenoid/Chl a+b ratio, a high xanthophyll/β-carotene ratio, and about 80% of the xanthophyll cycle pool (violaxanthin [V] + antheraxanthin [A] + zeaxanthin [Z]) was in the form of zeaxanthin and antheraxanthin. When the temperature was increased from 14°C to 24°C for three days, increased Chl synthesis, accompanied by an increase in the Chl a/b ratio, took place. The ratios of lutein, neoxanthin, and V+A+Z to Chl a+b decreased markedly, whereas no significant changes appeared in the β-carotene/Chl a+b ratio. Furthermore, there was a sharp decrease in the xanthophyll/β-carotene ratio and most of zeaxanthin was converted to violaxanthin in the xanthophyll cycle. The third leaf and the tip segment of the fourth leaf, both expanded at 14°C, showed little difference in their pigment contents. However, the rate of CO2 assimilation of the tip segment of the fourth leaf was nearly twice that of the third leaf on the third day at 24°C, while the photosynthetic activity was similar in both leaves before the transfer to 24°C. During the warm period at 24°C, new leaf tissue (basal segment of the fourth leaf and part of a fifth leaf) was formed. On the third day at 24°C, the pigment content of 24°C-grown leaf tissue did not differ much from that of 14°C-grown leaf tissue with the exception that the total carotenoid content was lower in the former as compared to the latter, mainly because of a lower V+A+Z content. The rate of CO2 assimilation of 24°C-grown leaf tissue was comparable to that of the tip segment of the fourth leaf. Regardless of which leaf tissue is considered, reducing the temperature from 24°C to 14°C for 5 days slightly affected the pigment content, but violaxanthin was largely converted to zeaxanthin and antheraxanthin in the xanthophyll cycle. The results indicate that compared to old leaf tissue of mature leaves, physiologically younger leaf tissue of immature leaves is much more able to recover from depressions in the photosynthetic activity induced by growth at sub-optimal temperature when the plants experience optimal growth temperatures, but that factors other than the pigment content must determine this capability.  相似文献   

2.
The effects on pigment composition and photosynthesis of low temperature during growth were examined in the third leaf of three chilling-tolerant and three chilling-sensitive genotypes of Zea mays L. The plants were grown under a controlled environment at 24 or 14 °C at a photon flux density (PFD) of 200 or 600 μ mol m–2 s–1. At 24 °C, the two classes of genotypes showed little differences in their photosynthetic activity and their composition of pigments. At 14 °C, photosynthetic activity was considerably reduced but the chilling-tolerant genotypes displayed higher photosynthetic rates than the chilling-sensitive ones. Plants grown at 14 °C showed a reduced chlorophyll (Chl) a + b content and a reduced Chl a / b ratio but an increased ratio of total carotenoids to Chl a + b . These changes in pigment composition in plants grown at low temperature were generally more pronounced in the chilling-sensitive genotypes than in the tolerant ones, particularly at high PFD. Furthermore, at 14 °C, all the genotypes showed increased ratios of lutein, neoxanthin and xanthophyll-cycle carotenoids to Chl a + b but a reduced ratio of β -carotene to Chl a + b , especially at high PFD. At 14 °C, the chilling-tolerant genotypes, when compared with the sensitive ones, were characterized by higher contents of β -carotene and neoxanthin, a lower content of xanthophyll-cycle carotenoids, a lower ratio of xanthophylls to β -carotene, and less of their xanthophyll-cycle carotenoid pool in the form of zeaxanthin. These differences between the two classes of genotypes were more pronounced at high PFD than at low PFD. The results are discussed in terms of the relationship that may exist in maize between pigment composition and the capacity to form an efficient photosynthetic apparatus at low growth temperature.  相似文献   

