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1.
Summary We have investigated the diurnal response of photosynthesis and variable photosystem II (PSII) chlorophyll fluorescence at 77 K for thalli of the chlorophyte macroalga, Ulva rotundata, grown in outdoor culture and transplanted to an intertidal sand flat in different seasons. The physiological response in summer indicated synergistic effects of high PFD and aerial exposure, the latter probably attributable to temperature, which usually increased by 8 to 10° C during midday emersion. Except at extreme emersed temperatures in summer (38° C), the light-saturated photosynthesis rate (Pm) did not decline at midday. In contrast, light-limited quantum yield of photosynthetic O2 exchange () and the ratio of variable to maximum fluorescence yield (Fv/Fm) reversibly declined during midday low tides in all seasons. Shade-grown thalli exhibited a fluorescence response suggestive of greater photodamage to PSII, whereas sun-grown thalli had greater photoprotective capacity. The fluorescence decline was smaller when high tide occurred at midday, and was delayed during morning cloudiness. These results suggest that the diurnal response to PFD in this shallow water species is modified by tidal and meteorological factors. U. rotundata has a great capacity for photoprotection which allows it to tolerate and even thrive in the harsh intertidal environment.Abbreviations Fo instantaneous yield of chlorophyll fluorescence - Fm maximum yield of fluorescence - Fv variable yield (Fm–Fo) of fluorescence - PFD photon flux density (400–700 nm) - Pm light-saturated rate of photosynthesis - PSH photosystem II - QA electron acceptor of PSII - light-limited quantum yield of photosynthesis  相似文献   

2.
Clonal tissue of the marine chlorophyte macroalga, Ulva rotundata Blid., was transferred from 100 to 1700 mol photons · m–2 · s–1 under limiting (1.5 M NH 4 + maximum, N/P=2) and sufficient (15 M NH 4 + maximum, N/P=20) nitrogen supply at 18° C and 11 h light-13 h darkness daily. Photoinhibition was assayed by light-response curves (photosynthetic O2 exchange), and chlorophyll fluorescence at 77 K and room temperature. Daily surface-area growth rate (SA) in N-sufficient plants increased sixfold over 3 d and was sustained at that level. During this period, respiration (R d) doubled and light-saturated net photosynthesis capacity (P m) increased by nearly 50%, indicating acclimation to high light. Quantum yield () decreased by 25% on the first day, but recovered completely within one week. The ratio of variable to maximum fluorescence (F v/F m) also decreased markedly on the first day, because of an increase in initial fluorescence (F o) and a decrease in F m, and partially recovered over several days. Under the added stress of N deficiency, SA accelerated fivefold over 4 d, despite chronic photoinhibition, then declined along with tissue-N. Respiration doubled, but P m decreased by 50% over one week, indicating inability to acclimate to high light. Both and F v/F m decreased markedly on the first day and did not significantly recover. Changes in F o, F m and xanthophyll-cycle components indicate concurrent photodamage to photosystem II (PSII) and photoprotection by thermal deexcitation in the antenna pigments. Increasing SA coincided with photoinhibition of PSII. Insufficient diel-carbon balance because of elevated R d and declining P m and tissue-N, rather than photochemical damage per se, was the apparent proximate cause of decelerating growth rate and subsequent tissue degeneration under N deficiency in U. rotundata.Abbreviations and Symbols Chl chlorophyll - Fo, Fm, Fv in the sequence given, initial, maximum and variable chlorophyll fluorescence - PFD photon flux density - Pm photosynthesis rate at light saturation - PSI, PSII photosystems I, II, respectively - Rd dark-respiration rate - RT room temperature - quantum yield of photosynthetic O2 evolution - SA daily surface-area specific growth rate We wish to thank Jud Kenworthy, National Marine Fisheries Service, Beaufort, N.C., USA for performing the C/N analysis, and Olle Björkman and Susan Thayer, Carnegie Institution of Washington, Stanford, Cal., USA for the analysis of xanthophylls. This research was supported by National Science Foundation (NSF) grant OCE-8812157 to C.B.O. and J.R. Support for G.L. was provided by a NSF-CNRS (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique) exchange fellowship.  相似文献   

3.
The occurrence of photoinhibition of photosynthesis in leaves of a willow canopy was examined by measuring the chlorophyll-a fluorescence ratio of F V/F M (FM is the maximum fluorescence level of the induction curve, and FV is the variable fluorescence, F V=F MF 0, where F0 is the minimal fluorescence). The majority of the leaves situated on the upper parts of peripheral shoots showed an afternoon inhibition of this ratio on clear days. This was the consequence of both a decrease in F M and a rise in F O. In the same leaves the diurnal variation in intercepted photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) was monitored using leaf-mounted sensors. Using the multivariate method, partial least squares in latent variables, it is shown that the dose of PPFD, integrated and linearly weighted over the last 6-h period, best predicts photoinhibition. Photoinhibition occurred even among leaves that did not intercept PPFDs above 1000 mol·m–2·s–1. Exposure of leaves to a standard photoinhibitory treatment demonstrated that the depression in the F V/F M ratio was paralleled by an equal depression in the maximal quantum yield of CO2 uptake and a nearly equal depression in the rate of bending (convexity) of the light-response curve of CO2 uptake. As a result, the rate of net photosynthesis is depressed over the whole natural range of PPFD. By simulating the daily course in the rate of net photosynthesis, it is estimated that in the order of one-tenth of the potential carbon gain of peripheral willow shoots is lost on clear days as a result of photoinhibition. This applies to conditions of optimal temperatures. Photoinhibition is even more pronounced at air temperatures below 23° C, as judged from measurements of the FV/FM ratio on clear days: the afternoon inhibition of this ratio increased in a curvilinear manner from 15% to 25% with a temperature decrease from 23° to 14° C.Abbreviations and Symbols FO minimum fluorescence - FV variable fluorescence - FM maximum fluorescence - PLS partial least squares in latent variables - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density - VPD water vapour-pressure deficit This study was supported by the Swedish Natural Science Research Council. We are indebted to Dr. Jerry Leverenz (Department of Plant Physiology, University of Umeå, Sweden) for guidance with the modelling of the photosynthesis data.  相似文献   

