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1.
P. Gast  T. Swarthoff  F.C.R. Ebskamp  A.J. Hoff 《BBA》1983,722(1):163-175
The yield of the triplet state of the primary electron donor of Photosystem I of photosynthesis (PT-700) and the characteristic parameters (g value, line shape, saturation behavior) of the ESR signal of the photoaccumulated intermediary acceptor A have been measured for two types of Photosystem I subchloroplast particles: Triton particles (TSF 1, about 100 chlorophyll molecules per P-700) that contain the iron-sulfur acceptors FX, FB and FA, and lithium dodecyl sulfate (LDS) particles (about 40 chlorophyll molecules per P-700) that lack these iron-sulfur acceptors. The results are: (i) In Triton particles the yield of PT-700 upon illumination is independent of the redox state of A and of FX,B,A and is maximally about 5% of the active reaction centers at 5 K. The molecular sublevel decay rates are kx = 1100 s?1 ± 10%, ky = 1300 s?1 ± 10% and kz = 83 s?1 ± 20%. In LDS particles the triplet yield decreases linearly with concentration of reduced intermediary acceptors, the maximal yield being about 4% at 5 K assuming full P-700 activity. (ii) In Triton particles the acceptor complex A consists of two acceptors A0 and A1, with A0 preceding A1. In LDS particles at temperatures below ?30°C only A0 is photoactive. (iii) The spin-polarized ESR signal found in the time-resolved ESR experiments with Triton particles is attributed to a polarized P-700-A?1 spectrum. The decay kinetics are complex and are influenced by transient nutation effects, even at low microwave power. It is concluded that the lifetime at 5 K of P-700A0A?1 must exceed 5 ms. We conclude that PT-700 originates from charge recombination of P-700A?0, and that in Triton particles A0 and A1 are both photoaccumulated upon cooling at low redox potential in the light. Since the state P-700AF?X does not give rise to triplet formation the 5% triplet yield in Triton particles is probably due to centers with damaged electron transport.  相似文献   

2.
Richard Malkin  Alan J. Bearden 《BBA》1975,396(2):250-259
Electron paramagnetic resonance studies of the primary reactants of Photosystems I and II have been conducted at cryogenic temperatures after laser-flash activation with monochromatic light.P-700 photooxidation occurs irreversibly in chloroplasts and in Photosystem I fragments after activation with a 730 nm laser flash at a temperature of 35 °;K. Flash activation of chloroplasts or Photosystem II chloroplast fragments with 660 nm light results in the production of a free-radical signal (g = 2.002, linewidth ~ 8 gauss) which decays with a half-time of 5.0 ms at 35 °;K. The half-time of decay is independent of temperature in the range of 10–77 °;K. This reversible signal can be eliminated by preillumination of the sample at 35 °;K with 660 nm light (but not by 730 nm light), by preillumination with 660 nm light at room temperature in the presence of 3-(3′, 4′-dichlorophenyl)-1,1′-dimethylurea (DCMU) plus hydroxylamine, or by adjustment of the oxidation-reduction potential of the chloroplasts to — 150 mV prior to freezing. In the presence of ferricyanide (20–50 mM), two free-radical signals are photoinduced during a 660 nm flash at 35 °;K. One signal decays with a half-time of 5 ms, whereas the second signal is formed irreversibly. These results are discussed in terms of a current model for the Photosystem II primary reaction at low temperature which postulates a back-reaction between P-680+ and the primary electron acceptor.  相似文献   

3.
Electron paramagnetic resonance studies of the primary reactants of Photosystems I and II have been conducted at cryogenic temperatures after laser-flash activation with monochromatic light.P-700 photooxidation occurs irreversibly in chloroplasts and in Photosystem I fragments after activation with a 730 nm laser flash at a temperature of 35 degrees K. Flash activation of chloroplasts or Photosystem II chloroplast fragments with 660 nm light results in the production of a free-radical signal (g = 2.002, linewidth approximately 8 gauss) which decays with a half-time of 5.0 ms at 35 degrees K. The half-time of decay is independent of temperature in the range of 10-77 degrees K. This reversible signal can be eliminated by preillumination of the sample at 35 degrees K with 660 nm light (but not by 730 nm light), by preillumination with 660 nm light at room temperature in the presence of 3-(3',4'-dichlorophenyl)-1,1'-dimethylurea (DCMU) plus hydroxylamine, or by adjustment of the oxidation-reduction potential of the chloroplasts to - 150 mV prior to freezing. In the presence of ferricyanide (20-50 mM), two free-radical signals are photoinduced during a 660 nm flash at 35 degrees K. One signal decays with a half-time of 5 ms, whereas the second signal is formed irreversibly. These results are discussed in terms of a current model for the Photosystem II primary reaction at low temperature which postulates a back-reaction between P-680+ and the primary electron acceptor.  相似文献   