3.
The performance of the photosynthetic apparatus was examined in the third leaves of Zea mays L. seedlings grown at near-optimal (25 °C) or at suboptimal (15 °C) temperature by measuring chlorophyll (ChI) a fluorescence parameters and oxygen evolution in different temperature and light conditions. In leaf tissue grown at 25 and 15 °C, the quantum yield of PSII electron transport (ψPSII) and the rate of O2 evolution decreased with decreasing temperature (from 25 to 4 °C) at a photon flux density of 125 μmol m?2 s?1. In leaves grown at 25 °C, the decrease of ψPSII correlated with a decrease of photochemical ChI fluorescence quenching (qp), whereas in leaves crown at 15 °C qp was largely insensitive to the temperature decrease. Compared with leaves grown at 25 °C, leaves grown at 15 °C were also able to maintain a higher fraction of oxidized to reduced QA (greater qp) at high photon flux densities (up to 2000 μmol m?2 s?1), particularly when the measurements were performed at high temperature (25 °C). With decreasing temperature and/or increasing light intensity, leaves grown at 15 °C exhibited a substantial quenching of the dark level of fluorescence F0 (q0) whereas this type of quenching was virtually absent in leaves grown at 25 °C. Furthermore, leaves grown at 15 °C were able to recover faster from photo inhibition of photosynthesis after a photoinhibitory treatment (1200 μmol m?2 s?1 at 25, 15 or 6 °C for 8 h) than leaves grown at 25 °C. The results suggest that, in spite of having a low photosynthetic capacity, Z. mays leaves grown at sub optimal temperature possess efficient mechanisms of energy dissipation which enable them to cope better with photoinhibition than leaves grown at near-optimal temperature. It is suggested that the resistance of Z. mays leaves grown at 15 °C to photoinhibition is related to the higher content of carotenoids of the xanthophyll cycle (violaxanthin + antheraxanthin + zeaxanthin) measured in these leaves than in leaves grown at 25 °C.  相似文献   

4.
Thermal acclimation and photoacclimation of photosynthesis were compared in Laminaria saccharina sporophytes grown at temperatures of 5 and 17 °C and irradiances of 15 and 150μmol photons m?2 s?1. When measured at a standard temperature (17°C), rates of light-saturated photosynthesis (Pmax) were higher in 5 °C-grown algae (c. 3.0 μmol O2 m?2 s?1) than in 17 °C-grown algae (c. 0.9 μmol O2 m-2 s-1). Concentrations of Rubisco were also 3-fold higher (per unit protein) in 5 °C-grown algae than in algae grown at 17 °C. Light-limited photosynthesis responded similarly to high temperature and low light Photon yields (α) were higher in algae grown at high temperature (regardless of light), and at 5 °C in low light, than in algae grown at 5 °C in high light Differences in a were correlated with light absorption; both groups of 17 °C algae and 5 °C low-light algae absorbed c. 75% of incident light, whereas 5 °C high-light algae absorbed c. 55%. Increased absorption was correlated with increases in pigment content PSII reaction centre densities and the fucoxanthin-Chl ale protein complex (FCP). Changes in a were also attributed, in part, to changes in the maximum photon yield of photosynthesis (0max). PSI reaction centre densities were unaffected by growth temperature, but the areal concentration of PSI in low-light-grown algae was twice that of high-light-grown algae (c. 160.0 versus 80.0 nmol m?2). We suggest that complex metabolic regulation allows L, saccharina to optimize photosynthesis over the wide range of temperatures and light levels encountered in nature.  相似文献   

