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1.
Mechanism of copper-enhanced photoinhibition in thylakoid membranes   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The effect of copper on photoinhibition of photosystem II (PSII) in vitro was studied in bean ( Phaseolus vulgaris L. cv. Dufrix) and pumpkin ( Cucurbita pepo L.) thylakoids. The thylakoids were illuminated at 200–2 000 μmol photons m−2 s−1 in the presence of 70–1 830 added Cu2+ ions per PSII. Three lines of evidence show that the irreversible damage of PSII caused by illumination of thylakoids in the presence of Cu2+ was mainly due to donor-side photoinhibition resulting from inhibition of the PSII donor side by Cu2+. First, addition of an artificial electron donor partially restored PSII activity of thylakoids that had been illuminated in the presence of Cu2+. Second, already moderate light was enough to cause rapid inhibition of PSII, and the inhibition could be saturated by light. Third, the extrinsic polypeptides of the oxygen-evolving complex were found to become oxidized by the combined effect of Cu2+ and light. The presence of oxygen was not necessary for the copper-induced enhancement of photoinhibition of PSII. When the illumination was prolonged, copper caused a gradual collapse of the thylakoid structure by increasing degradation of thylakoid proteins.  相似文献   

2.
Although light is the driving force of photosynthesis, excessive light can be harmful. One of the main processes that limits photosynthesis is photoinhibition, the process of light-induced photodamage. When the absorbed light exceeds the amount that is dissipated by photosynthetic electron flow and other processes, damaging radicals are formed that mostly inactivate photosystem II (PSII). Damaged PSII must be replaced by a newly repaired complex in order to preserve full photosynthetic activity. Chlorella ohadii is a green microalga, isolated from biological desert soil crusts, that thrives under extreme high light and is highly resistant to photoinhibition. Therefore, C. ohadii is an ideal model for studying the molecular mechanisms underlying protection against photoinhibition. Comparison of the thylakoids of C. ohadii cells that were grown under low light versus extreme high light intensities found that the alga employs all three known photoinhibition protection mechanisms: (i) massive reduction of the PSII antenna size; (ii) accumulation of protective carotenoids; and (iii) very rapid repair of photodamaged reaction center proteins. This work elucidated the molecular mechanisms of photoinhibition resistance in one of the most light-tolerant photosynthetic organisms, and shows how photoinhibition protection mechanisms evolved to marginal conditions, enabling photosynthesis-dependent life in severe habitats.  相似文献   

3.
Land plants live in a challenging environment dominated by unpredictable changes. A particular problem is fluctuation in sunlight intensity that can cause irreversible damage of components of the photosynthetic apparatus in thylakoid membranes under high light conditions. Although a battery of photoprotective mechanisms minimize damage, photoinhibition of the photosystem II (PSII) complex occurs. Plants have evolved a multi-step PSII repair cycle that allows efficient recovery from photooxidative PSII damage. An important feature of the repair cycle is its subcompartmentalization to stacked grana thylakoids and unstacked thylakoid regions. Thus, understanding the crosstalk between stacked and unstacked thylakoid membranes is essential to understand the PSII repair cycle. This review summarizes recent progress in our understanding of high-light-induced structural changes of the thylakoid membrane system and correlates these changes to the efficiency of the PSII repair cycle. The role of reversible protein phosphorylation for structural alterations is discussed. It turns out that dynamic changes in thylakoid membrane architecture triggered by high light exposure are central for efficient repair of PSII.  相似文献   

4.
Under strong light, photosystem II (PSII) of oxygenic photosynthetic organisms is inactivated, and this phenomenon is called photoinhibition. In a widely accepted model, photoinhibition is induced by excess light energy, which is absorbed by chlorophyll but not utilized in photosynthesis. Using monochromatic light from the Okazaki Large Spectrograph and thylakoid membranes from Thermosynechococcus elongatus, we observed that UV and blue light inactivated the oxygen-evolving complex much faster than the photochemical reaction center of PSII. These observations suggested that the light-induced damage was associated with a UV- and blue light-absorbing center in the oxygen-evolving complex of PSII. The action spectrum of the primary event in photodamage to PSII revealed the strong effects of UV and blue light and differed considerably from the absorption spectra of chlorophyll and thylakoid membranes. By contrast to the photoinduced inactivation of the oxygen-evolving complex in untreated thylakoid membranes, red light efficiently induced inactivation of the PSII reaction center in Tris-treated thylakoid membranes, and the action spectrum resembled the absorption spectrum of chlorophyll. Our observations suggest that photodamage to PSII occurs in two steps. Step 1 is the light-induced inactivation of the oxygen-evolving complex. Step 2, occurring after step 1 is complete, is the inactivation of the PSII reaction center by light absorbed by chlorophyll. We confirmed our model by illumination of untreated thylakoid membranes with blue and UV light, which inactivated the oxygen-evolving complex, and then with red light, which inactivated the photochemical reaction center.  相似文献   