4.
《BBA》1986,849(1):25-31
The Photosystem I electron acceptor complex was characterized by optical flash photolysis and electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy after treatment of a subchloroplast particle with lithium dodecyl sulfate (LDS). The following properties were observed after 60 s of incubation with 1% LDS followed by rapid freezing. (i) ESR centers A and B were not observed during or after illumination of the sample at 19 K, although the P-700+ radical at g = 2.0026 showed a large, reversible light-minus-dark difference signal. (ii) Center ‘X’, characterized by g factors of 2.08, 1.88 and 1.78, exhibited reversible photoreduction at 8 K in the absence of reduced centers A and B. (iii) The backreaction kinetics at 8 K between P-700, observed at g = 2.0026, and center X, observed at g = 1.78, was 0.30 s. (iv) The amplitudes of the reversible g = 2.0026 radical observed at 19 K and the 1.2 ms optical 698 nm transient observed at 298 K were diminished to the same extent when treated with 1% LDS at room temperature for periods of 1 and 45 min. We interpret the strict correlation between the properties and lifetimes of the optical P-700+ A2 reaction pair and the ESR P-700+ center X reaction pair to indicate that signal A2 and center X represent the same iron-sulfur center in Photosystem I.  相似文献   

5.
Alan J. Bearden  Richard Malkin 《BBA》1972,283(3):456-468
Quantitative electron paramagnetic resonance studies of the primary event associated with Photosystem I in chloroplasts have been carried out at 25 °K. After illumination of either whole chloroplasts or Photosystem I subchloroplast fragments (D-144) with 715-nm actinic light at 25 °K, equal spin concentrations of oxidized P700 and reduced bound iron-sulfur protein (bound ferredoxin) have been measured. Quantitative determination of the concentration of these two carriers by EPR spectroscopy after illumination at low temperature indicates that Photosystem I fragments are enriched in P700 and the bound iron-sulfur protein as compared with unfractionated chloroplasts. These results indicate that P700 and the bound iron-sulfur protein function as the donor-acceptor complex of chloroplast Photosystem I.  相似文献   

6.
《BBA》1987,893(2):149-160
The Photosystem I reaction center is a membrane-bound, multiprotein complex containing a primary electron donor (P-700), a primary electron acceptor (A0), an intermediate electron acceptor (A1) and three membrane-bound iron-sulfur centers (FX, FB, and FA). We reported in part I of this series (Golbeck, J.H. and Cornelius, J.M. (1986) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 849, 16–24) that in the presence of 1% lithium dodecyl sulfate (LDS), the reaction center becomes dissociated, resulting in charge separation and recombination between P-700 and FX without the need for prereduction of FA and FB. In this paper, we report (i) the LDS-induced onset of the 1.2-ms ‘fast’ phase of the P-700 absorption transient is time-dependent, attaining a maximum 3:1 ratio of ‘fast’ to ‘slow’ kinetic phases; (ii) the ‘fast’ kinetic phase, corresponding to the P-700+ FX backreaction, is stabilized indefinitely by dilution of the LDS-treated particle followed by ultrafiltration over a YM-100 membrane; (iii) without stabilization, the P-700+ FX reaction deteriorates, leading to the rise of the long-lived P-700 triplet formed from the P-700+AO backreaction; (iv) the ‘slow’ kinetic phase correlates with the redox and ESR properties of FA and/or FB, which indicates that in a minority of particles the terminal iron-sulfur protein remains attached to the reaction center core; (v) the ultrafiltered reaction center is severely deficient in all of the low molecular-weight polypeptides, particularly the 19-kDa, 18-kDa and 12-kDa polypeptides relative to the 64-kDa polypeptide(s); (vi) the stabilized particle contains 5.8 mol labile sulfide per mol photoactive P-700, reflecting largely the iron-sulfur content of Fx, but also residual FA and FB, on the reaction center; and (vii) the apoproteins of FA and FB are physically removed from the reaction center particle as indicated by the presence of protein-bound zero-valence sulfur in the YM-100 filtrate. These results are interpreted in terms of a model for Photosystem I in which FA and FB are located on a low-molecular-weight polypeptide and FX is depicted as a [2Fe-2S] cluster shared between the two high-molecular-weight polypeptides Photosystem I-A1 and Photosystem I-A2.  相似文献   

