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

2.
The role of electron transport to O2 in mitigating against photoinactivation of Photosystem (PS) II was investigated in leaves of pea (Pisum sativum L.) grown in moderate light (250 mol m–2 s–1). During short-term illumination, the electron flux at PS II and non-radiative dissipation of absorbed quanta, calculated from chlorophyll fluorescence quenching, increased with increasing O2 concentration at each light regime tested. The photoinactivation of PS II in pea leaves was monitored by the oxygen yield per repetitive flash as a function of photon exposure (mol photons m–2). The number of functional PS II complexes decreased nonlinearly with increasing photon exposure, with greater photoinactivation of PS II at a lower O2 concentration. The results suggest that electron transport to O2, via the twin processes of oxygenase photorespiration and the Mehler reaction, mitigates against the photoinactivation of PS II in vivo, through both utilization of photons in electron transport and increased nonradiative dissipation of excitation. Photoprotection via electron transport to O2 in vivo is a useful addition to the large extent of photoprotection mediated by carbon-assimilatory electron transport in 1.1% CO2 alone.Abbreviations Fm, Fo, Fv- maximal, initial (corresponding to open PS II traps) and variable chlorophyll fluorescence yield, respectively - NPQ- non-photochemical quenching - PS- photosystem - QA- primary quinone acceptor - qP- photochemical quenching coefficient  相似文献   

3.
Leaves of the C3 plant Brassica oleracea were illuminated with red and/or far-red light of different photon flux densities, with or without additional short pulses of high intensity red light, in air or in an atmosphere containing reduced levels of CO2 and/or oxygen. In the absence of CO2, far-red light increased light scattering, an indicator of the transthylakoid proton gradient, more than red light, although the red and far-red beams were balanced so as to excite Photosystem II to a comparable extent. On red background light, far-red supported a transthylakoid electrical field as indicated by the electrochromic P515 signal. Reducing the oxygen content of the gas phase increased far-red induced light scattering and caused a secondary decrease in the small light scattering signal induced by red light. CO2 inhibited the light-induced scattering responses irrespective of the mode of excitation. Short pulses of high intensity red light given to a background to red and/or far-red light induced appreciable additional light scattering after the flashes only, when CO2 levels were decreased to or below the CO2 compensation point, and when far-red background light was present. While pulse-induced light scattering increased, non-photochemical fluorescence quenching increased and F0 fluorescence decreased indicating increased radiationless dissipation of excitation energy even when the quinone acceptor QA in the reaction center of Photosystem II was largely oxidized. The observations indicate that in the presence of proper redox poising of the chloroplast electron transport chain cyclic electron transport supports a transthylakoid proton gradient which is capable of controlling Photosystem II activity. The data are discussed in relation to protection of the photosynthetic apparatus against photoinactivation.Abbreviations F, FM, F'M, F"M, F0, F'0 chlorophyll fluorescence levels - exc quantum efficiency of excitation energy capture by open Photosystem II - PS II quantum efficiency of electron flow through Photosystem II - P515 field indicating rapid absorbance change peaking at 522 nm - P700 primary donor of Photosystem I - QA primary quinone acceptor in Photosystem II - QN non-photochemical fluorescence quenching - Qq photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence  相似文献   

4.
The effect of iron deficiency on photosynthetic electron transport in Photosystem II (PS II) was studied in leaves and thylakoid membranes of lettuce (Lactuca sativa, Romaine variety) plants. PS II electron transport was characterized by oxygen evolution and chlorophyll fluorescence parameters. Iron deficiency in the culture medium was shown to affect water oxidation and the advancement of the S-states. A decrease of maximal quantum yield of PS II and an increase of fluorescence intensity at step J and I of OJIP kinetics were also observed. Thermoluminescence measurements revealed that charge recombination between the quinone acceptor of PS II, QB, and the S2 state of the Mn-cluster was strongly perturbed. Also the dark decay of Chl fluorescence after a single turnover white flash was greatly retarded indicating a slower rate of QA reoxidation.  相似文献   