5.
The effects of the positive charges of amines such as spermine (SPM), putrescine (PUT) and methylamine (MET) on the protection of PSII against excessive illumination were investigated in isolated thylakoid membranes. Under photoinhibition conditions, water oxidation, the kinetics of the Chl fluorescence rise and charge recombination in PSII were affected. A low concentration of SPM (1 mM) added before photoinhibition produced a significant improvement of F(v)/F(0), the oxygen yield and the amplitude of the B-band of thermoluminescence compared with the other amines. Amongst the amines studied, only SPM could protect the photosynthetic apparatus under photoinhibition conditions. This protection was probably provided by the polycationic nature of SPM (four positive charges at physiological pH), which can stabilize surface-exposed proteins of PSII through electrostatic interaction.  相似文献   

6.
Illumination of a suspension of thylakoids with light at high intensity causes inhibition of the photosystem II electron transport activity and loss from the membrane of the D1 protein of the photosystem II reaction center. Impairment of the electron transport activity and depletion of D1 protein from the thylakoid membrane of pea were investigated with reference to the presence or absence of oxygen in the suspension. The breakdown products of the D1 protein were identified by immunoblotting with anti-D1 polyclonal antibodies which were proven to recognize mainly the C-terminal region of the protein. The results obtained show that (i) the light-induced inactivation of the photosystem II electron transport activity under anaerobic conditions is faster than in the presence of oxygen; (ii) depletion of D1 protein is observed on a longer time scale with respect to loss of electron transport activity and is faster when photoinhibition is performed in the presence of oxygen; (iii) C-terminal fragments of D1 are only observed when photoinhibition is carried out anaerobically and are mainly localized in the stroma-exposed regions; and (iv) the fragments observed after anaerobic photoinhibition are quickly degraded on further illumination of the thylakoid suspension in the presence of oxygen.  相似文献   

7.
When photosynthetic organisms are exposed to abiotic stress, their photosynthetic activity is significantly depressed. In particular, photosystem II (PSII) in the photosynthetic machinery is readily inactivated under strong light and this phenomenon is referred to as photoinhibition of PSII. Other types of abiotic stress act synergistically with light stress to accelerate photoinhibition. Recent studies of photoinhibition have revealed that light stress damages PSII directly, whereas other abiotic stresses act exclusively to inhibit the repair of PSII after light-induced damage (photodamage). Such inhibition of repair is associated with suppression, by reactive oxygen species (ROS), of the synthesis of proteins de novo and, in particular, of the D1 protein, and also with the reduced efficiency of repair under stress conditions. Gene-technological improvements in the tolerance of photosynthetic organisms to various abiotic stresses have been achieved via protection of the repair system from ROS and, also, by enhancing the efficiency of repair via facilitation of the turnover of the D1 protein in PSII. In this review, we summarize the current status of research on photoinhibition as it relates to the effects of abiotic stress and we discuss successful strategies that enhance the activity of the repair machinery. In addition, we propose several potential methods for activating the repair system by gene-technological methods.  相似文献   

8.
When photodamaged under excessive light, the D1 protein is digested and removed from Photosystem (PS) II to facilitate turnover of the protein. In vitro studies have shown that part of the photodamaged D1 protein forms aggregates with surrounding polypeptides before being digested by a protease(s) in the stroma [Yamamoto Y (2001) Plant Cell Physiol 42: 121–128]. The aim of this study was to examine whether light-induced aggregation of the D1 protein also occurs in vivo. The following results were obtained: (1) PS II activity in spinach leaves was significantly inhibited by weak illumination (light intensity, 20–100 μE m−2 s−1), as monitored by chlorophyll fluorescence Fv/Fm, when the leaves were kept at higher temperatures (35–40 °C); (2) aggregation of the D1 protein, as well as cleavage of the protein, was detected in thylakoids isolated from spinach leaves that had been subjected to heat/light stress; (3) aggregates of the D1 protein disappeared after incubation of the leaves at 25 °C in the dark or under illumination with weak light. Since it is dependent on the presence of oxygen, aggregation of the D1 protein is probably induced by reactive oxygen species produced in thylakoids upon illumination at elevated temperatures. Consistent with this notion, singlet oxygen production in thylakoid samples under illumination was shown to be stimulated significantly at higher temperatures.  相似文献   