7.
Photosystem I particles devoid of the secondary electron acceptor A1 were studied by nanosecond flash absorption. The primary radical pair (P-700+, A0 -) decays with a half-time of 35 ns. The difference spectrum was measured (400–870 nm). After subtraction of the P-700+/P-700 difference spectrum, the A0 -/A0 was obtained. It includes bleachings centered at 690 and 430 nm, and broad positive bands in the near infra-red and the blue-green. This spectrum is consistent with A0 being chlorophyll a absorbing at 690 nm.  相似文献   

8.
Time-resolved fluorescence studies with a 3-ps temporal resolution were performed in order to: (1) test the recent model of the reversible primary charge separation in Photosystem I (Müller et al., 2003; Holwzwarth et al., 2005, 2006), and (2) to reconcile this model with a mechanism of excitation energy quenching by closed Photosystem I (with P700 pre-oxidized to P700+). For these purposes, we performed experiments using Photosystem I core samples isolated from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii wild type, and two mutants in which the methionine axial ligand to primary electron acceptor, A0, has been change to either histidine or serine. The temporal evolution of fluorescence spectra was recorded for each preparation under conditions where the “primary electron donor,” P700, was either neutral or chemically pre-oxidized to P700+. For all the preparations under study, and under neutral and oxidizing conditions, we observed multiexponential fluorescence decay with the major phases of ∼ 7 ps and ∼ 25 ps. The relative amplitudes and, to a minor extent the lifetimes, of these two phases were modulated by the redox state of P700 and by the mutations near A0: both pre-oxidation of P700 and mutations caused slight deceleration of the excited state decay. These results are consistent with a model in which P700 is not the primary electron donor, but rather a secondary electron donor, with the primary charge separation event occurring between the accessory chlorophyll, A, and A0. We assign the faster phase to the equilibration process between the excited state of the antenna/reaction center ensemble and the primary radical pair, and the slower phase to the secondary electron transfer reaction. The pre-oxidation of P700 shifts the equilibrium between the excited state and the primary radical pair towards the excited state. This shift is proposed to be induced by the presence of the positive charge on P700+. The same charge is proposed to be responsible for the fast A+A0 → AA0 charge recombination to the ground state and, in consequence, excitation quenching in closed reaction centers. Mutations of the A0 axial ligand shift the equilibrium in the same direction as pre-oxidation of P700 due to the up-shift of the free energy level of the state A+A0.  相似文献   

9.
Fluorescence yield dependence on external magnetic field (0–600 G) was measured for chlorophyll-protein complexes enriched with Photosystem I. Maximal relative changes of fluorescence yield at room temperature (1.0–2.5%) were dependent on the chlorphyll a:P-700 ratio. Magnetic field-induced changes were observed only in the presence of dithionite. At low temperatures (down to ?160°C) the magnetic field-induced effect decreased. The effect is obviously connected with the functions of reaction centers in Photosystem I. An explanation of the effect is proposed based on the hypothesis of radical pairs recombination within the reaction center. For the radical pair (P-700 A), an intermediate acceptor, A, with a g-value approximately equal to that of P-700 is proposed.  相似文献   

10.
Flash-induced absorption changes of Triton-solubilized Photosystem I particles from spinach were studied under reducing and/or illumination conditions that serve to alter the state of bound electron acceptors. By monitoring the decay of P-700 following each of a train of flashes, we found that P-430 or components resembling it can hold 2 equivalents of electrons transferred upon successive illuminations. This requires the presence of a good electron donor, reduced phenazine methosulfate or neutral red, otherwise the back reaction of P-700+ with P-430 occurs in about 30 ms. If the two P-430 sites, designated Centers A and B, are first reduced by preilluminating flashes or chemically by dithionite under anaerobic conditions, then subsequent laser flashes generate a 250 μs back reaction of P-700+, which we associate with a more primary electron acceptor A2. In turn, when A2 is reduced by background (continuous) illumination in presence of neutral red and under strongly reducing conditions, laser flashes then produce a much faster (3 μs) back reaction at wavelengths characteristic of P-700. We associate this with another more primary electron acceptor, A1, which functions very close to P-700. The organization of these components probably corresponds to the sequence P-700-A1-A2-P-430[AB]. The relation of the optical components to acceptor species detected by EPR, by electron-spin polarization or in terms of peptide components of Photosystem I is discussed.Preliminary experiments with broken chloroplasts suggest that an analogous situation occurs there, as well.  相似文献   