5.
When plants of Zea mays L. cv. LG11 that have been grown at optimal temperatures are transferred to chilling temperatures (0–12°C) photoinhibition of photosynthetic CO2 assimilation can occur. This study examines how growth at sub-optimal temperatures alters both photosynthetic capacity and resistance to chilling-dependent photoinhibition. Plants of Z. mays cv. LG11 were grown in controlled environments at 14, 17, 20 and 25°C. As a measure of the capacity for photosynthesis under light limiting conditions, the maximum quantum yields of CO2 assimilation (φa.c) and O2 evolution (φa.o) were determined for the laminae of the second leaves at photon fluxes of 50–150 μmol m-2s-1. To determine photosynthetic capacity at photon fluxes approaching light saturation, rates of CO2 uptake (A1500) and O2 evolution (A1500) were determined in a photon flux of 1500 μmol m-2s-1. In leaves developed at 14°C, φ and φ were 26 and 43%, respectively, of the values for leaves grown at 25°C. Leaves grown at 17°C showed intermediate reductions in φ and φ, whilst leaves developed at 20°C showed no significant differences from those grown at 25°C. Similar patterns of decrease were observed for A1500 and A1500.0 with decreasing growth temperature. Leaves developed at 25°C showed higher rates of CO2 assimilation at all light levels and measurement temperatures in comparison to leaves developed at 17 and 14°C. A greater reduction in A1500 relative to A1500.0 with decreasing growth temperature was attributed to increased stomatal limitation. Exposure of leaves to 800–1000 μmol m-2 s-1 when plant temperature was depressed to ca 6.5°C produced a photoinhibition of photosynthetic CO2 assimilation in all leaves. However, in leaves developed at 17°C the decrease in A1500 following this chilling treatment was only 25% compared to 90% in leaves developed at 25°C. Recovery following chilling was completed earlier in leaves developed at 17°C. The results suggest that growth at sub-optimal temperatures induces increased tolerance to exposure to high light at chilling temperatures. This is offset by the large loss in photosynthetic capacity imposed by leaf development at sub-optimal temperatures.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract Saxifraga cernua, a perennial herb distributed throughout the arctic and subarctic regions, shows high levels of dark respiration. The amount of respiration exhibited by leaves and whole plants at any temperature is influenced by the pretreatment temperature. Plants grown at 10°C typically show higher dark respiration rates than plants grown at 20°C. The levels of alternative-pathway respiration (or cyanide-insensitive respiration) in leaves of S. cernua grown at high and low temperatures were assessed by treating leaf discs with 0.25 mol m?3 salicylhydroxamic acid during measurements of oxygen consumption. Alternative pathway respiration accounted for up to 75% of the total respiration. Tissues from 20°C-grown plants yielded a Q10 of 3.37 for normal respiration, and of 0.97 for alternative-pathway respiration. Tissues from 10°C-grown plants yielded a Q10 of 2.55 for normal respiration, and of 0.79 for alternative-pathway respiration. The alternative pathway does not appear to be as temperature sensitive as the normal cytochrome pathway. A simple energy model was used to predict the temperature gain expected from these high rates of alternative-pathway respiration. The model shows that less than 0.02°C can be gained by leaves experiencing these high respiration rates.  相似文献   

7.
Pandey  D.M.  Kim  K.-H.  Yeo  U.-D. 《Photosynthetica》2003,41(2):311-314
Dynamic changes of neoxanthin (NEO), violaxanthin (VIO), anteraxanthin (ANT), zeaxanthin (ZEA), chlorophyll (Chl) a, Chl b, α-carotene, β-carotene, and their behaviour under increasing duration of high irradiance (HI) were investigated in the soybean hypocotyl callus culture. The calli were induced on solid (1.1 % agar) MS medium (pH 5.8) supplemented with 4.52 μM 2,4-D, 2.32 μM kinetin, and 3 % sucrose. After 30 d of culture, the green calli were irradiated with “white light” (133W m−2) for 0, 3.5, and 24 h. HPLC profiles were separated on a C18 column. With increasing duration of HI, the content of total carotenoids (Cars) increased, but the ratio of Chl a+b/Cars decreased. With lengthening the duration of HI, there was induction of ZEA. Contents of ANT, α-carotene, and β-carotene remained nearly constant, but ratio of ZEA/Chl a+b increased with lengthening the HI duration. This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

