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1.
Srivastava A  Zeiger E 《Plant physiology》1992,100(3):1562-1566
Chlorophyll a fluorescence transients from isolated Vicia faba guard cell chloroplasts were used to probe the response of these organelles to light quality. Guard cell chloroplasts were isolated from protoplasts by passing them through a 10-μm nylon net. Intact chloroplasts were purified on a Percoll gradient. Chlorophyll a fluorescence transients induced by actinic red or blue light were measured with a fluorometer equipped with a measuring beam. Actinic red light induced a monophasic quenching, and transients induced by blue light showed biphasic kinetics having a slow and a fast component. The difference between the red and blue light-induced transients could be observed over a range of fluence rates tested (200-800 μmol m−2 s−1). The threshold fluence rate of blue light for the induction of the fast component of quenching was 200 μmol m−2 s−1, but in the presence of saturating red light, fluence rates as low as 25 μmol m−2 s−1 induced the fast quenching. These results indicate that guard cell chloroplasts have a specific response to blue light.  相似文献   

2.
The chlorophyll fluorescence induction curves from mesophyll and guard cell chloroplasts of Saxifraga cernua, including both the fast (O to P, the transients involved in the rise in variable fluorescence) and slow (P to steady state fluorescence due to quenching) components, were characterized over a range of excitation intensities using microspectrophotometry (with epi-lumination) equipped with apertures designed to eliminate cross contamination of the fluorescence signal between the two chloroplast types. At low excitation intensities, the fast fluorescence kinetics from guard cell plastids showed an extended I to D phase and a more rapid appearance of P while minimal quenching from P to steady state fluorescence was observed compared to the transients from mesophyll chloroplasts suggesting a lower activity of photochemical (electron movement via carriers between donor and acceptor sites) and nonphotochemical (such as membrane conformational changes) events which regulate the fluorescence induction curve kinetics. As the excitation intensity was increased, the quenching rates of guard cells were faster at initiating conditions for photophosphorylation and the fast and slow fluorescence kinetics from guard cells resembled those of the mesophyll cells.

Guard cell chloroplasts of S. cernua from intact epidermal peels showed a low temperature (77 K) fluorescence emission spectrum having three major peaks (at 685, 695, and 730 nanometers when excited at 440 nanometers) which were qualitatively similar to those in the spectrum obtained from mesophyll tissue.

These data suggest that S. cernua guard cell chloroplast photosystems I and II contribute to light-dependent stomatal activity only at high light intensities.

  相似文献   

3.
The lack of detectable variable fluorescence from guard cell chloroplasts in both the albino and green portions of variegated leaves of St. Augustine grass (Stenotaphrum secundatum var variegatum A.S. Hitchc.) is reported. Fluorescence was measured either with a highly sensitive, modified fluorescence microscope which was capable of recording fluorescence induction curves from single chloroplasts, or with a spectrofluorometer. Both fast and slow fluorescence transients from S. secundatum guard cells showed a rapid rise and then remained at a steady level. Neither variable fluorescence increase (induction) nor decrease (quenching), properties normally associated with photosystem II, was observed from these chloroplasts. These fluorescence kinetics did not change either with alterations of the specimen preparation procedure or with alterations of the excitation light intensities and wavelengths. These results indicate that guard cell chloroplasts in this variety of S. secundatum do not conduct normal photosystem II electron transport. Light regulation of stomatal conductance in intact leaves of this plant did occur, however, and was similar to light regulation observed in other species. The conductance of the green portion of the leaves was much greater in the light than in the dark, and was much greater than the conductance of the albino portion of the leaves. Stomata in the green portion of the leaves also showed greater opening in blue light than in red light. These results provide evidence that stomatal regulation in this variety of S. secundatum does not rely on photosystem II electron transport in guard cell chloroplasts.  相似文献   