4.
Short-term (up to 5 h) transfers of shade-adapted (100 mol · m–2 · s–1) clonal tissue of the marine macroalga Ulva rotundata Blid. (Chlorophyta) to higher irradiances (1700, 850, and 350 mol · m–2 · s–1) led to photoinhibition of room-temperature chlorophyll fluorescence and O2 evolution. The ratio of variable to maximum (Fv/Fm) and variable (Fv) fluorescence, and quantum yield () declined with increasing irradiance and duration of exposure. This decline could be resolved into two components, consistent with the separation of photoinhibition into energy-dissipative processes (photoprotection) and damage to photosystem II (PSII) by excess excitation. The first component, a rapid decrease in Fv/Fm and in Fv, corresponds to an increase in initial (Fo) fluorescence and is highly sensitive to 1 mM chloramphenicol. This component is rapidly reversible under dim (40 mol · m–2 · s–1) light, but is less reversible with increasing duration of exposure, and may reflect damage to PSII. The second (after 1 h exposure) component, a slower decline in Fv/Fm and Fv with declining Fo, appears to be associated with the photoprotective interconversion of violaxanthin to zeaxanthin and is sensitive to dithiothreitol. The accumulation of zeaxanthin in U. rotundata is very slow, and may account for the predominance of increases in Fo at high irradiances.Abbreviations and Symbols CAP chloramphenicol - DTT dithiothreitol - Fo, Fm, Fv initial, maximum, and variable fluorescence - quantum yield - PFD photon flux density - PSII photosystem II To whom correspondence should be addressedWe are grateful to O. Björkman and S. Thayer, Carnegie Institution of Washington, Stanford, Cal., USA, for analysis of xanthophyll pigments reported here. This research was supported by National Science Foundation grant OCE-8812157 to C.B.O. and J.R. Support for G.L. was provided by a NSF-CNRS (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique) exchange fellowship.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of repeated exposure to high light (1200 mol · m–2 · s–1 photosynthetic photon flux density, PPFD) at 5° C was examined in attached leaves of cold-grown spring (cv. Katepwa) and winter (cv. Kharkov) wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) over an eight-week period. Under these conditions, Kharkov winter wheat exhibited a daily reduction of 24% in FV/FM (the ratio of variable to maximal fluorescence in the dark-adapted state), in contrast to 41% for cold-grown Katepwa spring wheat. Both cultivars were able to recover from this daily suppression of FV/FM such that the leaves exhibited an average morning FV/FM of 0.651 ± 0.004. Fluorescence measurements made under steady-state conditions as a function of irradiance from 60 to 2000 mol · m–2 · s–1 indicated that the yield of photosystem II (PSII) electron transport under light-saturating conditions was the same for photoinhibited and control cold-grown plants, regardless of cultivar. Repeated daily exposure to high light at low temperature did not increase resistance to short-term photoinhibition, although zeaxanthin levels increased by three- to fourfold. In addition, both cultivars increased the rate of dry-matter accumulation, relative to control plants maintained at 5° C and 250 mol · m–2 · s–1 PPFD (10% and 28% for Katepwa and Kharkov, respectively), despite exhibiting suppressed fv/fm and reduced photon yields for O2 evolution following daily high-light treatments. Thus, although photosynthetic efficiency is suppressed by a longterm, photoinhibitory treatment, light-saturated rates of photosynthesis are sufficiently high during the high-light treatment to offset any reduction in photochemical efficiency of PSII. We suggest that in these cold-tolerant plants, photoinhibition of PSII may represent a longterm, stable, down-regulation of photochemistry to match the overall photosynthetic demand for ATP and reducing equivalents.Abbreviations and Symbols Chl chlorophyll - HL high light - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density - FO minimum fluorescence in the dark-adapted state - FM maximum fluorescence in the dark-adapted state - FV maximum variable fluorescence in the dark-adapted state (FM-FO) - FV/FV photosynthetic efficiency of the dark-adapted state - fV/fM photosynthetic efficiency of the light-adapted steady state - qP photochemical quenching parameter - qN non-photochemical quenching parameter - e yield of electron transport and equals qP · fV/fM - 1-qO FO quenching parameter - app apparent photon yield. The assistance of Amy So is gratefully acknowledged. This research was supported by a Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERCC) Operating Grant to N.P.A.H. G.Ö. was supported by an NSERCC International Exchange Award and the Swedish Natural Sciences Research Council.  相似文献   