8.
Attached intact leaves of Schefflera arboricola grown at three different photon flux densities (PFDs) were subjected to 24-h exposures to a high PFD and subsequent recovery at a low PFD. While sun leaves showed virtually no sustained effects on photosystem II (PSII), shade-grown leaves exhibited pronounced photoinhibition of PSII that required several days at low PFD to recover. Upon transfer to high PFD, levels of nonphotochemical quenching in PSII as well as levels of zeaxanthin were initially low in shade leaves but continued to increase gradually during the 24-h exposure. The xanthophyll cycle pool size rose gradually during and also subsequent to the photoinhibitory treatment in shade leaves. Upon return to low PFD, a marked and extremely long-lasting retention of zeaxanthin and antheraxanthin was observed in shade but not sun leaves. During recovery, changes in the conversion state of the xanthophyll cycle therefore closely mirrored the slow increases in PSII efficiency. This novel report of a close association between zeaxanthin retention and lasting PSII depressions in these shade leaves clearly suggests a role for zeaxanthin in photoinhibition of shade leaves. In addition, there was a decrease in β-carotene levels, some decrease in chlorophyll, but no change in lutein and neoxanthin (all per leaf area) in the shade leaves during and subsequent to the photoinhibitory treatment. These data may be consistent with a degradation of a portion of core complexes but not of peripheral light-harvesting complexes. A possible conversion of β-carotene to form additional zeaxanthin is discussed. Received: 24 October 1997 / Accepted: 12 November 1997  相似文献   

9.
The effects of photon flux density (PFD) and spectral quality on biomass, pigment content and composition, and the photosynthetic activity of Oscillatoria agardhii Gomont were investigated in steady-state populations. For alterations of PFD, chemostat populations were exposed to 50, 130 and 230 μmol photons·m?2·s?1 of photosynthetic active radiation (PAR). Decreases in biomass, chlorophyll a (Chl a) and c-phycocyanin (CPC) contents, and CPC: Chl a and CPC: carotenoid content was not altered. Increases in the relative abundances of myxoxanthophyll and zeaxanthin and deceases in the relative abundances of echinenone and β-carotene within the carotenoid pigments coincided with increasing PFD. Increases in Chl a-specific photosynthetic rates and maxima and decreases in biomass-specific photosynthetic rates and maxima with increasing PFD were attributed to increased light harvesting by carotenoids per unit Chl a and reduction in total pigment content, respectively. Responses to spectral quality were tested by exposing chemostat populations to a gradient of spectral transmissions at 50 μmol photons·m?2·s?1 PAR. Biomass differences among populations were likely attributable to the distinct absorption of the PAR spectrum by Chl a, CPC, and carotenoids. Although pigment contents were not altered by spectral quality, relative abundances of zeaxanthin and echinenone in the carotenoid pigments increased in populations exposed to high-wavelength PAR. The population adapted to green light possessed a greater photosynthetic maximum than populations adapted to other spectral qualities.  相似文献   

10.
Leaves of Zea mays L. seedlings which developed at optimal (25°C) or suboptimal (15°C) temperature were exposed to high irradiance (1000 μmol m?2 s?1) and a severe chilling temperature (5°C) for up to 24 h to investigate their ability to withstand photooxidative stress. During this stress, the degradation of the endogenous antioxidants ascorbate, glutathione and α-tocopherol was delayed and less pronounced in 15°C leaves. Similarly, the decline in chlorophyll a, chlorophyll b, β-carotene and lutein was slower throughout the stress period. Faster development and a higher level of non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) of chlorophyll fluorescence, related to a stronger de-poxidation of the larger xanthophyll cycle pool in 15°C leaves, could act as a defence mechanism to reduce the formation of reactive oxygen species during severe chilling. Furthermore, plants grown at suboptimal temperature exhibited a higher amount of the antioxidants glutathione and α-tocopherol. The higher α-tocopherol content in leaves (double based on leaf area; 4-fold higher based on chlorophyll content) which developed at suboptimal temperature may play an especially important role in the stabilization of the thylakoid membrane and thus prevent lipid peroxidation.  相似文献   