4.
Recent studies have shown that guard cell and coleoptile chloroplasts appear to be involved in blue light photoreception during blue light-dependent stomatal opening and phototropic bending. The guard cell chloroplast has been studied in detail but the coleoptile chloroplast is poorly understood. The present study was aimed at the characterization of the corn coleoptile chloroplast, and its comparison with mesophyll and guard cell chloroplasts. Coleoptile chloroplasts operated the xanthophyll cycle, and their zeaxanthin content tracked incident rates of solar radiation throughout the day. Zeaxanthin formation was very sensitive to low incident fluence rates, and saturated at around 800–1000 mol m–2 s–1. Zeaxanthin formation in corn mesophyll chloroplasts was insensitive to low fluence rates and saturated at around 1800 mol m–2 s–1. Quenching rates of chlorophyll a fluorescence transients from coleoptile chloroplasts induced by saturating fluence rates of actinic red light increased as a function of zeaxanthin content. This implies that zeaxanthin plays a photoprotective role in the coleoptile chloroplast. Addition of low fluence rates of blue light to saturating red light also increased quenching rates in a zeaxanthin-dependent fashion. This blue light response of the coleoptile chloroplast is analogous to that of the guard cell chloroplast, and implicates these organelles in the sensory transduction of blue light. On a chlorophyll basis, coleoptile chloroplasts had high rates of photosynthetic oxygen evolution and low rates of photosynthetic carbon fixation, as compared with mesophyll chloroplasts. In contrast with the uniform chloroplast distribution in the leaf, coleoptile chloroplasts were predominately found in the outer cell layers of the coleoptile cortex, and had large starch grains and a moderate amount of stacked grana and stroma lamellae. Several key properties of the coleoptile chloroplast were different from those of mesophyll chloroplasts and resembled those of guard cell chloroplasts. We propose that the common properties of guard cell and coleoptile chloroplasts define a functional pattern characteristic of chloroplasts specialized in photosensory transduction.Abbreviations Ant or A antheraxanthin - dv/dt fluorescence quenching rate - Fm maximum yield of fluorescence with all PS II reaction centers closed - Fo yield of instantaneous fluorescence with all PS II reaction centers open - Vio or V violaxanthin - Zea or Z zeaxanthin  相似文献   

5.
Melis A  Zeiger E 《Plant physiology》1982,69(3):642-647
Chlorophyll fluorescence transients from mesophyll and guard cell chloroplasts of variegated leaves from Chlorophytum comosum were compared using high resolution fluorescence spectroscopy. Like their mesophyll counterparts, guard cell chloroplasts showed the OPS fluorescence transient indicating the operation of the linear electron transport and the possible generation of NADPH in these organelles. They also showed a slow fluorescence yield decrease, equivalent to the MT transition in mesophyll, suggesting the formation of the high energy state and photophosphorylation. Unlike the mesophyll chloroplasts, the fluorescence from guard cell chloroplasts lacked the increment of the SM transition, indicating that the two types of chloroplasts have some metabolic differences. The presence of CO2 (supplied as bicarbonate, pH 6.7) specifically inhibited the MT-equivalent transition while its absence accelerated it. These observations constitute the first specific evidence of a guard cell chloroplast response to CO2. Control of photosynthetic ATP levels in the guard cell cytoplasm by CO2 may provide a mechanism regulating the availability of high energy equivalents at the guard cell plasmalemma, thus affecting stomatal opening.  相似文献   

6.
Several photochemical and spectral properties of maize (Zea mays) bundle sheath and mesophyll chloroplasts are reported that provide a better understanding of the photosynthetic apparatus of C4 plants. The difference absorption spectrum at 298 K and the fluorescence excitation and emission spectra of chlorophyll at 298 K and 77 K provide new information on the different forms of chlorophyll a in bundle sheath and mesophyll chloroplasts: the former contain, relative to short wavelength chlorophyll a forms, more long wavelength chlorophyll a form (e.g. chlorophyll a 693 and chlorophyll a 705) and less chlorophyll b than the latter. The degree of polarization of chlorophyll a fluorescence is 6% in bundle sheath and 4% in mesophyll chloroplasts. This result is consistent with the presence of relatively high amounts of oriented long wavelength forms of chlorophyll a in bundle sheath compared to mesophyll chloroplasts. The relative yield of variable, with respect to constant, chorophyll a fluorescence in mesophyll chloroplasts is more than twice that in bundle sheath chloroplast. Furthermore, the relative yield of total chlorophyll a fluorescence is 40% lower in bundle sheath compared to that in mesophyll chloroplasts. This is in agreement with the presence of the higher ratio of the weakly fluorescent pigment system I to pigment system II in bundle sheath than in mesophyll chloroplast. The efficiency of energy transfer from chlorophyll b and carotenoids to chlorophyll a are calculated to be 100 and 50%, respectively, in both types of chloroplasts. Fluorescence quenching of atebrin, reflecting high energy state of chloroplasts, is 10 times higher in mesophyll chloroplasts than in bundle sheath chloroplasts during noncyclic electron flow but is equal during cyclic flow. The entire electron transport chain is shown to be present in both types of chloroplasts, as inferred from the antagonistic effect of red (650 nm) and far red (710 nm) lights on the absorbance changes at 559 nm and 553 nm, and the photoreduction of methyl viologen from H2O. (The rate of methyl viologen photoreduction in bundle sheath chloroplasts was 40% of that of mesophyll chloroplasts.)  相似文献   