11.
Triton-solubilized Photosystem I particles from spinach chloroplasts exhibit largely reversible P-700 absorption changes over the temperature range from 4.2 K to room temperature. For anaerobic samples treated with dithionite and neutral red at pH 10 and illuminated during cooling, a brief (1 μs) saturating flash produces absorption changes in the long wavelength region that decay in 0.95 ± 0.2 ms from 4.2 to 50 K. Above 80 K a faster (100 ± 30 μs) component dominates in the decay process, but this disappears again above about 180 K. The major decay at temperatures above 200 K occurs in about 1 ms. The difference spectrum of these absorption changes between 500 and 900 nm closely resembles that of P-700. Using ascorbate and 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol as the reducing system with a sample of Photosystem I particles cooled in darkness to 4.2 K, a fully reversible signal is seen upon both the first and subsequent flashes. The decay time in this case is 0.9 ± 0.3 ms.  相似文献   

12.
A. Telfer  J. Barber  P. Heathcote  M.C.W. Evans 《BBA》1978,504(1):153-164
1. Photosystem I particles enriched in P-700 prepared by Triton X-100 treatment of chloroplasts show a light-induced increase in fluorescence yield of more than 100% in the presence of dithionite but not in its absence.2. Steady state light maintains the P-700, of these particles, in the oxidised state when ascorbate is present but in the presence of dithionite only a transient oxidation occurs.3. EPR data show that, in these particles, the primary electron acceptor (X) is maintained in the reduced state by light at room temperature only when the dithionite is also present. In contrast, the secondary electron acceptors are reduced in the dark by dithionite.4. Fluorescence emission and excitation spectra and fluorescence lifetime measurements for the constant and variable fluorescence indicate a heterogeneity of the chlorophyll in these particles.5. It is concluded that the variable fluorescence comes from those chlorophylls which can transfer their energy to the reaction centre and that the states PX and P+X are more effective quenchers of chlorophyll fluorescence than PX?, where P is P-700.  相似文献   

13.
The rise time, of Signal IIf and the decay time of P-680+ have been measured kinetically as a function of pH by using EPR. The Photosystem II-enriched preparations which were used as samples were derived from spinach chloroplasts, and they evolved oxygen before Tris washing. The onset kinetics of Signal IIf are in agreement, within experimental error, with the fast component of the decay of an EPR signal attributable to P-680+. The signal IIf rise kinetics also show good agreement with published values of the pH dependence of the decay of P-680+ measured optically (Conjeaud, H. and Mathis, P. (1980) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 590, 353–359). These results are consistent with a model where the species Z (or D1) responsible for Signal IIf is the immediate electron donor to P-680+ in tris-washed Photosystem II fragments.  相似文献   

14.
J.H. Golbeck  B.R. Velthuys  B. Kok 《BBA》1978,504(1):226-230
Absorption changes accompanying the formation of light-induced P-700+ were investigated in a highly enriched Photosystem I preparation where an intermediate electron acceptor preceding P-430 could be detected. In an enriched Photosystem I particle, light-induced reversible absorption changes observed at 700 nm in the presence of dithionite resembled those previously seen at 703 nm and 820 nm [9], thus indicating the presence of a backreaction between P-700+ and A?2. After this same Photosystem I particle was treated to denature the bound iron-sulfur centers, the photochemical changes that could be attributed to P-700 A2 were completely lost. These results provide evidence that the intermediate electron acceptor, A2, is a bound iron-sulfur protein. Additional studies in the 400–500 nm region with Photosystem I particles prepared by sonication indicate that the spectrum of A2 is different from that of P-430.  相似文献   

15.
N. K. Boardman 《BBA》1972,283(3):469-482
1. The Photosystem II fraction (D-10) obtained by incubation of spinach chloroplasts with digitonin was further purified by incubation with Triton X-100. The resulting Photosystem II subchloroplast fragment (DT-10) contained 1 mole of cytochrome b-559 per 170 moles of chlorophyll. It lacked cytochrome f and cytochrome b6 and its content of P700 was low.