6.
Analyses of chlorophyll fluorescence and photosynthetic oxygen evolution were conducted to understand why cold-hardened winter rye (Secale cereale L.) is more resistant to photoinhibition of photosynthesis than is non-hardened winter rye. Under similar light and temperature conditions, leaves of cold-hardened rye were able to keep a larger fraction of the PS II reaction centres in an open configuration, i.e. a higher ratio of oxidized to reduced QA (the primary, stable quinone acceptor of PSII), than leaves of non-hardened rye. Three fold-higher photon fluence rates were required for cold-hardened leaves than for non-hardened leaves in order to establish the same proportion of oxidized to reduced QA. This ability of cold-hardened rye fully accounted for its higher resistance to photoinhibition; under similar redox states of qa cold-hardened and non-hardened leaves of winter rye exhibited similar sensitivities to photoinhibition. Under given light and temperature conditions, it was the higher capacity for light-saturated photosynthesis in cold-hardened than in non-hardened leaves, which was responsible for maintaining a higher proportion of oxidized to reduced QA. This higher capacity for photosynthesis of cold-hardened leaves also explained the increased resistance of photosynthesis to photoinhibition upon cold-hardening.Abbreviations Fm and F'm fluorescence when all PSII reaction centres are closed in dark- and light-acclimated leaves, respectively - Fo and F'o fluorescence when all PSII reaction centres are open in darkness and steady-state light, respectively - Fv variable fluorescence (F'm-F'o) under steady-state light conditions - Fv/Fm the ratio of variable to maximum fluorescence as an expression of the maximum photochemical yield of PSII in dark-acclimated leaves - QA the primary, stable, quinone electron acceptor of PSII - qN non-photochemical quenching of fluorescence due to high energy state (pH) - qp photochemical quenching of fluorescence - RH cold-hardened rye - RNH non-hardened rye This work was supported by a Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERCC) Operating Grant to N.P.A.H. G.Ö. was supported by an NSERCC International Exchange Award and by the Swedish Natural Science Research Council.  相似文献   

7.
The effects of a 60 min exposure to photosynthetic photon flux densities ranging from 300 to 2200 mol m–2s–1 on the photosynthetic light response curve and on PS II heterogeneity as reflected in chlorophyll a fluorescence were investigated using the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. It was established that exposure to high light acts at three different regulatory or inhibitory levels; 1) regulation occurs from 300 to 780 mol m–2s–1 where total amount of PS II centers and the shape of the light response curve is not significantly changed, 2) a first photoinhibitory range above 780 up to 1600 mol m–2s–1 where a progressive inhibition of the quantum yield and the rate of bending (convexity) of the light response curve can be related to the loss of QB-reducing centers and 3) a second photoinhibitory range above 1600 mol m–2s–1 where the rate of light saturated photosynthesis also decreases and convexity reaches zero. This was related to a particularly large decrease in PS II centers and a large increase in spill-over in energy to PS I.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - DCMU 3,(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - FM maximal fluorescence yield - Fpl intermediate fluorescence yield plateau level - F0 non-variable fluorescence yield - Fv total variable fluorescence yield (FM-F0) - initial slope to the light response curve, used as an estimate of initial quantum yield - convexity (rate of bending) of the light response curve of photosynthesis - LHC light-harvesting complex - Pmax maximum rate of photosynthesis - PQ plastoquinone - Q photosynthetically active photon flux density (400–700 nm, mol m–2s–1) - PS photosystem - QA and QB primary and secondary quinone electron acceptor of PS II  相似文献   

8.
The obligate shade plant, Tradescantia albiflora Kunth grown at 50 mol photons · m–2 s–1 and Pisum sativum L. acclimated to two photon fluence rates, 50 and 300 mol · m–2 · s–1, were exposed to photoinhibitory light conditions of 1700 mol · m–2 · s–1 for 4 h at 22° C. Photosynthesis was assayed by measurement of CO2-saturated O2 evolution, and photosystem II (PSII) was assayed using modulated chlorophyll fluorescence and flash-yield determinations of functional reaction centres. Tradescantia was most sensitive to photoinhibition, while pea grown at 300 mol · m–2 · s–1 was most resistant, with pea grown at 50 mol · m–2 · s–1 showing an intermediate sensitivity. A very good correlation was found between the decrease of functional PSII reaction centres and both the inhibition of photosynthesis and PSII photochemistry. Photoinhibition caused a decline in the maximum quantum yield for PSII electron transport as determined by the product of photochemical quenching (qp) and the yield of open PSII reaction centres as given by the steady-state fluorescence ratio, FvFm, according to Genty et al. (1989, Biochim. Biophys. Acta 990, 81–92). The decrease in the quantum yield for PSII electron transport was fully accounted for by a decrease in FvFm, since qp at a given photon fluence rate was similar for photoinhibited and noninhibited plants. Under lightsaturating conditions, the quantum yield of PSII electron transport was similar in photoinhibited and noninhibited plants. The data give support for the view that photoinhibition of the reaction centres of PSII represents a stable, long-term, down-regulation of photochemistry, which occurs in plants under sustained high-light conditions, and replaces part of the regulation usually exerted by the transthylakoid pH gradient. Furthermore, by investigating the susceptibility of differently lightacclimated sun and shade species to photoinhibition in relation to qp, i.e. the fraction of open-to-closed PSII reaction centres, we also show that irrespective of light acclimation, plants become susceptible to photoinhibition when the majority of their PSII reaction centres are still open (i.e. primary quinone acceptor oxidized). Photoinhibition appears to be an unavoidable consequence of PSII function when light causes sustained closure of more than 40% of PSII reaction centres.Abbreviations Fo and Fo minimal fluorescence when all PSII reaction centres are open in darkness and steady-state light, respectively - Fm and Fm maximal fluorescence when all PSII reaction centres are closed in darkand light-acclimated leaves, respectively - Fv variable fluorescence - (Fm-Fo) under steady-state light con-ditions - Fs steady-state fluorescence in light - QA the primary,stable quinone acceptor of PSII - qNe non-photochemical quench-ing of fluorescence due to high energy state - (pH); qNi non-photochemical quenching of fluorescence due to photoinhibition - qp photochemical quenching of fluorescence To whom correspondence should be addressedThis work was supported by the Swedish Natural Science Research Council (G.Ö.) and the award of a National Research Fellowship to J.M.A and W.S.C. We thank Dr. Paul Kriedemann, Division of Forestry and Forest Products, CSIRO, Canberra, Australia, for helpful discussions.  相似文献   