7.
A newly developed nitrogen laser fluorimeter insensitive to actinic illumination was used to follow simultaneously the light induced changes in red and blue fluorescence of intact isolated spinach chloroplasts and leaf pieces. The recorded variable blue fluorescence was linked to a water soluble component of intact isolated chloroplasts, depended on Photosystem I, and was related to changes in carbon metabolism. From the comparison of changes in intact and broken chloroplasts and from fluorescence spectra under different conditions, it was concluded that the variation in NADPH was the major cause for the changes in blue fluorescence. This study opens a path towards continuous and non-destructive monitoring of NADPH redox state in chloroplasts and leaves.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - DHAP dihydroxyacetone phosphate - DLGA DL-glyceraldehyde - FNR ferredoxin-NADP reductase - FWHM full width at half maximum - LED light emitting diodes - OAA oxaloacetate - qN non-photochemical quenching - PGA 3-phosphoglycerate - Pi inorganic orthophosphate - qP photochemical quenching - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density - QA primary quinone acceptor of Photosystem II Preliminary results of this work were presented at the First Conference on the Physiology and Biochemistry of high Mountain Plants, 2–3 July 1992, Villar d'Arene, France.  相似文献   

8.
The activity of NADP and O2 photoreduction by water is essentially higher in chloroplasts isolated from pea seedlings (Pisum sativum L.) grown under blue light as compared with that from plants grown under red light. In contrast, the photoreduction of NADP and O2 with photosystem I only is practically the same or even lower in chloroplasts isolated from plants grown under blue light. The addition of plastocyanin does not affect the rate or the extent of NADP photoreduction by water in the chloroplasts isolated from plants grown under blue light, whereas it sharply activates NADP reduction in the chloroplasts isolated from plants grown under red light. The extent of the light-induced oxidation of cytochrome f is appreciably higher in chloroplasts isolated from plants grown under blue light. Cytochrome b559 plays the predominant role in the oxidoreductive reactions of these chloroplasts. Furthermore, the fluorescence measurements indicate more effective transfer of excitation energy from chlorophyll to the photosystem II reaction center in chloroplasts isolated from plants grown under blue light.  相似文献   

9.
Kruse T  Tallman G  Zeiger E 《Plant physiology》1989,91(4):1382-1386
A method for isolating guard cell protoplasts (GCP) from mechanically prepared epidermis of Vicia faba is described. Epidermis was prepared by homogenizing leaves in a Waring blender in a solution of 10% Ficoll, 5 millimolar CaCl2, and 0.1% polyvinylpyrrolidone 40 (PVP). Attached mesophyll and epidermal cells were removed by shaking epidermis in a solution of Cellulysin, mannitol, CaCl2, PVP, and pepstatin A. Cleaned epidermis was transferred to a solution of mannitol, CaCl2, PVP, pepstatin A, cellulase “Onozuka” RS, and pectolyase Y-23 for the isolation of GCP. Preparations made by this method included both adaxial and abaxial GCP and contained ≤0.017% mesophyll protoplasts, ≤0.6% mesophyll fragments, and no epidermal cell contaminants. Yields averaged 9 × 104 protoplasts/leaflet and 98 to 100% of the GCP excluded trypan blue, concentrated neutral red, and hydrolyzed fluorescein diacetate. Isolated GCP increased in diameter by 2.2 micrometers after incubation in darkness in 10 micromolar fusicoccin, 0.4 molar mannitol, 5 millimolar KCl, and 1 millimolar CaCl2. Illumination of GCP with 800 micromoles per square meter per second of red light resulted in alkalinization of their suspension medium. When 10 micromolar per square meter per second of blue light was superimposed onto the red light background, the medium acidified. Measurements of chlorophyll a fast fluorescence transients from isolated GCP indicated that GCP were capable of electron transport, and slow transients contained the “M” peak usually associated with a functional photosynthetic carbon reduction pathway.  相似文献   