9.
Cyclic electron flow within PSII (CEF-PSII) was proven to alleviate the photoinhibition of PSII. We set the conditions where CEF-PSII functioned or did not, by adding nigericin to the reaction mixture for the dissipation of DeltapH across thylakoid membranes, and then the thylakoids were illuminated. When CEF-PSII did not function and the activity of linear electron flow (LEF) was low, light-treated thylakoid membranes largely lost the activity of LEF. The inactivation of LEF was due to the loss of the activity of PSII, but not that of PSI. The inactivation of PSII was suppressed, when CEF-PSII functioned or LEF was enhanced. These results imply that CEF-PSII contributes to the protection of PSII from its photoinhibition with LEF, as an electron sink.  相似文献   

10.
A proteome analysis of Arabidopsis thaliana thylakoid-associated polysome nascent chain complexes was performed to find novel proteins involved in the biogenesis, maintenance and turnover of thylakoid protein complexes, in particular the PSII (photosystem II) complex, which exhibits a high turnover rate. Four unknown proteins were identified, of which TLP18.3 (thylakoid lumen protein of 18.3 kDa) was selected for further analysis. The Arabidopsis mutants (SALK_109618 and GABI-Kat 459D12) lacking the TLP18.3 protein showed higher susceptibility of PSII to photoinhibition. The increased susceptibility of DeltaTLP18.3 plants to high light probably originates from an inefficient reassembly of PSII monomers into dimers in the grana stacks, as well as from an impaired turnover of the D1 protein in stroma exposed thylakoids. Such dual function of the TLP18.3 protein is in accordance with its even distribution between the grana and stroma thylakoids. Notably, the lack of the TLP18.3 protein does not lead to a severe collapse of the PSII complexes, suggesting a redundancy of proteins assisting these particular repair steps to assure functional PSII. The DeltaTLP18.3 plants showed no clear visual phenotype under standard growth conditions, but when challenged by fluctuating light during growth, the retarded growth of DeltaTLP18.3 plants was evident.  相似文献   

11.
The nuclear-coded 22 kd heat-shock protein (HSP-22) which is transported into the chloroplast and localized in the thylakoids was further characterized and found to be located in the grana lamellae (stacked thylakoids) as an extrinsic protein in the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Inhibition of photosynthetic electron flow during heat-shock of Chlamydomonas cells was light-dependent, occurring at low-light intensities (<100 W/m2) as compared with photoinhibition at 25°C (>1000 W/m2). The site of the damage was localized at the photosystem II (PS II) reaction center. The damage was drastically increased when heat-shock treatment was carried out in the presence of the 80S ribosomal translation inhibitor, cycloheximide (CHI). Pre-incubation of Chlamydomonas cells at 42°C resulted in partial protection against photoinhibition during heat-shock, as compared with cells pre-incubated at 42°C in the presence of CHI which, therefore, did not translate the heat-shock proteins. Analysis of the thylakoid polypeptides' pattern by SDS-PAGE revealed that during heat-shock in the light, thylakoid proteins became aggregated proportionally to the light intensity. Heat-shock in the presence of CHI enhanced the aggregation process which, at low light intensities, was specific to the PS II reaction center D1-protein. The results suggest that the chloroplasts HSPs prevent damage to the PS II reaction center during heat-shock in the light.  相似文献   