9.
P. J. Ferrar  C. B. Osmond 《Planta》1986,168(4):563-570
We have compared the ability of shadegrown clones of Solamum dulcamara L. from shade and sun habitats to acclimate to bright light, as a function of nitrogen nutrition before and after transfer to bright light. Leaves of S. dulcamara grown in the shade with 0.6 mM NO 3 - have similar photosynthetic properties as leaves of plants grown with 12.0 mM NO 3 - . When transferred to bright light for 1–2 d the leaves of these plants show substantial photoinhibition which is characterized by about 50% decrease in apparent quantum yield and a reduction in the rate of photosynthesis in air at light saturation. Photoinhibition of leaf photosynthesis is associated with reduction in the variable component of low-temperature fluorescence emission, and with loss of in-vitro electron transport, especially of photosystem II-dependent processes.We find no evidence for ecotypic differentiation in the potential for photosynthetic acclimation among shade and sun clones of S. dulcamara, or of differentiation with respect to nitrogen requirements for acclimation. Recovery from photoinhibition and subsequent acclimation of photosynthesis to bright light only occurs in leaves of plants provided with 12.0 mM NO 3 - . In these, apparent quantum yield is fully restored after 14 d, and photosynthetic acclimation is shown by an increase in light-saturated photosynthesis in air, of light-and CO2-saturated photosynthesis, and of the initial slope of the CO2-response curve. The latter changes are highly correlated with changes in ribulose-bisphosphate-carboxylase activity in vitro. Plants supplied with 0.6 mM NO 3 - show incomplete recovery of apparent quantum yield after 14 d, but CO2-dependent leaf photosynthetic parameters return to control levels.Symbols and abbreviations Fo initial level of fluorescence at 77 K - Fm maximum level of fluorescence at 77 K - Fv variable components of fluorescence at 77 K (Fv=Fm-Fo) - PSI, PSII photosystem I and II, respectively - RuBP ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate - RuBPCase ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase (EC 4.1.1.39)  相似文献   

10.
In this study we investigated the basis for the reduction in the quantum yield of carbon assimilation in maize (Zea mays L. cv. LG11) caused by chilling in high light. After chilling attached maize leaves at 5° C for 6 h at high irradiance (1000 mol photons·m–2·s–1) chlorophyll fluorescence measurements indicated a serious effect on the efficiency of photochemical conversion by photosystem II (PSII) and measurements of [14C]atrazine binding showed that the plastoquinone binding site was altered in more than half of the PSII reaction centres. Although there were no direct effects of the chilling treatment on coupling-factor activity, ATP-formation capacity was affected because the photoinhibition of PSII led to a reduced capacity to energize the thylakoid membranes. In contrast to chilling at high irradiance, no photoinhibition of PSII accompanied the 20% decrease in the quantum yield of carbon assimilation when attached maize leaves were chilled in low light (50 mol photons·m–2·s–1). Thus it is clear that photoinhibition of PSII is not the sole cause of the light-dependent, chillinduced decrease in the quantum yield of carbon assimilation. During the recovery of photosynthesis from the chilling treatment it was observed that full [14C]atrazinebinding capacity and membrane-energization capacity recovered significantly more slowly than the quantum yield of carbon assimilation. Thus, not only is photoinhibition of PSII not the sole cause for the decreased quantum yield of carbon assimilation, apparently an appreciable population of photoinhibited PSII centres can be tolerated without any reduction in the quantum yield of carbon assimilation.Abbreviations and Symbols PPFD photosynthetically active photon flux density - PSII photosystem II - Fv/Fm ratio of variable to maximal fluorescence - quantum yield of carbon assimilation This work was supported in part by grants from the UK Agricultural and Food Research Council (AG 84/5) to N.R.B. and from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (Competitive Research Grant 87-CRCR-1-2381) to D.R.O. G.Y.N. was the recipient of a British Council scholarship and N.R.B. received a fellowship from the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (Project on Food Production and Preservation).  相似文献   