5.
A model is presented describing the relationship between chlorophyll fluorescence quenching and photoinhibition of Photosystem (PS) II-dependent electron transport in chloroplasts. The model is based on the hypothesis that excess light creates a population of inhibited PS II units in the thylakoids. Those units are supposed to posses photochemically inactive reaction centers which convert excitation energy to heat and thereby quench variable fluorescence. If predominant photoinhibition of PS II and cooperativity in energy transfer between inhibited and active units are presumed, a quasi-linear correlation between PS II activity and the ratio of variable to maximum fluorescence, FVFM, is obtained. However, the simulation does not result in an inherent linearity of the relationship between quantum yield of PS II and FVFM ratio. The model is used to fit experimental data on photoinhibited isolated chloroplasts. Results are discussed in view of current hypotheses of photoinhibition.Abbreviations FM maximum total fluorescence - F0 initial fluorescence - FV maximum variable fluorescence - PS Photosystem - QA, QB primary and secondary electron acceptors of Photosystem II  相似文献   

6.
High-temperature-induced inhibition of the acceptor side of Photosystem II (PS II) was studied in tobacco thylakoids using oxygen evolution, chlorophyll a (Chl a) fluorescence and redox potential measurements. When thylakoids were heated at 2 °C/min from 25 to 50 °C, the oxygen evolving complex became inhibited between 32 and 45 °C, whereas the acceptor side of PS II tolerated higher temperatures. Variable Chl a fluorescence decreased more slowly than oxygen evolution, suggesting that transitions between some S-states occurred even after heat-induced inhibition of the oxygen evolving activity. 77 K emission spectroscopy reveals that heating does not cause detachment of the light-harvesting complex II from PS II, and thus the heat-induced increase in the initial F0 fluorescence is due to loss of exciton trapping in the heated PS II centers. Redox titrations showed a heat-induced increase in the midpoint potential of the QA/QA -) couple from the control value of –80 mV to +40 mV at 50 °C, indicating a loss of the reducing power of QA -). When its driving force thus decreased, electron transfer from QA -) to QB in the PS II centers that still could reduce QA became gradually inhibited, as shown by measurements of the decay of Chl a fluorescence yield after a single turnover flash. Interestingly, the heat-induced loss of variable fluorescence and inhibition of electron transfer from QA -) to QB could be partially prevented by the presence of 5 mM bicarbonate during heating, suggesting that high temperatures cause release of the bicarbonate bound to PS II. We speculate that both the upshift in the redox potential of the QA/QA -) couple and the release of bicarbonate may be caused by a heat-induced structural change in the transmembrane D1 or D2 proteins. This structural change may, in turn, be caused by the inhibition of the oxygen evolving complex during heating.  相似文献   

7.
We have isolated and characterized two nuclear mutations which affect plastoquinone accumulation in maize. The mutations, hcf103 and hcf114, modify the same genetic locus. Plants homozygous for either mutant allele exhibit reduced PS II electron transport activity, reduced variable chlorophyll fluorescence and reduced delayed fluorescence yield. In these ways, hcf103 and hcf114 resemble previously described PS II mutants which lack stably assembled PS II reaction center complexes. However, unlike most previously described PS II mutants, hcf103 and hcf114 possess stable membrane-associated PS II complexes. Plastoquinone (PQ-9), which performs a variety of redox functions essential to normal non-cyclic electron transport, is severely depleted in the mutants. The lack of PS II electron transport activity is attributed to the absence of PQ-9. This is the first report of mutants deficient in PQ which do not also suffer serious pleiotropic defects.Abbreviations PS II Photosystem II - PQ plastoquinone - QA and QB primary and secondary stable electron acceptors of PS II - HPLC high pressure liquid chromatography - LDS-PAGE lithium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - TLC thin layer chromatography  相似文献   

8.
The discovery of period four oscillations of the fluorescence yield under flashing light demonstrated that not only the redox state of the Photosystem II (PS II) electron acceptor QA, but also the oxygen evolving cycle (described by the S states) modulates the fluorescence yield of chlorophyll (Chl). The positive charges accumulated on the donor side of PS II act on the fluorescence yield (measured in the QA state during a strong flash) through the concentration of the quencher P680 +, the oxidized form of PS II reaction center Chl a. However, the period four oscillations of the fluorescence yield detected 1 s after a strong flash (in the P680QA state) have not yet been fully explained. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