11.
The last steps of chlorophyll (Chl) biosynthesis were studied at different light intensities and temperatures in dark‐germinated ginkgo (Ginkgo biloba L.) seedlings. Pigment contents and 77 K fluorescence emission spectra were measured and the plastid ultrastructure was analysed. All dark‐grown organs contained protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) forms with similar spectral properties to those of dark‐grown angiosperm seedlings, but the ratios of these forms to each other were different. The short‐wavelength, monomeric Pchlide forms were always dominating. Etioplasts with small prolamellar bodies (PLBs) and few prothylakoids (PTs) differentiated in the dark‐grown stems. Upon illumination with high light intensities (800 μmol m?2 s?1 photon flux density, PFD), photo‐oxidation and bleaching occurred in the stems and the presence of 1O2 was detected. When Chl accumulated in plants illuminated with 15 μmol m?2 s?1 PFD it was significantly slower at 10°C than at 20°C. At room temperature, the transformation of etioplasts into young chloroplasts was observed at low light, while it was delayed at 10°C. Grana did not appear in the plastids even after 48 h of greening at 20°C. Reaccumulation of Pchlide forms and re‐formation of PLBs occurred when etiolated samples were illuminated with 200 μmol m?2 s?1 PFD at room temperature for 24 h and were then re‐etiolated for 5 days. The Pchlide forms appeared during re‐etiolation had similar spectral properties to those of etiolated seedlings. These results show that ginkgo seedlings are very sensitive to temperature and light conditions during their greening, a fact that should be considered for ginkgo cultivation.  相似文献   

12.
Ola M.  Heide 《Physiologia plantarum》1969,22(5):1001-1012
Soil application of CCC reduced stem and leaf growth in Begonia plants. This effect was evident with all concentrations tested at 18°C, whereas at 21 and 24°C no growth–retarding effect was observed with 2 × 10?2 M CCC, and with 5 × 10?3 M growth was even stimulated. Flowering was promoted by CCC in long day and neur–critical temperature, particularly under low light intensity in the winter. The formation of adventitious buds in leaves of plants grown at 21 and 24°C was stimulated when the plants received 5 × 10?2 and 2 × 10?2 M CCC, while 8 7times; 10?2 M was inhibitory. In plants grown at 18°C bud formation was inhibited by all CCC concentrations. Root formation in the the leaves was usually stimulated by high CCC concentrations, while root elongation was reduced. The level of ether–extractable. acidic auxin (presumably IAA) in the leaves was lowered by CCC treatment of the plants, hut this required higher CCC concentrations at higt than at low temperature. When applied to detached leaves CCC stimulated bud formation at concentrations ranging from 10?4 to 10?2 M in leaves planted at 18 and 21°C. At 24°C budding was inhibited by 10?2 M CCC, the lower concentrations being stimulatory also at this temperature. Root formation and growth were not much affected by CCC treatment of the leaves, but increased with the temperature. Soil application of Phosfon (4 × 10?4 M) had no effect on growth and flowering, nov did it affect the subsequent regeneration of buds and roots in the leaves. In detached leaves Phosfon stimulated bud formation with au optimum at 10?6 M. Root formation was stimulated by Phosfon at all temperatures, the optimal concentration being 10?5 M, whereas root length was conversely affected. Foliar application of B-995 to intact plants and treatment of detached leaves greatly inhibited the formation of buds and had little effect on root formation. B-99D reduced the growth and delayed flowering in the plants.  相似文献   