11.
The function of photosystem (PS)II during desiccation and exposure to high photon flux density (PFD) was investigated via analysis of chlorophyll fluorescence in the desert resurrection plant Selaginella lepidophylla (Hook. and Grev.) Spring. Exposure of hydrated, physiologically competent stems to 2000 mol · m–2 · s–1 PFD caused significant reductions in both intrinsic fluorescence yield (FO) and photochemical efficiency of PSII (FV/FM) but recovery to pre-exposure values was rapid under low PFD. Desiccation under low PFD also affected fluorescence characteristics. Both FV/FM and photochemical fluorescence quenching remained high until about 40% relative water content and both then decreased rapidly as plants approached 0% relative water content. In contrast, the maximum fluorescence yield (FM) decreased and non-photochemical fluorescence quenching increased early during desiccation. In plants dried at high PFD, the decrease in FV/FM was accentuated and FO was reduced, however, fluorescence characteristics returned to near pre-exposure values after 24-h of rehydration and recovery at low PFD. Pretreatment of stems with dithiothreitol, an inhibitor of zeaxanthin synthesis, accelerated the decline in FV/FM and significantly increased FO relative to controls at 925 mol · m–2 · s–1 PFD, and the differences persisted over a 3-h low-PFD recovery period. Pretreatment with dithiothreitol also significantly decreased non-photochemical fluorescence quenching, increased the reduction state of QA, the primary electron acceptor of PSII, and prevented the synthesis of zeaxanthin relative to controls when stems were exposed to PFDs in excess of 250 mol · m–2 · s–1. These results indicate that a zeaxanthin-associated mechanism of photoprotection exists in this desert pteridophyte that may help to prevent photoinhibitory damage in the fully hydrated state and which may play an additional role in protecting PSII as thylakoid membranes undergo water loss.Abbreviations and Symbols DTT dithiothreitol - EPS epoxidation state - FO yield of instantaneous fluorescence at open PSII centers - FM maximum yield of fluorescence at closed PSII centers induced by saturating light - FM FM determined during actinic illumination - FV yield of variable fluorescence (FM-FO) - FV/FM photochemical efficiency of PSII - qP photochemical fluorescence quenching - qNP non-photochemical fluorescence quenching of Schreiber et al. (1986) - NPQ non-photochemical fluorescence quenching from the Stern-Volmer equation - PFD photon flux density - RWC relative water content This paper is based on research done while W.G.E. was on leave of absence at Duke University during the fall of 1990. We would like to thank Dan Yakir, John Skillman, Steve Grace, and Suchandra Balachandran and many others at Duke University for their help and input with this research. Dr. Barbara Demmig-Adams provided zeaxanthin for standard-curve purposes.  相似文献   

12.
A. Laisk  O. Kiirats  V. Oja  U. Gerst  E. Weis  U. Heber 《Planta》1992,186(3):434-441
Exchange of CO2 and O2 and chlorophyll fluorescence were measured in the presence of 360 1 · 1–1 CO2 in nitrogen in Helianthus annuss L. leaves which had been preconditioned in the dark or at a photon flux density (PFD) of 24 mol · m–2 · s–1 either in 21 or 0% O2. An initial light-dependent O2 outburst of 6 mol · m–2 was measured after aerobic dark incubation. It was attributed to the reduction of electron carriers, predominantly plastoquinone. The maximum initial rate of O2 evolution at PFD 8000 mol · m–2 · s–1 was 170 mol · m–2 · s–2 or about four times the steady CO2-and light-saturated rate of photosynthesis. Fluorescence measurements showed that the rate was still acceptor-limited. Fast O2 evolution ceased after electron carriers were reduced in the dark-adapted leaf, but continued for a short time at the lower rate of 62 mol · m–2 · s–1 in the light-adapted leaf. The data are interpreted to show that enzymes involved in 3-phosphoglycerate reduction are dark-inhibited, but were fully active in low light. In a dark-adapted leaf, respiratory CO2 evolution continued under nitrogen; it was partially inhibited by illumination. Prolonged exposure of a leaf to anaerobic conditions caused reducing equivalents to accumulate. This was shown by a slowly increasing chlorophyll fluorescence yield which indicated the reduction of the PSII acceptor QA in the dark. When the leaf was illuminated, no O2 evolution was detected from short light pulses, although transient O2 production was appreciable during longer light pulses. This indicates that an electron donor (pool size about 2–3 e/PSII reaction center) became reduced in the dark and the first photons were used to oxidise this donor instead of water.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - CRC carbon reduction cycle - GAPDH NADP-glyceraldehyde-phosphate dehydrogenase - PFD photon flux density - PGA 3-phosphoglycerate - RuBP ribulose bisphosphate - TCA tricarboxylic acid cycle To whom correspondence should be addressedThis work received support by the Estonian Academy of Sciences, the Gottfried-Wilhelm-Leibniz Program of the Deutsche For-schungsgemeinschaft and the Sonderforschungsbereich 251 of the University of Würzburg.  相似文献   

13.
D. H. Greer  W. A. Laing 《Planta》1988,175(3):355-363
Photoinhibition of photosynthesis was induced in intact kiwifruit (Actinidia deliciosa (A. Chev.) C. F. Liang et A. R. Ferguson) leaves grown at two photon flux densities (PFDs) of 700 and 1300 mol·m-2·s-1 in a controlled environment, by exposing the leaves to PFD between 1000 and 2000 mol·m-2·s-1 at temperatures between 10 and 25°C; recovery from photoinhibition was followed at the same range of temperatures and at a PFD between 0 and 500 mol·m-2·s-1. In either case the time-courses of photoinhibition and recovery were followed by measuring chlorophyll fluorescence at 692 nm and 77K and by measuring the photon yield of photosynthetic O2 evolution. The initial rate of photoinhibition was lower in the high-light-grown plants but the long-term extent of photoinhibition was not different from that in low-light-grown plants. The rate constants for recovery after photoinhibition for the plants grown at 700 and 1300 mol·m-2·s-1 or for those grown in shade were similar, indicating that differences between sun and shade leaves in their susceptibility to photoinhibition could not be accounted for by differences in capacity for recovery during photoinhibition. Recovery following photoinhibition was increasingly suppressed by an increasing PFD above 20 mol·m-2·s-1, indicating that recovery in photoinhibitory conditions would, in any case, be very slow. Differences in photosynthetic capacity and in the capacity for dissipation of non-radiative energy seemed more likely to contribute to differences in susceptibility to photoinhibition between sun and shade leaves of kiwifruit.Abbreviations and symbols F o , F m , F v instantaneous, maximum, variable fluorescence - F v /F m fluorescence ratio - F i =F v at t=0 - F F v at t= - K D rate constant for photochemistry - k(F p ) first-order rate constant for photoinhibition - k(F r ) first-order rate constant for recovery - PFD photon flux density - PSII photosystem II - i photon yield of O2 evolution (incident light)  相似文献   