10.
Chloroplast photorelocation movement is extensively studied in C3 but not C4 plants. C4 plants have two types of photosynthetic cells: mesophyll and bundle sheath cells. Mesophyll chloroplasts are randomly distributed along cell walls, whereas bundle sheath chloroplasts are located close to the vascular tissues or mesophyll cells depending on the plant species. The cell-specific C4 chloroplast arrangement is established during cell maturation, and is maintained throughout the life of the cell. However, only mesophyll chloroplasts can change their positions in response to environmental stresses. The migration pattern is unique to C4 plants and differs from that of C3 chloroplasts. in this mini-review, we highlight the cell-specific disposition of chloroplasts in C4 plants and discuss the possible physiological significances.Key words: abscisic acid, aggregative movement, avoidance movement, blue light, bundle sheath cell, C4 plant, chloroplast, cytoskeleton, environmental stress, mesophyll cellChloroplasts can change their intracellular positions to optimize photosynthetic activity and/or reduce photodamage occurring in response to light irradiation. On treating with high-intensity light, the chloroplasts move away from the light to minimize photodamage (avoidance response). Meanwhile, on irradiating with low-intensity light, they move toward the light source to maximize photosynthesis (accumulation response). These chloroplast-photorelocation movements are observed in a wide variety of plant species from green algae to seed plants,13 although little attention has been paid to C4 plants. There is a report stating that monocotyledonous C4 plants showed changes in the light transmission of leaves in response to blue light,4 although the direction of migration of the chloroplasts is not described.C4 plants have two types of photosynthetic cells: mesophyll (M) cells and bundle sheath (BS) cells, which have numerous well-developed chloroplasts. BS cells surround the vascular tissues, while M cells encircle the cylinders of the BS cells (Fig. 1). The C4 dicarboxylate cycle of photosynthetic carbon assimilation is distributed between the two cell types, and acts as a CO2 pump to concentrate CO2 in the BS chloroplasts.5,6 C4 plants are divided into three subtypes on the basis of decarboxylating enzymes: NADP-malic enzyme (ME), NAD-ME and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase. Although the M chloroplasts of all C4 species are randomly distributed along the cell walls, BS chloroplasts are located either in a centripetal (close to the vascular tissue) or in a centrifugal (close to M cells) position, depending on the species (Fig. 1A).7 Thus, C4 M and BS cells have different systems for chloroplast positioning: an M cell-specific system for dispersing chloroplasts and a BS cell-specific system for holding chloroplasts in a centripetal or centrifugal disposition.Open in a separate windowFigure 1The intracellular arrangement of chloroplasts in finger millet (Eleusine coracana), an NAD-ME-type C4 plant. (A) Light micrograph of a transverse section of a leaf blade from a control plant. Bundle sheath (BS) cells surround the vascular tissues, while mesophyll (M) cells encircle the cylinders of the BS cells. BS chloroplasts are well developed, and are located in a centripetal position, whereas M chloroplasts are randomly distributed along the cell walls. B, bundle sheath cell; M, mesophyll cell; V, vascular bundle. (B) Transverse section of a leaf blade from a drought-stressed plant. Most M chloroplasts are aggregatively distributed toward the BS side, while the centripetal arrangement of BS chloroplasts is unchanged. (C and D) Transverse sections of leaf segments irradiated with blue light of intensity 500 µmol m−2 s−1 with or without 30 µM ABA for 8 h (C and D, respectively). The adaxial side of each leaf section (upper side in the photograph) was illuminated. In the absence of ABA, M chloroplasts exhibited avoidance movement on the illuminated side and aggregative movement on the opposite side. In the presence of ABA, aggregative movement was observed on both sides. Scale bars = 50 µm.  相似文献   