12.
Redox-controlled, reversible phosphorylation of the thylakoid light harvesting complex II (LHCII) regulates its association with photosystems (PS) I or II and thus, energy distribution between the two photosystems (state transition). Illumination of solubilized LHCII enhances exposure of the phosphorylation site at its N-terminal domain to protein kinase(s) and tryptic cleavage in vitro [Zer et al. (1999) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 96, 8277-8282]. Here we report that short illumination (5-10 min, 15-30 micromol m(-2) s(-1)) enhances the accessibility of LHCII phosphorylation site to kinase(s) activity also in isolated thylakoids. However, prolonged illumination or higher light intensities (30 min, 80-800 micromol m(-2) s(-1)) prevent phosphorylation of LHCII in the isolated membranes as well as in vivo, although redox-dependent protein kinase activity persists in the illuminated thylakoids toward exogenous solubilized LHCII. This phenomenon, ascribed to light-induced inaccessibility of the phosphorylation site to the protein kinase(s), affects in a similar way the accessibility of thylakoid LHCII N-terminal domain to tryptic cleavage. The illumination effect is not redox related, decreases linearly with temperature from 25 to 5 degrees C and may be ascribed to light-induced conformational changes in the complex causing lateral aggregation of dephosphorylated LHCII bound to and/or dissociated from PSII. The later state occurs under conditions allowing turnover of the phospho-LHCII phosphate. The light-induced inaccessibility of LHCII to the membrane-bound protein kinase reverses readily in darkness only if induced under LHCII-phosphate turnover conditions. Thus, phosphorylation prevents irreversible light-induced conformational changes in LHCII allowing lateral migration of the complex and the related state transition process.  相似文献   

13.
Phosphatidylglycerol (PG) is a ubiquitous component of thylakoid membranes. Experiments with the pgsA mutant of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 defective in biosynthesis of PG have demonstrated an indispensable role of PG in photosynthesis. In the present study, we have investigated the light susceptibility of the pgsA mutant with regard to the maintenance of the photosynthetic machinery. Growth of the mutant cells without PG increased the light susceptibility of the cells and resulted in severe photoinhibition of photosynthesis upon a high-light treatment, whereas the growth in the presence of PG was protected against photoinhibition. Photoinhibition induced by PG deprivation was mainly caused by an impairment of the restoration process. The primary target of the light-induced damage in thylakoid membranes, the D1 protein of photosystem (PS) II was, however, synthesized and degraded with similar rates irrespective of whether the mutant cells were incubated with PG or not. Intriguingly, it was found that instead of the synthesis of the D1 protein, the dimerization of the PSII core monomers was impaired in the PG-deprived mutant cells. Addition of PG to photoinhibited cells restored the dimerization capacity of PSII core monomers. These results suggest that PG plays an important role in the maintenance of the photosynthetic machinery through the dimerization and reactivation of the PSII core complex.  相似文献   

14.
Oxygenic photosynthesis takes place in the thylakoid membrane of cyanobacteria, algae, and higher plants. Initially light is absorbed by an oligomeric pigment-protein complex designated as photosystem II (PSII), which catalyzes light-induced water cleavage under release of molecular oxygen for the biosphere on our planet. The membrane-extrinsic manganese stabilizing protein (PsbO) is associated on the lumenal side of the thylakoids close to the redox-active (Mn)(4)Ca cluster at the catalytically active site of PSII. Recombinant PsbO from the thermophilic cyanobacterium Thermosynechococcus elongatus was expressed in Escherichia coli and spectroscopically characterized. The secondary structure of recombinant PsbO (recPsbO) was analyzed in the absence and presence of Ca(2+) using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) and circular dichroism spectropolarimetry (CD). No significant structural changes could be observed when the PSII subunit was titrated with Ca(2+) in vitro. These findings are compared with data for spinach PsbO. Our results are discussed in the light of the recent 3D-structural analysis of the oxygen-evolving PSII and structural/thermodynamic differences between the two homologous proteins from thermophilic cyanobacteria and plants.  相似文献   

15.
The response of Spirulina (Arthrospira) platensis to high salt stress was investigated by incubating the cells in light of moderate intensity in the presence of 0.8 M NaCl. NaCl caused a decrease in photosystem II (PSII) mediated oxygen evolution activity and increase in photosystem I (PSI) activity and the amount of P700. Similarly maximal efficiency of PSII (Fv/Fm) and variable fluorescence (Fv/Fo) were also declined in salt-stressed cells. Western blot analysis reveal that the inhibition in PSII activity is due to a 40 % loss of a thylakoid membrane protein, known as D1, which is located in PSII reaction center. NaCl treatment of cells also resulted in the alterations of other thylakoid membrane proteins: most prominently, a dramatic diminishment of the 47-kDa chlorophyll protein (CP) and 94-kDa protein, and accumulation of a 17-kDa protein band were observed in SDS-PAGE. The changes in 47-kDa and 94-kDa proteins lead to the decreased energy transfer from light harvesting antenna to PSII, which was accompanied by alterations in the chlorophyll fluorescence emission spectra of whole cells and isolated thylakoids. Therefore we conclude that salt stress has various effects on photosynthetic electron transport activities due to the marked alterations in the composition of thylakoid membrane proteins.  相似文献   