14.
Modulated chlorophylla fluorescence is useful for eco-physiological studies of lichens as it is sensitive, non-invasive and specific to the photobiont. We assessed the validity of using fluorescence yield to predict CO2 gain in cyano-lichens, by simultaneous measurements of CO2 gas exchange and chlorophylla fluorescence in five species withNostoc-photobionts. For comparison, O2 evolution and fluorescence were measured in isolated cells ofNostoc, derived fromPeltigera canina (Nostoc PC). At irradiances up to the growth light level, predictions from fluorescence yield underestimated true photosynthesis, to various extents depending on species. This reflected the combined effect of a state transition in darkness, which was not fully relaxed until the growth light level was reached, and a phycobilin contribution to the minimum fluorescence yield (Fo). Above the growth light level, the model progressively overestimated assimilation, reflecting increased electron flow to oxygen under excess irradiance. In cyanobacteria, this flow maintains photosystem II centres open even up to photoinhibitory light levels without contributing to CO2 fixation. Despite this we show that gross CO2 gain may be predicted from fluorescence yield also in cyanolichens when the analysis is made near the acclimated growth light level. This level can be obtained even when measurements are performed in the field, since it coincides with a minimum in non-photochemical fluorescence quenching (NPQ). However, the absolute relation between fluorescence yield and gross CO2 gain varies between species. It may therefore be necessary to standardise the fluorescence prediction for each species with CO2 gas exchange.Abbreviations CCM CO2-Concentrating mechanism - Chl chlorophyll - Ci inorganic carbon - 0 convexity (curvature of the light response curve) - ETR electron transport rate - Fo minimum fluorescence yield - Fm maximal fluorescence yield - Fs fluorescence yield at steady-state photosynthesis - Fv variable fluorescence yield - Fv/Fm dark ratio of variable to maximal fluorescence yield after dark adaptation - FvFmmax ratio of variable to maximal fluorescence yield in the absence of quenching - CO2 maximum quantum yield of CO2 assimilation - PS quantum yield of photosystem II photochemistry - GP gross photosynthesis - I irradiance (mol quanta·m–2·s–1) - NPQ non photochemical fluorescence quenching - qp photochemical fluorescence quenching  相似文献   

15.
High-light treatments (1750–2000 mol photons m–2 · s–1) of leaves from a number of higher-plant species invariably resulted in quenching of the maximum 77K chlorophyll fluorescence at both 692 and 734 nm (F M, 692 and F M, 734). The response of instantaneous fluorescence at 692 nm (F O, 692) was complex. In leaves of some species F O, 692 increased dramatically in others it was quenched, and in others yet it showed no marked, consistent change. Regardless of the response of F O, 692 an apparently linear relationship was obtained between the ratio of variable to maximum fluorescence (F V/F M, 692) and the photon yield of O2 evolution, indicating that photoinhibition affects these two variables to approximately the same extent. Treatment of leaves in a CO2–free gas stream containing 2% O2 and 98% N2 under weak light (100 mol · m–2 · s–1) resulted in a general and fully reversible quenching of 77K fluorescence at 692 and 734 nm. In this case both F O, 692 and F M, 692 were invariably quenched, indicating that the quenching was caused by an increased non-radiative energy dissipation in the pigment bed. We propose that high-light treatments can have at least two different, concurrent effects on 77K fluorescence in leaves. One results from damage to the photosystem II (PSII) reaction-center complex and leads to a rise in F O, 692; the other results from an increased non-radiative energy dissipation and leads to quenching of both F O, 692 and F M, 692 This general quenching had a much longer relaxation time than reported for pH-dependent quenching in algae and chloroplasts. Sun leaves, whose F V/F M, 692 ratios were little affected by high-light exposure in normal air, suffered pronounced photoinhibition when the exposure was made under conditions that prevent photosynthetic gas exchange (2% O2, 0% CO2). However, they were still less susceptible than shade leaves, indicating that the higher capacity for energy dissipation via photosynthesis is not the only cause of their lower susceptibility. The rate constant for recovery from photoinhibition was much higher in mature sun leaves than in mature shade leaves, indicating that differences in the capacity for continuous repair may in part account for the difference in their susceptibility to photoinhibition.Abbreviations and symbols kDa kilodalton - LHC-II light-harvesting chlorophyll-protein complex - PFD photon flux density (photon fluence rate) - PSI, PSII photosystem I, II - F O, F M, F V instantaneous, maximum, variable fluorescence emission - absorptance - a photon yield of O2 evolution (absorbed light) C.I.W.-D.P.B. Publication No. 925  相似文献   