9.
Many of the core proteins in Photosystem II (PS II) undergo reversible phosphorylation. It is known that protein phosphorylation controls the repair cycle of Photosystem II. However, it is not known how protein phosphorylation affects the partial electron transport reactions in PS II. Here we have applied variable fluorescence measurements and EPR spectroscopy to probe the status of the quinone acceptors, the Mn cluster and other electron transfer components in PS II with controlled levels of protein phosphorylation. Protein phosphorylation was induced in vivo by varying illumination regimes. The phosphorylation level of the D1 protein varied from 10 to 58% in PS II membranes isolated from pre-illuminated spinach leaves. The oxygen evolution and QA to QB(QB ) electron transfer measured by flash-induced fluorescence decay remained similar in all samples studied. Similar measurements in the presence of DCMU, which reports on the status of the donor side in PS II, also indicated that the integrity of the oxygen-evolving complex was preserved in PS II with different levels of D1 protein phosphorylation. With EPR spectroscopy we examined individual redox cofactors in PS II. Both the maximal amplitude of the charge separation reaction (measured as photo-accumulated pheophytin) and the EPR signal from the QA Fe2+ complex were unaffected by the phosphorylation of the D1 protein, indicating that the acceptor side of PS II was not modified. Also the shape of the S2 state multiline signal was similar, suggesting that the structure of the Mn-cluster in Photosystem II did not change. However, the amplitude of the S2 multiline signal was reduced by 35% in PS II, where 58% of the D1 protein was phosphorylated, as compared to the S2 multiline in PS II, where only 10% of the D1 protein was phosphorylated. In addition, the fraction of low potential Cyt b 559 was twice as high in phosphorylated PS II. Implications from these findings, were precise quantification of D1 protein phosphorylation is, for the first time, combined with high-resolution biophysical measurements, are discussed. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

10.
Chlorophyll a fluorescence of Synechococcus UTEX 625 was quenched during the transport of inorganic carbon, even when CO2 fixation was inhibited by iodoacetamide. Measurements with a pulse modulation fluorometer showed that at least 75% of the quenching was due to oxidation of Qa, the primary acceptor of photosystem II. Mass spectrometry revealed that transport of inorganic carbon increased the rate of O2 photoreduction. Hence, O2 could serve as an electron acceptor to allow oxidation of Qa even in the absence of CO2 fixation.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of cumulative over-saturating pulses (OSP) of white light (1 s, >10 000 μmol photons m−2 s−1), applied every 20 min on pea leaves, was investigated during a complete diurnal cycle of 24 h. In dark-adapted leaves, this treatment leads to a progressive decline of the optimum Photosystem II (PS II) quantum yield. Continuous low background light (except far-red light) had a protective effect against this OSP-induced photoinactivation. The lack of far-red effect could be due to its absorption mainly in PS I and not in PS II, but could be also due to the general low absorption in this wavelength region. The photoinactivation was enhanced in leaves that had been previously infiltrated with chloramphenicol. The quantum yield of CO2 assimilation, but not its maximal capacity, was inhibited by the OSP treatment. The most spectacular effects observed, in addition to an irreversible quenching of Fm, was a strong inhibition of QA reoxidation revealed by a large increase in the Fs level and consequently by a decrease of ΔF/Fm′. Under such conditions, we observed that the electron flow deduced from ΔF/Fm′ underestimated the real electron flow to CO2. Time-resolved Chlorophyll a fluorescence measurements showed that the reduced capacity of QA reoxidation in OSP treated leaves was accompanied by the appearance of a 4.7 ns component attributed to PS II charge recombination. We suggest that a modification at the QB site may influence the redox potential of QA/QA , facilitating the reversion of the primary charge separation. In addition, a 1.2 ns fluorescence component accumulated, which appeared to be responsible for the underestimation of PS II electron flow. The observed photoinactivation seemed to be different from the photoinhibition often described in the literature, which occurs under continuous light. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