11.
Anna Drozak  El?bieta Romanowska 《BBA》2006,1757(11):1539-1546
The regulation by light of the photosynthetic apparatus, and composition of light-harvesting complexes in mesophyll and bundle sheath chloroplasts was investigated in maize. Leaf chlorophyll content, level of plastoquinone, PSI and PSII activities and Lhc polypeptide compositions were determined in plants grown under high, moderate and low irradiances. Photochemical efficiency of PSII, photochemical fluorescence quenching and non-photochemical fluorescence quenching over a range of actinic irradiances were also determined, using chlorophyll a fluorescence analysis. Acclimation of plants to different light conditions caused marked changes in light-harvesting complexes, LHCI and LHCII, and antenna complexes were also reorganized in these types of chloroplasts. The level of LHCII increased in plants grown in low light, even in agranal bundle sheath chloroplasts where the amount of PSII was strongly reduced. Irradiance also affected LHCI complex and the number of structural polypeptides, in this complex, generally decreased in chloroplasts from plants grown under lower light. Surprisingly moderate and low irradiances during growth do not affect the light reaction and fluorescence parameters of plants but generated differences in composition of light-harvesting complexes in chloroplasts. On the other hand, the changes in photosynthetic apparatus in plants acclimated to high light, resulted in a higher efficiency of photosynthesis. Based on these observations we propose that light acclimation to high light in maize is tightly coordinated adjustment of light reaction components/activity in both mesophyll and bundle sheath chloroplasts. Acclimation is concerned with balancing light utilization and level of the content of LHC complexes differently in both types of chloroplasts.  相似文献   

12.
Sakae Katoh  Akihiko Yamagishi 《BBA》1984,767(2):185-191
The inductive kinetics of fluorescence and photoacoustic signal were measured simultaneously in dark-adapted thalli of the green coenocytic alga Bryopsis maxima. Under illumination with weak red light modulated at 60 Hz, the fluorescence yield varied, showing three maxima P, M1 and M2 almost immediately, 10 s and 6 min after the onset of the illumination, respectively (Yamagishi, A., Satoh, K. and Katoh, S. (1978) Plant Cell Physiol. 19, 17–25). The photoacoustic signal also showed inductive transients which parallel well those of the fluorescence up to the M2 stage. After M2, the photoacoustic signal remained at a constant level, while the emission yield gradually decreased. The first peak of the fluorescence induction and a corresponding peak of the photoacoustic transients were selectively eliminated by prior illumination or methyl viologen treatment of the dark-adapted thalli. The second peaks of the two induction curves were abolished by carbonylcyanide-m-chlorophenylhydrazone, whereas dicyclohexylcarbodiimide enhanced their peak heights and suppressed the subsequent decreases. The results indicate that the fluorescence yield is mainly determined by the redox state of the Photosystem II reaction center throughout the induction period except the last phase. Mechanisms underlying inductive transients of fluorescence are discussed in the light of the present findings.  相似文献   

13.
Dithiothreitol, which completely inhibits the de-epoxidation of violaxanthin to zeaxanthin, was used to obtain evidence for a causal relationship between zeaxanthin and the dissipation of excess excitation energy in the photochemical apparatus in Spinicia oleracea L. In both leaves and chloroplasts, inhibition of zeaxanthin formation by dithiothreitol was accompanied by inhibition of a component of nonphotochemical fluorescence quenching. This component was characterized by a quenching of instantaneous fluorescence (Fo) and a linear relationship between the calculated rate constant for radiationless energy dissipation in the antenna chlorophyll and the zeaxanthin content. In leaves, this zeaxanthin-associated quenching, which relaxed within a few minutes upon darkening, was the major component of nonphotochemical fluorescence quenching determined in the light, i.e. it represented the `high-energy-state' quenching. In isolated chloroplasts, the zeaxanthin-associated quenching was a smaller component of total nonphotochemical quenching and there was a second, rapidly reversible high-energy-state component of fluorescence quenching which occurred in the absence of zeaxanthin and was not accompanied by Fo quenching. Leaves, but not chloroplasts, were capable of maintaining the electron acceptor, Q, of photosystem II in a low reduction state up to high degrees of excessive light and thus high degrees of nonphotochemical fluorescence quenching. When ascorbate, which serves as the reductant for violaxanthin de-epoxidation, was added to chloroplast suspensions, zeaxanthin formation at low photon flux densities was stimulated and the relationship between nonphotochemical fluorescence quenching and the reduction state in chloroplasts then became more similar to that found in leaves. We conclude that the inhibition of zeaxanthin-associated fluorescence quenching by dithiothreitol provides further evidence that there exists a close relationship between zeaxanthin and potentially photoprotective dissipation of excess excitation energy in the antenna chlorophyll.  相似文献   