16.
Photoinhibition of photosystem II (PSII) occurs when the rate of light-induced inactivation (photodamage) of PSII exceeds the rate of repair of the photodamaged PSII. For the quantitative analysis of the mechanism of photoinhibition of PSII, it is essential to monitor the rate of photodamage and the rate of repair separately and, also, to examine the respective effects of various perturbations on the two processes. This strategy has allowed the re-evaluation of the results of previous studies of photoinhibition and has provided insight into the roles of factors and mechanisms that protect PSII from photoinhibition, such as catalases and peroxidases, which are efficient scavengers of H(2)O(2); α-tocopherol, which is an efficient scavenger of singlet oxygen; non-photochemical quenching, which dissipates excess light energy that has been absorbed by PSII; and the cyclic and non-cyclic transport of electrons. Early studies of photoinhibition suggested that all of these factors and mechanisms protect PSII against photodamage. However, re-evaluation by the strategy mentioned above has indicated that, rather than protecting PSII from photodamage, they stimulate protein synthesis, with resultant repair of PSII and mitigation of photoinhibition. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Photosynthesis Research for Sustainability: from Natural to Artificial.  相似文献   

17.
The relationship between the susceptibility of photosystem II (PSII) to photoinhibition in vivo and the rate of degradation of the D1 protein of the PSII reaction center heterodimer was investigated in leaves from pea plants (Pisum sativum L. cv Greenfeast) grown under widely contrasting irradiances. There was an inverse linear relationship between the extent of photoinhibition and chlorophyll (Chl) a/b ratios, with low-light leaves being more susceptible to high light. In the presence of the chloroplast-encoded protein synthesis inhibitor lincomycin, the differential sensitivity of the various light-acclimated pea leaves to photoinhibition was largely removed, demonstrating the importance of D1 protein turnover as the most crucial mechanism to protect against photoinhibition. In the differently light-acclimated pea leaves, the rate of D1 protein degradation (measured from [35S]methionine pulse-chase experiments) increased with increasing incident light intensities only if the light was not high enough to cause photoinhibition in vivo. Under moderate illumination, the rate constant for D1 protein degradation corresponded to the rate constant for photoinhibition in the presence of lincomycin, demonstrating a balance between photodamage to D1 protein and subsequent recovery, via D1 protein degradation, de novo synthesis of precursor D1 protein, and reassembly of functional PSII. In marked contrast, in light sufficiently high to cause photoinhibition in vivo, the rate of D1 protein degradation no longer increased concomitantly with increasing photoinhibition, suggesting that the rate of D1 protein degradation is playing a regulatory role. The extent of thylakoid stacking, indicated by the Chl a/b ratios of the differently light-acclimated pea leaves, was linearly related to the half-life of the D1 protein in strong light. We conclude that photoinhibition in vivo occurs under conditions in which the rate of D1 protein degradation can no longer be enhanced to rapidly remove irreversibly damaged D1 protein. We suggest that low-light pea leaves, with more stacked membranes and less stroma-exposed thylakoids, are more susceptible to photoinhibition in vivo mainly due to their slower rate of D1 protein degradation under sustained high light and their slower repair cycle of the photodamaged PSII centers.  相似文献   