13.
Liu  Peng  Meng  Qing-wei  Zou  Qi  Zhao  Shi-jie  Liu  Qing-zhong 《Photosynthetica》2001,39(3):467-472
Two cultivars of Capsicum annuum L. were acclimated for 5 d at sub-optimal temperature (14 °C) and irradiance of 250 µmol m–2 s–1. This cold-hardening resulted in some reduction in the extent of photoinhibition during an 8 h exposure to high irradiance at 4 °C. Obvious differences were observed between non-hardened leaves (NHL) and cold-hardened leaves (CHL) in the recovery under low irradiance at room temperature. The CHL of both cultivars recovered faster than NHL, especially during the initial fast phase of recovery. Compared with NHL, the total content of carotenoids (Cars), based on chlorophyll, Chl (a+b), and the proportions of xanthophyll cycle pigments referred to total Cars increased in CHL, mainly due to an increase of violaxanthin (V) + antheraxanthin (A) + zeaxanthin (Z) content per mol Chl (a+b). Faster development and a higher non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) of Chl fluorescence, related to a stronger deepoxidation of the larger xanthophyll cycle pool in NHL, could act as a major defence mechanism to reduce the formation of reactive oxygen species during severe chilling. This is suggested by higher content of Z or Z+A in photoinhibition as well as by its rapid decline during the initial fast phase of recovery. In contrast to the chilling-sensitive cv. 0004, the chilling-tolerant cv. 1141 did more easily acclimate its photosynthetic apparatus to low temperatures.  相似文献   

14.
In a chilling-sensitive plant, cucumber, chilling of leaves in the light results in irreversible damage to PSI. Recent in vitro studies suggested that hydroxyl radicals, which are formed in the presence of H2O2 and reduced Fe-S centers, are involved in the PSI inhibition. We therefore examined this possibility in vivo. Chilling of leaves at 5°C in the light caused a temporary increase in H2O2 concentration, which was probably due to the net H2O2 production in vivo. The activity, measured at 5°C, of the thylakoid ascorbate peroxidase (APX), a key enzyme of the H2O2-scavenging system, was about 20% of that measured at 25°C. The isolated thylakoids retaining high thylakoid APX activity did not show light-dependent net H2O2 production at 25°C. However, at 5°C, net production of H2O2 was observed. Since the rate of electron flow to molecular oxygen in the isolated thylakoids was ca 5 mmol e? mol?1 Chl s?1 at 5°C, the H2O2-scavenging capacity was below this level. When intact leaves were illuminated at 5°C at an irradiance of 100 µmol m?2 s?1, the rate of electron transport through PSII was ca 20 mmol e? mol?1 Chl s?1 and more than 80% of QA was in the reduced state. Since thylakoids are uncoupled in cucumber leaves at 5°C in the light. ATP is not formed and energy dissipation in the form of heat is suppressed. Therefore, the electron flow to molecular oxygen would be greater than 5 mmol e? mol?1 Chl s?1. Moreover, under such conditions, components in the electron transport chain, including Fe-S centers in PSI, were probably reduced. These features indicate that, when cucumber leaves are chilled in the light, hydroxyl radicals can be produced by the Fenton reaction and cause damage to PSI.  相似文献   

15.
Rates of 14C uptake and cellular composition of C, N, and Chl a in the marine diatom Leptocylindrus danicus Cleve were measured in axenic batch culture under 49 combinations of temperature (5, 10, 15, 20 °C), daylength (15: 9, 12: 12, 9: 15 LD), and irradiance (at least four irradiances per daylength). 14C uptake exhibited a temperature-dependent daylength effect. Similar P-I curves characterized cells grown under 15: 9 and 12: 12 LD; Pmax values were 17.2, 11.2, 4.3, and 1.8 pg C. pg Chl a?1. h?1 at 20, 15, 10, and 5°C, respectively. Under 9:15 LD at 20 and 15°C, the lightsaturated photosynthetic rate was ≈50% that in cells grown under longer daylengths. 14C uptake was independent of daylength at 10 and 5°C. The initial slope, a, of cells grown under long daylengths increased by five-fold between 5 and 20 °C. α values of cells grown under 9: 15 LD at 15 and 20 °C were depressed relative to longer daylengths. Chl a was inversely related to irradiance, and increased with temperature from 10 to 20 °C, whereas cell carbon and nitrogen showed a similar temperature dependence but was not influenced by irradiance or daylength. The C : N ratio and cell volume were independent of temperature, irradiance, and daylength. Both the C : Chl a and N : Chl a ratios increased with irradiance by greater amounts at lower temperatures.  相似文献   