12.
Registration of chlorophyll fluorescence induction curves (IC) from individual microalgae cenobiums was performed during Scenedesmus quadricauda culture growth. Emphasis was placed on the analysis of patterns of the slow phase of IC, since these slow fluorescence transitions reflect complex interactions between primary and secondary photosynthetic processes. A classification was performed of the ICs obtained according to the patterns of their slow phase. Four different types of such patterns were distinguished. The microalgae population structure with respect to IC patterns was investigated at different stages of culture growth. The distribution of microalgae cenobiums over the patterns of IC was found to change in accordance with the stage of population development. At the stage of the population growth enhancement, nonmonotonous IC dominated with a high steady-state level of fluorescence. The stage of linear growth was characterized by IC with monotonous decay kinetics and low steady-state level of fluorescence. At the third stage including the phases of growth inhibition, stationary state and the beginning of cell death the population structure was the most heterogeneous, with all IC patterns observed.Abbreviations CO2 carbon dioxide - ETC electron transfer chain - Fl fluorescence - FNR ferredoxin-NADPH reductase - IC induction curve of chlorophyll fluorescence - PQ plastoquinone - PS I Photosystem I - PS II Photosystem II - QA primary quinone acceptor of PS II  相似文献   

13.
The amplitudes ratio of the fast and slow phases (Afast/Aslow) in the kinetics of the dark relaxation of variable chlorophyll fluorescence (FV) was studied after various periods of illumination of dark-adapted primary barley leaves. Simultaneously, photosynthetic activity was monitored using the photoacoustic technique and the photochemical and non-photochemical fluorescence quenching parameters. The ratio Afast/Aslow changed with the preceding illumination time in a two-step manner. During the first stage of photosynthetic induction (0–20 s of illumination), characterized by a drop in O2-dependent photoacoustic signal following an initial spike and by a relatively stable small value of photochemical FV quenching, the ratio Afast/Aslow remained practically unaltered. During the second stage (20–60 s of illumination), when both the rate of O2 evolution and the photochemical FV quenching were found to be sharply developed, a marked increase in the above ratio was also observed. A linear correlation was found between the value of the photochemical quenching and the ratio Afast/Aslow during the second phase of photosynthetic induction. It is concluded that the slow phase appearing in the kinetics of FV dark relaxation is not due to the existence of Photosystem II reaction centres lacking the ability to reduce P700+ with high rates, but is instead related to the limitation of electron release from Photosystem I during the initial stage of the induction period of photosynthesis. This limitation keeps the intersystem electron carriers in the reduced state and thus increases the probability of back electron transfer from QA to the donor side of Photosystem II.Abbreviations Afast/Aslow the ratio of magnitudes between the fast and slow phases of dark relaxation of variable fluorescence - FO initial level of chlorophyll fluorescence - FV variable chlorophyll fluorescence (F-FO) - (FV)S the yield of variable chlorophyll fluorescence under saturating pulse in illuminated leaves - (FV)M the yield of variable chlorophyll fluorescence under saturating pulse in dark-adapted leaves - PA photoacoustic - PSI Photosystem I - PS II Photosystem II - qN non-photochemical quenching - qQ photochemical quenching  相似文献   

14.
The involvement of phospholipids in the regulation of photosynthetic electron transport activities was studied by incubating isolated pea thylakoids with phospholipase C to remove the head-group of phospholipid molecules. The treatment was effective in eliminating 40–50% of chloroplast phospholipids and resulted in a drastic decrease of photosynthetic electron transport. Measurements of whole electron transport (H2Omethylviologen) and Photosystem II activity (H2Op-benzoquinone) demonstrated that the decrease of electron flow was due to the inactivation of Photosystem II centers. The variable part of fluorescence induction measured in the absence of electron acceptor was decreased by the progress of phospholipase C hydrolysis and part of the signal could be restored on addition of 3-(3,4-dicholorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea. The B and Q bands of thermoluminescence corresponding to S2S3QB and S2S3QA charge recombination, respectively, was also decreased with a concomitant increase of the C band, which originated from the tyrosine D+QA charge recombination. These results suggest that phospholipid molecules play an important role in maintaining the membrane organization and thus maintaining the electron transport activity of Photosystem II complexes.Abbreviations DCMU 3-(3,4-dicholorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - Fvar variable fluorescence - LHC light-harvesting complex - MGDG monogalactosyldiacylglycerol - PS photosystem  相似文献   