2. The DT-10 fragment showed only traces of photochemical activity with water as electron donor, but it was active in a Photosystem II reaction with 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol as electron acceptor and diphenyl carbazide as donor. Photoreduction of NADP+ with diphenyl carbazide as donor was negligible. There was some photoreduction of NADP+ with ascorbate plus 2,6 dichlorophenolindophenol as donor but this activity could be accounted for by contamination with Photosystem I. These results are consistent with the Z-scheme of photosynthesis with Photosystems I and II operating in series for the reduction of NADP+ from water. DT-10 subchloroplast fragments showed a light-induced rise in fluorescence yield at 20 °C in the presence of diphenyl carbazide. A light-induced fluorescence increase also was observed at 77 °K.

3. During the preparation of the DT-10 fragment, the high potential form of cytochrome b-559 was largely converted to a form of lower potential and C-550 was converted to the reduced state. A photoreduction of C-550 was observed at liquidnitrogen temperature, provided the C-550 was oxidised with ferricyanide prior to cooling. Some photooxidation of cytochrome b-559 was obtained at 77 °K if the preparation was reduced prior to cooling, but the degree of photooxidation was variable with different preparations. C-550 does not appear to be identical with the primary fluorescence quencher, Q.

4. Photosystem I subchloroplast fragments (D-144) released by the action of digitonin were compared with Photosystem I fragments (DT-144) released from D-10 fragments by Triton X-100. There were no significant differences between D-144 and DT-144 fragments either in chlorophyll a/b ratio or in P700 content.  相似文献   


16.
The linear dichroism of Photosystem I particles containing 10 chlorophylls per P700 has been investigated at 10 K. The particles were oriented by uniaxial squeezing of polyacrylamide gels. The oxidation state of P700 was altered either by incubation of the gels with redox mediators or by low temperature illumination. The QY transitions of the primary electron donor P700, of the remaining unoxidized chlorophyll in P700+ and of a chlorophyll molecule absorbing at 686 nm, which presumably corresponds to the primary electron acceptor A0, are all preferentially oriented perpendicular to the gel squeezing direction. The QY transition of the chlorophyll forms absorbing at 670 and 675 nm appear tilted at 40 ± 5° from this orientation axis. This orientation of the various chlorophylls is compared to that previously reported for more native Photosystem I particles.Abbreviations PSI Photosystem I - P700 primary electron donor of PSI - A0 primary electron acceptor of PSI  相似文献   

17.
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) power saturation and saturation recovery methods have been used to determine the spin lattice, T1, and spin-spin, T2, relaxation times of P-700+ reaction-center chlorophyll in Photosystem I of plant chloroplasts for 10 K less than or equal to T less than or equal to 100 K. T1 was 200 mus at 100 K and increased to 900 mus at 10 K. T2 was 40 ns at 40 K and increased to 100 ns at 10 K. T1 for 40 K less than or equal to T less than or equal to 100 K is inversely proportional to temperature, which is evidence of a direct-lattice relaxation process. At T = 20 K, T1 deviates from the 1/T dependence, indicating a cross relaxation process with an unidentified paramagnetic species. The individual effects of ascorbate and ferricyanide on T1 of P-700+ were examined: T1 of P-700+ was not affected by adding 10 mM ascorbate to digitonin-treated chloroplast fragments (D144 fragments). The P-700+ relaxation time in broken chloroplasts treated with 10 mM ferricyanide was 4-times shorter than in the untreated control at 40 K. Ferricyanide appears to be relaxing the P-700+ indirectly to the lattice by a cross-relaxation process. The possibility of dipolar-spin broadening of P-700+ due to either the iron sulfur center A or plastocyanin was examined by determining the spin-packet linewidth for P-700+ when center A and plastocyanin were in either the reduced or oxidized states. Neither reduced center A nor oxidized plastocyanin was capable of broadening the spin-packet linewidth of P-700+ signal. The absence of dipolar broadening indicates that both center A and plastocyanin are located at a distance at least 3.0 nm from the P-700+ reaction center chlorophyll. This evidence supports previous hypotheses that the electron donor and acceptor to P-700 are situated on opposite sides of the chloroplast membrane. It is also shown that the ratio of photo-oxidized P-700 to photoreduced centers A and B at low temperature is 2 : 1 if P-700 is monitored at a nonsaturating microwave power.  相似文献   