18.
Light-dependent reduction of the plastoquinone pool regulates the activity of the thylakoid-bound protein kinase which phosphorylates the light harvesting chlorophyll a,b-protein complex (LHC II) and regulates energy distribution between photosystems II (PS II) and I (Staehelin, L. A., and C. J. Arntzen, 1983, J. Cell Biol., 97:1327-1337). Since reduction of plastoquinone by PS II is abolished in photoinhibited thylakoids due to loss of the secondary electron acceptor QB protein (Kyle, D. J., I. Ohad, and C. J. Arntzen, 1984, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 81:4070-4074), it was of interest to examine the activity of the LHC II protein kinase system during photoinhibition and recovery of PS II activity. The kinase activity was assessed both in vivo and in vitro in Chlamydomonas cells exposed to high light intensity (photoinhibition) and recovery at low light intensity. The kinase activity was progressively reduced during photoinhibition and became undetectable after 90 min. The inactive LHC II-kinase system could not be reactivated in vitro either by light or by reduction of the plastoquinone pool following addition of reduced duroquinone (TMQH2). The LHC II polypeptides were dephosphorylated in vivo when cells, prelabeled with [32P]orthophosphate before exposure to high light intensity, were transferred to photoinhibiting light in the presence of [32P]orthophosphate. In vivo recovery of the LHC II-kinase activity, elicited by the addition of TMQH2 to the assay system, did not require restoration of QB-dependent electron flow or de novo protein synthesis, either in the cytoplasm or in the chloroplast. Mild sonication of thylakoids isolated from photoinhibited cells restored the ability of the LHC II protein kinase system to be activated in vitro by addition to TMQH2. Restoration of the light-activated LHC-II kinase required recovery of QB-dependent electron flow. At the structural level, photoinhibition did not affect the ratio of grana/stroma thylakoids. A reduction of approximately 20% of the 11-17-nm intramembrane particles and an equivalent increase in the number of 6-10.5-nm particles was observed on the E-fracture faces of stacked thylakoid membranes. Similar but smaller changes were observed also on the E-fracture faces of unstacked thylakoid membranes (more 10-14-nm and less 6-9-nm particles) and P-fracture faces of stacked thylakoid membranes (more 6-8- and less 9.5-13-nm particles). All these structural changes were reversed to normal values during recovery of PS II activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
The 'stay-green' mutation cytG in soybean ( Glycine max ) partially inhibits the degradation of the light-harvesting complex II (LHCII) and the associated chlorophyll during monocarpic senescence. cytG did not alter the breakdown of the cytochrome b 6/ f complex, thylakoid ATP synthase or components of Photosystem I. In contrast, cytG accelerated the loss of oxygen evolution activity and PSII reaction-centre proteins. These data suggest that LHCII and other thylakoid components are degraded by separate pathways. In leaves induced to senesce by darkness, cytG inhibited the breakdown of LHCII and chlorophyll, but it did not enhance the loss of PSII-core components, indicating that the accelerated degradation of PSII reaction centre proteins in cytG was light dependent. Illumination of mature and senescent leaves of wild-type soybean in the presence of an inhibitor (lincomycin) of chloroplast protein synthesis revealed that senescence per se did not affect the rate of photoinhibition in leaves. Likewise, mature leaves of the cytG mutant did not show more photoinhibition than wild-type leaves. However, in senescent cytG leaves, photoinhibition proceeded more rapidly than in the wild-type. We conclude that the cytG mutation enhances photoinhibition in senescing leaves, and photoinhibition causes the rapid loss of PSII reaction-centre proteins during senescence in cytG .  相似文献   

20.
The fluorescence induction curve of photoinhibited thylakoids measured in the presence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethyl urea was modeled using an extension of the model of Lavergne and Trissl (Biophys. J. 68:2474-2492), which takes into account the reversible exciton trapping by photosystem II (PSII) reaction centers and exciton exchange between PSII units. The model of Trissl and Lavergne was modified by assuming that PSII consists of photosynthetically active and photoinhibited (inactive in oxygen evolution) units and that the inactive PSII units can efficiently dissipate energy even if they still retain the capacity for the charge separation reaction. Comparison of theoretical and experimental fluorescence induction curves of thylakoids, which had been subjected to strong light in the presence of the uncoupler nigericin, suggests connectivity between the photoinhibited and active PSII units. The model predicts that photoinhibition lowers the yield of radical pair formation in the remaining active PSII centers. However, the kinetics of PSII inactivation in nigericin-treated thylakoids upon exposure to photoinhibitory light ranging from 185 to 2650 micromol photons m-2 s-1 was strictly exponential. This may suggest that photoinhibition occurs independently of the primary electron transfer reactions of PSII or that increased production of harmful substances by photoinhibited PSII units compensates for the protection afforded by the quenching of excitation energy in photoinhibited centers.  相似文献   

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