14.
A modified fluorescence microscope system was used to measure chlorophyll fluorescence and delayed light emission from mesophyll and bundle sheath cells in situ in fresh-cut sections from leaves of Panicum miliaceum L. The fluorescence rise in 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethylurea (DCMU)-treated leaves and the slow fluorescence kinetics in untreated leaves show that mesophyll chloroplasts have larger photosystem II unit sizes than do bundle sheath chloroplasts. The larger photosystem II units imply more efficient noncyclic electron transport in mesophyll chloroplasts. Quenching of slow fluorescence also differs between the cell types with mesophyll chloroplasts showing complex kinetics and bundle sheath chloroplasts showing a relatively simple decline. Properties of the photosynthetic system were also investigated in leaves from plants grown in soil containing elevated NaCl levels. As judged by changes in both fluorescence kinetics in DCMU-treated leaves and delayed light emission in leaves not exposed to DCMU, salinity altered photosystem II in bundle sheath cells but not in mesophyll cells. This result may indicate different ionic distributions in the two cell types or, alternatively, different responses of the two chloroplast types to environmental change.  相似文献   

15.
The presence of chloroplasts in guard cells from leaf epidermis, coleoptile, flowers, and albino portions of variegated leaves was established by incident fluorescence microscopy, thus confirming the notion that guard cell chloroplasts are remarkably conserved. Room temperature emission spectra from a few chloroplasts in a single guard cell of Vicia faba showed one major peak at around 683 nanometers. Low-temperature (77 K) emission spectra from peels of albino portions of Chlorophytum comosum leaves and from mesophyll chloroplasts of green parts of the same leaves showed major peaks at around 687 and 733 nanometers, peaks usually attributed to photosystem II and photosystem I pigment systems, respectively. Spectra of peels of V. faba leaves showed similar peaks. However, fluorescence microscopy revealed that the Vicia peels, as well as those from Allium cepa and Tulipa sp., were contaminated with non-guard cell chloroplasts which were practically undetectable under bright field illumination. These observations pose restrictions on the use of epidermal peels as a source of isolated guard cell chloroplasts. Studies on the 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea-sensitive variable fluorescence kinetics of uncontaminated epidermal peels of C. comosum indicated that guard cell chloroplasts operate a normal, photosystem II-dependent, linear electron transport. The above properties in combination with their reported inability to fix CO2 photosynthetically may render the guard cell chloroplasts optimally suited to supply the reducing and high-energy phosphate equivalents needed to sustain active ion transport during stomatal opening in daylight.  相似文献   

16.
Lysenko V 《Planta》2012,235(5):1023-1033
Residual chlorophyll in chlorophyll-deficient (albino) areas of variegated leaves of Ficus benjamina originates from guard cell chloroplasts. Photosynthetic features of green and albino sectors of F. benjamina were studied by imaging the distribution of the fluorescence decrease ratio Rfd within a leaf calculated from maximum (Fm) and steady-state leaf chlorophyll fluorescence (Fs) at 690 and 740 nm. Local areas of albino sectors demonstrated an abnormally high Rfd740/Rfd690 ratio. Fluorescence transients excited in albino sectors at red (640 and 690 nm) wavelengths showed an abrupt decrease of the Rfd values (0.4 and 0.1, correspondingly) as compared with those excited at blue wavelengths (1.7–2.4). This “Red Drop” was not observed for green sectors. Normal and chlorophyll-deficient leaf sectors of F. benjamina were also tested for linear and cyclic electron transport in thylakoids. The tests have been performed studying fluorescence at a steady-state phase with CO2-excess impulse feeding, photoacoustic signal generated by pulse light source at wavelengths selectively exciting PSI, fluorescence kinetics under anaerobiosis and fluorescence changes observed by dual-wavelength excitation method. The data obtained for albino sectors strongly suggest the possibility of a cyclic electron transport simultaneously occurring in guard cell thylakoids around photosystems I and II under blue light, whereas linear electron transport is absent or insufficient.  相似文献   