15.
This paper examines the effect of inorganic carbon transport and accumulation in Synechococcus PCC7942 on fluorescence quenching, photosynthetic oxygen reduction and both linear and cyclic electron flow. The data presented support the previous findings of Miller et al. (1991) that the accumulation of Ci by the CO2 concentrating mechanism is able to stimulate oxygen photoreduction, particularly so when CO2 fixation is inhibited by PCR cycle inhibitors such as glycolaldehyde. This effect is found with both high and low-Ci grown cells, but the potential for oxygen photoreduction is about two-fold higher in low-Ci grown cells. This greater potential for O2 photoreduction is also correlated with a higher ability of low-Ci cells to photoreduce H2O2. Experiments with a mutant which transports Ci but does not accumulate it internally, indicates that the stimulation of O2 photoreduction appears to be a direct effect of the internal accumulation of Ci rather than from its participation in the transport process. In the absence of Ci, no specific partial reactions of photosynthetic electron transport appear to be inhibited, and the PS 1 acceptors PNDA and MV as well as the PS 2 acceptor DMQ can all run electron transport at levels approaching those during active CO2 fixation. Measurements of P700+ show that when the cells are depleted of Ci during photosynthesis, P700 becomes more oxidised. This indicates that the resupply of electrons from the intersystem chain is relatively more restricted under conditions of Ci limitation than is the availability of PS 1 electron acceptors. It is proposed that the accumulated Ci pool can directly stimulate the ability of O2 to act as a PS 1 acceptor and that the ability of PS 1 acceptors, such as O2, to relieve restrictions on intersystem electron transfer is perhaps a result of a reduction in cyclic electron flow and a subsequent increase in the oxidation state of the plastoquinone pool.Abbreviations BTP 1,3-bis[tris(hydroxymethyl)-methylaminopropane] - CA carbonic anhydrase' - Ci inorganic carbon (CO2+HCO3 +CO3 2–) - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DMQ 2,6-dimethylbenzoquinone - EZ ethoxyzolamide or 6-ethoxy-2-benzothiazole-sulfonamide - FCCP carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoro methoxyphenyl-hydrazone - F steady-state chlorophyll fluorescence - Fm chlorophyll fluorescence during a saturating light pulse - Fo chlorophyll fluorescence in the dark, prior to illumination by actinic light - MV methyl viologen or 1,1-dimethyl-4,4-bipyridinium dichloride - PCR cycle photosynthetic carbon reduction cycle - PNDA N,N-dimethyl-p-nitrosoaniline - PS 1 the quantum yield of Photosystem 1 - PS 2 the quantum yield of Photosystem 2  相似文献   

16.
Pea chloroplasts were treated with phospholipase A2 which hydrolysed approx. 75% phosphatidylglycerol and 60% phosphatidylcholine. The major effect of the treatment was an inhibition of Photosystem (PS) II electron transport together with an (approx. 30%) increase of initial chlorophyll fluorescence (F0) and a subsequent loss of variable fluorescence during induction, as well as an inhibition of the cation-induced rise in steady-state chlorophyll fluorescence. In contrast to the effects upon PS II activities, PS I activity was not depressed and increased slightly under certain conditions, while the coupling factor for photophosphorylation was inhibited to some extent. No significant increase in spillover was observed following the treatment with phospholipase A2. These results are discussed in relation to the ways in which phospholipid depletion may lead to the various effects observed. It is proposed that the site of PS II inhibition after phospholipase A2 treatment may be at the electron transfer from pheophytin to Q, the first quinone-type electron acceptor.  相似文献   

17.
Photosynthetic control describes the processes that serve to modify chloroplast membrane reactions in order to co-ordinate the synthesis of ATP and NADPH with the rate at which these metabolites can be used in carbon metabolism. At low irradiance, optimisation of the use of excitation energy is required, while at high irradiance photosynthetic control serves to dissipate excess excitation energy when the potential rate of ATP and NADPH synthesis exceed demand. The balance between pH, ATP synthesis and redox state adjusts supply to demand such that the [ATP]/[ADP] and [NADPH]/[NADP+] ratios are remarkably constant in steady-state conditions and modulation of electron transport occurs without extreme fluctuations in these pools.Abbreviations FBPase Fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase - PS I Photosystem I - PS II Photosystem II - Pi inorganic phosphate - PGA glycerate 3-phosphate - PQ plastoquinone - QA the bound quinone electron acceptor of PS II - qP Photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence associated with the oxidation of QA - qN non-photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence - qE non-photochemical quenching associated with the high energy state of the membrane - RuBP ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate - TP triose phosphate - intrinsic quantum yield of PS II - quantum yield of electron transport - quantum yield of CO2 assimilation  相似文献   