16.
G. Laskay  E. Lehoczki  A. L. Dobi  L. Szalay 《Planta》1986,169(1):123-129
The effects of the pyridazinone compound SAN 9785 on the photosynthetic competence of leaves, on the photochemical activity of isolated thylakoids and on the formation and spectral properties of chlorophyll-protein complexes were studied during a 72-h greening period of detached etiolated leaves of barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Horpácsi kétsoros). It was established that i) the photosynthetic capacity of the leaves decreased considerably (by 80 and 90%, as determined by14CO2 fixation and fast fluorescence induction measurements, respectively); ii) the photochemical activity of isolated thylakoids from water to potassium ferricyanide and from dichlorophenol indophenol/ascorbate to methylviologen exhibited only slight reductions when expressed on a chlorophyll basis compared with the control; iii) the slow fluorescence induction curves of the treated leaves demonstrated the presence of a peculiar fluorescence component interrupting the quenching of fluorescence at around 1 min illumination; iv) a shortage of the chlorophyll-protein complex of photosystem I (CPI) occurred with a higher content of the monomer of the light harvesting complex in the thylakoids of treated leaves; and v) the fluorescence spectrum of the CPI band present in treated leaves indicates the destruction of the structural integrity of this complex during isolation from the membrane.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - CPI, CPII chlorophyll-protein complexes of the reaction centres of PSI and PSII - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DPIP 2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol - DPIPH2 chemically reduced form of DPIP - F o fluorescence of constant yield - F v fluorescence of variable yield - F i ,F m mitial and maximum yield of fluorescence - LHCP3 monomer of the light-harvesting complex - LHCP2 and LHCP1 oligomers of the light-harvesting complex LHCP3 - PSI, PSII photosystems I, II - SAN 9785 4-chloro-5-(dimethylamino)-2-phenyl-3(2H)-pyridazinone, also known as BASF 13-338 - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis  相似文献   

17.
We investigated to what extent south-exposed leaves (E-leaves) of the evergreen ivy (Hedera helix L.) growing in the shadow of two deciduous trees suffered from photoinhibition of photosynthesis when leaf-shedding started in autumn. Since air temperatures drop concomitantly with increase in light levels, changes in photosynthetic parameters (apparent quantum yield, i and maximal photosynthetic capacity of O2 evolution, Pmax; chlorophyll-a fluorescence at room temperature) as well as pigment composition were compared with those in north-exposed leaves of the same clone (N-leaves; photosynthetic photon flux density PPFD< 100 mol · m–2 · s–2) and phenotypic sun leaves (S-leaves; PPFD up to 2000 mol · m–2 · s–1).In leaves exposed to drastic light changes during winter (E-leaves) strong photoinhibition of photosynthesis could be observed as soon as the incident PPFD increased in autumn. In contrast, in N-leaves the ratio of variable fluorescence to maximum fluorescence (FV/FMm) and i did not decline appreciably prior to severe frosts (up to -12° C) in January. At this time, i was reduced to a similar extent in all leaves, from about 0.073 mol O2 · mol–1 photons before stress to about 0.020. Changes in i were linearly correlated with changes in fv/fm (r = 0.955). The strong reduction in FV/FM on exposure to stress was caused by quenching in FM. The initial fluorescence (F0), however, was also quenched in all leaves. The diminished fluorescence yield was accompanied by an increase in zeaxanthin content. These effects indicate that winter stress in ivy primarily induces an increase in non-radiative energy-dissipation followed by photoinhibitory damage of PSII. Although a pronounced photooxidative bleaching of chloroplast pigments occurred in January (especially in E-leaves), photosynthetic parameters recovered completely in spring. Thus, the reduction in potential photosynthetic yield in winter may be up to three times greater in leaves subjected to increasing light levels than in leaves not exposed to a changing light environment.Abbreviations and Symbols F0, FM initial and maximal fluorescence yield when all PSII centres are open and closed - FV variable fluorescence (FM-F0) - Pmax maximal photosynthetic capacity at 1000 umol · m–2 · s–1 PPFD and CO2 saturation - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density - i apparent quantum yield of photosynthetic O2 evolution - E-leaves, N-leaves shade leaves exposed, not exposed to drastic light changes during winter - S-leaves sun leaves from an open ivy stand Dedicated to Professor Otto Härtel on the occasion of his 80th birthdayThis work was supported by the Austrian Fonds zur Förderung der wissenschaftlichen Forschung.  相似文献   