17.
Profiles of chlorophyll fluorescence were measured in spinach leaves irradiated with monochromatic light. The characteristics of the profiles within the mesophyll were determined by the optical properties of the leaf tissue and the spectral quality of the actinic light. When leaves were infiltrated with 10?4M DCMU [3‐(3,4‐dichlorophenyl)‐1, 1‐dimethyl‐urea] or water, treatments that minimized light scattering, irradiation with 2000 μmol m?2 s?1 green light produced broad Gaussian‐shaped fluorescence profiles that spanned most of the mesophyll. Profiles for chlorophyll fluorescence in the red (680 ± 16 nm) and far red (λ > 710 nm) were similar except that there was elevated red fluorescence near the adaxial leaf surface relative to far red fluorescence. Fluorescence profiles were narrower in non‐infiltrated leaf samples where light scattering increased the light gradient. The fluorescence profile was broader when the leaf was irradiated on its adaxial versus abaxial surface due to the contrasting optical properties of the palisade and spongy mesophyll. Irradiation with blue, red and green monochromatic light produced profiles that peaked 50, 100 and 150 μm, respectively, beneath the irradiated surface. These results are consistent with previous measurements of the light gradient in spinach and they agree qualitatively with measurements of carbon fixation under monochromatic blue, red and green light. These results suggest that chlorophyll fluorescence profiles may be used to estimate the distribution of quanta that are absorbed within the leaf for photosynthesis.  相似文献   

18.
Evolution of o(2) in brown algal chloroplasts   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
A method is described for the isolation of photosynthetically active chloroplasts from four species of brown algae: Fucus vesiculosis, Nereocystis luetkeana, Laminaria saccharina, and Macrocystis integrifolia. When compared to lettuce and spinach chloroplasts, the algal chloroplasts all showed lower activities for both photosystems II and I. Chloroplasts from all the plants produced H2O2, with photosystem I functioning as the O2 reductant in the light. In contrast to the green plants, however, brown algal chloroplasts strongly reduced O2 under conditions where both photosystems II and I remain active. Relative variable fluorescence values were lower both in intact plants and chloroplasts of the brown algae than for either spinach or lettuce. It is suggested that although light harvesting activities appear similar in all the plants, details of electron transport in brown algae may differ from those of green plants.  相似文献   

19.
A method of imaging and analysis of fluorescence kinetic parameters distributed over leaf area is described in details. Video data recorded by the CCD-camera were processed using free programs VirtualDub and ImageJ. The method allows not only to image the distribution of fluorescence decrease ratio (Rfd), but also to obtain fluorescence induction curves, which are corresponded to any region of interest selected within the leaf image. A considerable mosaicism of shade leaves of Ficus benjamina L. was shown on the basis of Rfd values, whose functional significance is discussed from the point of view of adaptation to different light intensities. A pronounced non-uniformity of F. benjamina leaves was revealed in relation to the retention time of the secondary fluorescence maximum (peak M). A method of differential imaging was proposed to allow visualization of this non-uniformity and to demonstrate the existence of the previously unknown phenomenon of secondary chlorophyll fluorescence “wave” in leaves. It was also shown the absence of M peak in the chlorophyll-deficient, lacking the mesophyll leaf sectors, where the residual chlorophyll is originated from guard cell chloroplasts.  相似文献   

20.
The blue, green and red fluorescence emission of green wheat ( Triticum aestivum L. var. Rector) and soybean leaves ( Glycine max L. var. Maple Arrow) as induced by UV light (nitrogen laser: 337 nm) was determined in a phytochamber and in plants grown in the field. The fluorescence emission spectra show a blue maximum near 450 nm, a green shoulder near 530 nm and the two red chlorophyll fluorescence maxima near 690 and 735 nm. The ratio of blue to red fluorescence, F450/F690, exhibited a clear correlation to the irradiance applied during the growth of the plants. In contrast, the chlorophyll fluorescence ratio, F690/F735, and the ratio of blue to green fluorescence, F450/F530, seem not to be or are only slightly influenced by the irradiance applied during plant growth. The blue fluorescence F450 only slightly decreased, whereas the red chlorophyll fluorescence decreased with increasing irradiance applied during growth of the plants. This, in turn, resulted in greatly increased values of the ratio, F450/F690, from 0.5 – 1.5 to 6.4 – 8.0. The decrease in the chlorophyll fluorescence with increasing irradiance seems to be caused by the accumulation of UV light absorbing substances in the epidermal layer which considerably reduces the UV laser light which passes through the epidermis and excites the chlorophyll fluorescence of the chloroplasts in the subepidermal mesophyll cells.  相似文献   

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