18.
Triton-solubilized Photosystem I particles from spinach chloroplasts exhibit largely reversible P-700 absorption changes over the temperature range from 4.2 K to room temperature. For anaerobic samples treated with dithionite and neutral red at pH 10 and illuminated during cooling, a brief (1 microseconds) saturating flash produces absorption changes in the long wavelength region that decay in 0.95 +/- 0.2 ms from 4.2 to 50 K. Above 80 K a faster (100 +/- 30 microseconds) component dominates in the decay process, but this disappears again above about 180 K. The major decay at temperatures above 200 K occurs in about 1 ms. The difference spectrum of these absorption changes between 500 and 900 nm closely resembles that of P-700. Using ascorbate and 2.6-dichlorophenolindophenol as the reducing system with a sample of Photosystem I particles cooled in darkness to 4.2 K, a fully reversible signal is seen upon both the first and subsequent flashes. The decay time in this case is 0.9 +/- 0.3 ms.  相似文献   

19.
S.K. Chamorovsky  R. Cammack 《BBA》1982,679(1):146-155
When spinach Photosystem I particles, frozen in the dark with ascorbate, are illuminated at low temperatures, one electron is transferred from P-700 to either iron-sulphur centre A or B. It was found that the proportion of centre A or B reduced depended on the temperature of illumination. At 25 K, reduction of centre A, as detected by ESR spectroscopy, was strongly preferred. At higher temperatures, at about 150K, there was an increased proportion of reduced centre B. Reduction of B was more strongly preferred in particles frozen in 50% glycerol. The kinetics of dark reoxidation of A? and B? at various temperatures were followed by observing the radical signal of P-700+, and also by periodically cooling to 25 K to measure the ESR spectra of the iron-sulphur centres. The recombination of A? and P-700+ occurred at lower temperatures than that at of B?; at 150–200 K, centre B was the more stable electron trap. Dark reoxidation of both centres was more rapid in samples that were illuminated at 25 K than in samples illuminated at 150–215 K. In no case was net electron transfer between centres A and B observed. Differences in g values of the ESR spectra in particles illuminated at 25 and 200 K indicate that the iron-sulphur centres are in altered conformational states. It is concluded firstly that, in the frozen state, the rates of dark electron transfer decrease in the sequence A?P-700+ > B?P-700+ > B? → A; secondly, that when centres A or B are photoreduced, a temperature-dependent conformational change takes place which slows down the rate of recombination with P-700+.  相似文献   

20.
Excitation energy trapping and charge separation in Photosystem II were studied by kinetic analysis of the fast photovoltage detected in membrane fragments from peas with picosecond excitation. With the primary quinone acceptor oxidized the photovoltage displayed a biphasic rise with apparent time constants of 100–300 ps and 550±50 ps. The first phase was dependent on the excitation energy whereas the second phase was not. We attribute these two phases to trapping (formation of P-680+ Phe-) and charge stabilization (formation of P-680+ QA -), respectively. A reversibility of the trapping process was demonstrated by the effect of the fluorescence quencher DNB and of artificial quinone acceptors on the apparent rate constants and amplitudes. With the primary quinone acceptor reduced a transient photoelectric signal was observed and attributed to the formation and decay of the primary radical pair. The maximum concentration of the radical pair formed with reduced QA was about 30% of that measured with oxidized QA. The recombination time was 0.8–1.2 ns.The competition between trapping and annihilation was estimated by comparison of the photovoltage induced by short (30 ps) and long (12 ns) flashes. These data and the energy dependence of the kinetics were analyzed by a reversible reaction scheme which takes into account singlet-singlet annihilation and progressive closure of reaction centers by bimolecular interaction between excitons and the trap. To put on firmer grounds the evaluation of the molecular rate constants and the relative electrogenicity of the primary reactions in PS II, fluorescence decay data of our preparation were also included in the analysis. Evidence is given that the rates of radical pair formation and charge stabilization are influenced by the membrane potential. The implications of the results for the quantum yield are discussed.Abbreviations DCBQ 2,6-dichloro-p-benzoquinone - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DNB m-dinitrobenzene - PPBQ phenyl-p-benzoquinone - PS I photosystem I of green plants - PS II photosystem II of green plants - PSU photosynthetic unit - P-680 primary donor of PS II - Phe intermediary pheophytin acceptor of PS II - QA primary quinone acceptor of PS II - RC reaction center  相似文献   

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