18.
The temperature dependence of the rate of de-epoxidation of violaxanthin to zeaxanthin was determined in leaves of chilling-sensitive Gossypium hirsutum L. (cotton) and chilling-resistant Malva parviflora L. by measurements of the increase in absorbance at 505 nm (A 505) and in the contents of antheraxanthin and zeaxanthin that occur upon exposure of predarkened leaves to excessive light. A linear relationship between A 505 and the decrease in the epoxidation state of the xanthophyll-cycle pigment pool was obtained over the range 10–40° C. The maximal rate of de-epoxidation was strongly temperature dependent; Q10 measured around the temperature at which the leaf had developed was 2.1–2.3 in both species. In field-grown Malva the rate of de-epoxidation at any given measurement temperature was two to three times higher in leaves developed at a relatively low temperature in the early spring than in those developed in summer. Q10 measured around 15° C was in the range 2.2–2.6 in both kinds of Malva leaves, whereas it was as high as 4.6 in cotton leaves developed at a daytime temperature of 30° C. Whereas the maximum (initial) rate of de-epoxidation showed a strong decrease with decreased temperature the degree of de-epoxidation reached in cotton leaves after a 1–2 · h exposure to a constant photon flux density increased with decreased temperature as the rate of photosynthesis decrease. The zeaxanthin content rose from 2 mmol · (mol chlorophyll)–1 at 30° C to 61 mmol · (mol Chl)–1 at 10° C, corresponding to a de-epoxidation of 70% of the violaxanthin pool at 10° C. The degree of de-epoxidation at each temperature was clearly related to the amount of excessive light present at that temperature. The relationship between non-photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence and zeaxanthin formation at different temperatures was determined for both untreated control leaves and for leaves in which zeaxanthin formation was prevented by dithiothreitol treatment. The rate of development of that portion of non-photochemical quenching which was inhibited by dithiothreitol decreased with decreasing temperature and was linearly related to the rate of zeaxanthin formation over a wide temperature range. In contrast, the rate of development of the dithiothreitol-resistant portion of non-photochemical quenching was remarkably little affected by temperature. Evidently, the kinetics of the development of non-photochemical quenching upon exposure of leaves to excessive light is therefore in large part determined by the rate of zeaxanthin formation. For reasons that remain to be determined the relaxation of dithiothreitolsensitive quenching that is normally observed upon darkening of illuminated leaves was strongly inhibited at low temperatures.Abbreviations and Symbols Chl chlorophyll - DTT dithiothreitol - EPS epoxidation state - NPQ non-photochemical chlorophyll fluorescence quenching - PFD photon flux density - PSII photosystem II - F, Fm fluorescence emission at the actual, full closure of the PSII centers C.I.W.-D.P.B. Publication No. 1092We thank Connie Shih for skillful assistance in growing the plants, for conducting the HPLC analyses, and for preparing the figures. A Carnegie Institution Fellowship and a Feodor-Lynen-Fellowship by the Alexander von Humboldt-Foundation to W.B. is gratefully acknowledged. This work was supported by Grant No. 89-37-280-4902 of the Competitive Grants Program of the U.S. Department of Agriculture to O.B.  相似文献   

19.
In leaves of an atrazine-resistant mutant ofSenecio vulgaris the quantum efficiency of CO2 assimilation was reduced by 21% compared to the atrazine-susceptible wild type, and at a light level twice that required to saturate photosynthesis in the wild type the CO2 fixation rate in the mutant was decreased by 15%. In leaves at steady-state photosynthesis there was a measurable increase in the reduction state of the photosystem II (PSII) primary quinone acceptor,Q A. Although this would lead to a decreased rate of PSII electron transport and may thus explain the decrease in quantum efficiency, this cannot account for the fall in the maximum rate of CO2 fixation. The atrazine-resistant mutant showed an appreciably longer photosynthetic induction time which indicates an effect on carbon metabolism; however, the response of CO2-fixation rate to intercellular CO2 concentration revealed no differences in carboxylation efficiency. There were also no differences in the ability to perform a State 1–State 2 transition between the atrazine-resistant and susceptible biotypes and no difference in the profiles of phosphorylated thylakoid polypeptides. It is concluded that the alteration of the redox equilibrium between PSII quinone electron acceptors in the atrazine-resistant biotype limits appreciably the photosynthetic efficiency in non-saturating light. Additionally, there is a further, as yet unidentified, limitation which decreases photosynthesis in the resistant mutant under light-saturating conditions.Abbreviations and symbols DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - F max maximum fluorescence emission - F o2 minimal fluorescence emission upon exposure to saturating light flash - F v variable fluorescence emission - F v2 variable fluorescence emission upon exposure to saturating light flash - kDa kilodalton - PSI, II photosystems I, II - Q A primary quinone acceptor of PSH - Q B secondary quinone acceptor of PSII - RuBP ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate  相似文献   

20.
Leaves of Populus balsamifera grown under full natural sunlight were treated with 0, 1, or 2 l SO2·1-1 air under one of four different photon flux densities (PFD). When the SO2 exposures took place in darkness or at 300 mol photons·m-2·s-1, sulfate accumulated to the levels predicted by measurements of stomatal conductance during SO2 exposure. Under conditions of higher PFD (750 and 1550 mol·m-2·s-1), however, the predicted levels of accumulated sulfate were substantially higher than those obtained from anion chromatography of the leaf extracts. Light-and CO2-saturated capacity as well as the photon yield of photosynthetic O2 evolution were reduced with increasing concentration of SO2. At 2 l SO2·1-1 air, the greatest reductions in both photosynthetic, capacity and photon yield occurred when the leaves were exposed to SO2 in the dark, and increasingly smaller reductions in each occurred with increasing PFD during SO2 exposure. This indicates that the inhibition of photosynthesis resulting from SO2 exposure was reduced when the exposure occurred under conditions of higher light. The ratio F v/F M (variable/maximum fluorescence emission) for photosyntem II (PSII), a measure of the photochemical efficiency of PSII, remained unaffected by exposure of leaves to SO2 in the dark and exhibited only moderate reductions with increasing PFD during the exposure, indicating that PSII was not a primary site of damage by SO2. Pretreatment of leaves with SO2 in the dark, however, increased the susceptibility of PSII to photoinhibition, as such pretreated leaves exhibited much greater reductions inF V/F M when transferred to moderate or high light in air than comparable control leaves.Abbreviations and symbols A1200 photosynthetic capacity (CO2-saturated rate of O2 evolution at 1200 mol photons·m-2·s-1) - Fo instantaneous fluorescence emission - FM maximum fluorescence emission - FV variable fluorescence emission - PFD photon flux density (400–700 nm) - PSII photosystem II  相似文献   

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