16.
Dunaliella bardawil Ben-Amotz & Avron accumulates high concentrations of β-carotene when grown under high light intensity. The β-carotene is composed mainly of 9-cis and all-trans β-carotene. Accumulation of β-carotene and an increase in the ratio of the 9-cis to the all-trans isomer are strongly dependent on the light intensity under which the algae are cultivated but are independent of light quality within the photosynthetically active radiation range. Cells grown under continuous red (>645 nm) or white light of 500 W·m?2 reach a value of about 32 pg β-carotene·cell?1 and a ratio of 9-cis to all-trans β-carotene of around 2, whereas cells grown under low red or white light intensity of 25 W·m?2 contain about 3 pg·cell?1 and a ratio of isomers of around 0.3.  相似文献   

17.
The effects of low temperature on the synthesis and stability of the 32 kDa D1 protein of photosystem II were investigated in chloroplasts isolated from maize (Zea mays cv. LG11) leaves. The synthesis of D1 by intact chloroplasts in vitro was strongly dependent on temperature; the Q10 for the initial rate of incorporation of [35S]-methionine into D1 was ca. 2.6 over the range 13–25°C. The synthesis of other thylakoid polypeptides exhibited a similar temperature dependence, whilst synthesis of stromal proteins was considerably less temperature-dependent, with the exception of two polypeptides of ca. 56 and 59.5 kDa. The stability of newly-synthesized D1 in the thylakoid membranes was dependent both on the temperature at which the plants were grown and on the temperature during the pulse-labelling period when the protein was synthesized. In chloroplasts isolated from maize leaves grown at 25°C, D1 that was synthesized and assembled at 25 °C in vitro was rapidly degraded during the chase period. At lower chase temperatures the protein was more stable. When chloroplasts from 25°C-grown leaves were pulse-labelled at 13°C, the stability of D1 was markedly enhanced at all temperatures during the chase period. This effect was even more pronounced in chloroplasts isolated from plants grown at 14°C. The implications of these results are discussed with regard to the ability of maize to recover from photoinhibitory damage at low temperatures.  相似文献   

18.
The effect of anaerobiosis on the induction of the xanthophyll cycle was investigated in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. The results showed that, anaerobiosis obtained by either sulfur starvation or by bubbling nitrogen in the culture grown in complete medium induced the xanthophyll cycle even when cultures were exposed to low light conditions. The zeaxanthin content reached 35 mmol mol?1 Chl a, after 110 h in anaerobic sulfur-starved cultures, and 30 mmol mol?1 Chl a within 24 h in sulfur replete cultures bubbled with nitrogen. Both starved and non-starved cultures grown under aerobic conditions, did not exhibit any sizeable increase in the zeaxanthin content. Chlorophyll fluorescence measurements revealed a decrease in the maximum photochemical quantum yield of PSII (Fv/Fm) by more than 50 %. The chlorophyll fluorescence kinetics (OJIP) analysis showed a strong rise at the J-step indicating a strong reduction of QA. Our findings demonstrated that anaerobiosis in low light exposed cultures induced the xanthophyll cycle through a strong increase of the level of plastoquinone pool reduction, which was associated to the formation of a trans-thylakoid membranes proton gradient, while in dark anaerobic cultures, no appreciable induction of xanthophyll cycle could be observed, despite the sizeable increase in non–photochemical quenching.  相似文献   