18.
Fluorescence induction of isolated spinach chloroplasts was measured by using weak continuous light. It is found that the kinetics of the initial phase of fluorescence induction as well as the initial fluorescence level Fj are influenced by the number of preilluminating flashes, and shows damped period 4 oscillation. Evidence is given to show that it is correlated with the S-state transitions of oxygen evolution. Based on the previous observations that the S states can modulate the fluorescence yield of Photosystem II, a simulating calculation suggests that, in addition to the Photosystem II centers inactive in the plastoquinone reduction, the S-state transitions can also make a contribution to the intial phase of fluorescence induction.Abbreviations DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethyl urea - F0 non-variable fluorescence level emitted when all PS II centers are open - Fi initial fluorescence level immediately after shutter open - Fpt intermediate plateau fluorescence level - Fm maximum fluorescence level emitted when all PS II centers are closed - PS II Photosystem II - QA primary quinone acceptor of PS II - QB secondary quinone acceptor of PS II  相似文献   

19.
An insertional transposon mutation in the sll0606 gene was found to lead to a loss of photoautotrophy but not photoheterotrophy in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. Complementation analysis of this mutant (Tsll0606) indicated that an intact sll0606 gene could fully restore photoautotrophic growth. Gene organization in the vicinity of sll0606 indicates that it is not contained in an operon. No electron transport activity was detected in Tsll0606 using water as an electron donor and 2,6-dichlorobenzoquinone as an electron acceptor, indicating that Photosystem II (PS II) was defective. Electron transport activity using dichlorophenol indolephenol plus ascorbate as an electron donor to methyl viologen, however, was the same as observed in the control strain. This indicated that electron flow through Photosystem I was normal. Fluorescence induction and decay parameters verified that Photosystem II was highly compromised. The quantum yield for energy trapping by Photosystem II (FV/FM) in the mutant was less than 10% of that observed in the control strain. The small variable fluorescence yield observed after a single saturating flash exhibited aberrant QA reoxidation kinetics that were insensitive to dichloromethylurea. Immunological analysis indicated that whereas the D2 and CP47 proteins were modestly affected, the D1 and CP43 components were dramatically reduced. Analysis of two-dimensional blue native/lithium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels indicated that no intact PS II monomer or dimers were observed in the mutant. The CP43-less PS II monomer did accumulate to detectable levels. Our results indicate that the Sll0606 protein is required for the assembly/stability of a functionally competent Photosystem II.  相似文献   

20.
The influence of UV-B irradiation on photosynthetic oxygen evolution by isolated spinach thylakoids has been investigated using thermoluminescence measurements. The thermoluminescence bands arising from the S2QB - (B band) and S2QA (Q band) charge recombination disappeared with increasing UV-B irradiation time. In contrast, the C band at 50°C, arising from the recombination of QA - with an accessory donor of Photosystem II, was transiently enhanced by the UV-B irradiation. The efficiency of DCMU to block QA to QB electron transfer decreased after irradiation as detected by the incomplete suppression of the B band by DCMU. The flash-induced oscillatory pattern of the B band was modified in the UV-B irradiated samples, indicating a decrease in the number of centers with reduced QB. Based on the results of this study, UV-B irradiation is suggested to damage both the donor and acceptor sides of Photosystem II. The damage of the water-oxidizing complex does not affect a specific S-state transition. Instead, charge stabilization is enhanced on an accessory donor. The acceptor-side modifications decrease the affinity of DCMU binding. This effect is assumed to reflect a structural change in the QB/DCMU binding site. The preferential loss of dark stable QB - may be related to the same structural change or could be caused by the specific destruction of reduced quinones by the UV-B light.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - DCMU 3-(3,4,-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - PS II Photosystem II - QA first quinone electron acceptor of PS II - QB second quinone electron acceptor of PS II - Tyr-D accessory electron donor of PS II - S0-S4 charge storage states of the water-oxidizing complex  相似文献   

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