19.
Tissue-specific effects of low growth temperature on maize chloroplast thylakoid protein accumulation were analysed using immunocytology. Sections of leaves from plants grown at 25 and 14°C were probed with antibodies to specific chloroplast thylakoid proteins from the four major protein multisubunit complexes of the thylakoid membrane followed by fluorescein-conjugated goat anti-rabbit antibodies. At a normal growth temperature of 25°C, the 32 kDa D1 protein of the photosystem II reaction centre and the 33 kDa protein of the extrinsic oxygen-evolving complex of photosystem II are both accumulated to a greater degree in the mesophyll than in the bundle sheath chloroplasts. In contrast, subunit II of photosystem I, cytochrome f and the α- and β-subunits of ATP synthetase are predominant in the bundle sheath thylakoids at 25°C. A striking difference between the 25°C-grown and the 14°C-grown leaf tissue was the presence in the latter of (20–30%) cells whose chloroplasts apparently completely lack several of the thylakoid proteins. In plants grown at 14°C, the accumulation of the 33 kDa protein of the extrinsic oxygen-evolving complex of photosystem II was apparently unchanged, but other thylakoid proteins showed a significant reduction. The uneven distribution of proteins between the bundle sheath and mesophyll chloroplasts observed at 25°C was also maintained at 14°C. Reduction in the fluorescence at 14°C was manifested either as an overall reduction in the diffuse fluorescence across the chloroplast profiles or less frequently as a reduction to small discrete bodies of intense fluorescence. The significance of these results to low-temperature-induced reduction in the photosynthetic productivity of maize is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Leaf Xanthophyll content and composition in sun and shade determined by HPLC   总被引:39,自引:0,他引:39  
As a part of our investigations to test the hypothesis that zeaxanthin formed by reversible de-epoxidation of violaxanthin serves to dissipate any excessive and potentially harmful excitation energy we determined the influence of light climate on the size of the xanthophyll cycle pool (violaxanthin + antheraxanthin + zeaxanthin) in leaves of a number of species of higher plants. The maximum amount of zeaxanthin that can be formed by de-epoxidation of violaxanthin and antheraxanthin is determined by the pool size of the xanthophyll cycle. To quantitate the individual leaf carotenoids a rapid, sensitive and accurate HPLC method was developed using a non-endcapped Zorbax ODS column, giving baseline separation of lutein and zeaxanthin as well as of other carotenoids and Chl a and b.The size of the xanthophyll cycle pool, both on a basis of light-intercepting leaf area and of light-harvesting chlorophyll, was ca. four times greater in sun-grown leaves of a group of ten sun tolerant species than in shade-grown leaves in a group of nine shade tolerant species. In contrast there were no marked or consistent differences between the two groups in the content of the other major leaf xanthophylls, lutein and neoxanthin. Also, in each of four species examined the xanthophyll pool size increased with an increase in the amount of light available during leaf development whereas there was little change in the content of the other xanthophylls. However, the -carotene/-carotene ratio decreased and little or no -carotene was detected in sun-grown leaves. Among shade-grown leaves the -carotene/-carotene ratio was considerably higher in species deemed to be umbrophilic than in species deemed to be heliophilic.The percentage of the xanthophyll cycle pool present as violaxanthin (di-epoxy-zeaxanthin) at solar noon was 96–100% for shade-grown plants and 4–53% for sun-grown plants with zeaxanthin accounting for most of the balance. The percentage of zeaxanthin in leaves exposed to midday solar radiation was higher in those with low than in those with high photosynthetic capacity.The results are consistent with the hypothesis that the xanthophyll cycle is involved in the regulation of energy dissipation in the pigment bed, thereby preventing a buildup of excessive excitation energy at the reaction centers.Abbreviations A antheraxanthin - C -carotene - C -carotene - EPS epoxidation state (V+0.5A)/(V+A+Z) - L lutein - N neoxanthin - PFD photon flux density - V violaxanthin - Z zeaxanthin C.I.W.-D.P.B. Publiation No. 1035  相似文献   

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