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1.
Light-induced structural changes of chloroplasts and their lamellae were studied in leaves of Pisum sativum L., cv. Blue Bantam, using electron microscopy. Upon illumination of 14-day-old plants with 2000 lux, the chloroplasts decreased in thickness by about 23% with an accompanying increase in electron scattering by the stroma. Concomitantly, the average thickness of granal lamellae (thylakoids) decreased from 195 ± 4 angstroms in the dark to 152 ± 4 angstroms in the light, and this change was half-saturated at only 50 lux. Lamellar flattening at 50 lux and its reversal in the dark both had half-times of a minute or less. The thickness of a partition (a pair of apposed lamellar membranes) was 140 ± 9 angstroms in both the light and the dark, indicating that the observed light-induced change was in the volume enclosed within the thylakoid. The effect of illumination could be inhibited by various uncouplers of photophosphorylation but not by 3-(3, 4-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethylurea, suggesting that it depended on ATP (or its precursor). In the presence of 0.5 micromolar nigericin, the thickness of the granal lamellae increased in the light to 213 ± 3 angstroms; this may reflect an uptake of K+ into an osmotically responding space within the thylakoids.  相似文献   

2.
Fu CF  Gibbs M 《Plant physiology》1988,88(1):207-212
Isolated, intact spinach (Spinacia oleracea L. var. “Long Standing Bloomsdale”) chloroplasts were heated in the dark and the effect of this treatment on photosynthetic activities was determined at 25°C. Dark incubation of the chloroplasts for 10 minutes at 35°C and pH 8.1 resulted in a 50% decline in CO2 photoassimilation. This decline in photosynthetic performance was dependent upon time, temperature, and medium pH with the optimum effect at acidic pH values. Photosynthetic decline was not observed if MgATP, MgADP, or a mixture of fructose 1,6-bisphosphate, aldolase, and oxaloacetate or ribose 5-phosphate and oxaloacetate was added prior to but not after the temperature pretreatment. A chloroplast preparation reconstituted with thylakoids and stroma from pretreated (35°C, 10 minutes, pH 8.1) intact chloroplasts and supplemented with ferredoxin, ADP, and NADP was photosynthetically competent, indicating that ATP-coupled electron flow and the enzymes comprising the Benson-Calvin cycle remained stable during the dark treatment. In contrast, exposure of isolated thylakoids to 35°C for 10 minutes uncoupled photophosphorylation from NADP and ferricyanide reduction. We propose that the decline of intact chloroplast photosynthesis is the result of a decrease in the content of or a change in the ratios of the adenine nucleotides. Maintenance of an adequate supply of adenine nucleotide is the effect of the externally added MgATP or of chloroplastic respiration of a sugar phosphate.  相似文献   

3.
Coral bleaching is a significant contributor to the worldwide degradation of coral reefs and is indicative of the termination of symbiosis between the coral host and its symbiotic algae (dinoflagellate; Symbiodinium sp. complex), usually by expulsion or xenophagy (symbiophagy) of its dinoflagellates. Herein, we provide evidence that during the earliest stages of environmentally induced bleaching, heat stress and light stress generate distinctly different pathomorphological changes in the chloroplasts, while a combined heat- and light-stress exposure induces both pathomorphologies; suggesting that these stressors act on the dinoflagellate by different mechanisms. Within the first 48 hours of a heat stress (32°C) under low-light conditions, heat stress induced decomposition of thylakoid structures before observation of extensive oxidative damage; thus it is the disorganization of the thylakoids that creates the conditions allowing photo-oxidative-stress. Conversely, during the first 48 hours of a light stress (2007 µmoles m−2 s−1 PAR) at 25°C, condensation or fusion of multiple thylakoid lamellae occurred coincidently with levels of oxidative damage products, implying that photo-oxidative stress causes the structural membrane damage within the chloroplasts. Exposure to combined heat- and light-stresses induced both pathomorphologies, confirming that these stressors acted on the dinoflagellate via different mechanisms. Within 72 hours of exposure to heat and/or light stresses, homeostatic processes (e.g., heat-shock protein and anti-oxidant enzyme response) were evident in the remaining intact dinoflagellates, regardless of the initiating stressor. Understanding the sequence of events during bleaching when triggered by different environmental stressors is important for predicting both severity and consequences of coral bleaching.  相似文献   

4.
Sicher RC 《Plant physiology》1984,74(4):962-966
The light-dependent accumulation of radioactively labeled inorganic carbon in isolated spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) chloroplasts was determined by silicone oil filtering centrifugation. Intact chloroplasts, dark-incubated 60 seconds at pH 7.6 and 23°C with 0.5 millimolar sodium bicarbonate, contained 0.5 to 1.0 millimolar internal inorganic carbon. The stromal pool of inorganic carbon increased 5- to 7-fold after 2 to 3 minutes of light. The saturated internal bicarbonate concentration of illuminated spinach chloroplasts was 10- to 20-fold greater than that of the external medium. This ratio decreased at lower temperatures and with increasing external bicarbonate. Over one-half the inorganic carbon found in intact spinach chloroplasts after 2 minutes of light was retained during a subsequent 3-minute dark incubation at 5°C. Calculations of light-induced stromal alkalization based on the uptake of radioactively labeled bicarbonate were 0.4 to 0.5 pH units less than measurements performed with [14C]dimethyloxazolidine-dione. About one-third of the binding sites on the enzyme ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase were radiolabeled when the enzyme was activated in situ and 14CO2 bound to the activator site was trapped in the presence of carboxypentitol bisphosphates. Deleting orthophosphate from the incubation medium eliminated inorganic carbon accumulation in the stroma. Thus, bicarbonate ion distribution across the chloroplast envelope was not strictly pH dependent as predicted by the Henderson-Hasselbach formula. This finding is potentially explained by the presence of bound CO2 in the chloroplast.  相似文献   

5.
Nobel PS 《Plant physiology》1968,43(5):781-787
A light-induced shrinkage of chloroplasts in vivo could be detected with chloroplasts isolated within 2 minutes of harvesting pea plants. As determined both by packed volume and Coulter counter, the mean volume of chloroplasts from plants in the dark was 39 μ3, whereas it was 31 μ3 for chloroplasts from plants in the light. Upon illumination of the plants, the half-time for the chloroplast shrinkage in vivo was about 3 minutes, and the half-time for the reversal in the dark was about 5 minutes. A plant growth temperature of 20° was optimal for the volume change. The chloroplast shrinkage was half-maximal for a light intensity of 400 lux incident on the plants and was light-saturated near 2000 lux. The light-absorbing pigment responsible for the volume change was chlorophyll. This light-induced shrinkage resulted in a flattening and slight indenting of the chloroplasts. This chloroplast flattening upon illumination of the plants may accompany an increase in the photosynthetic efficiency of chloroplasts.  相似文献   

6.
Thermostability of the photosynthetic apparatus of abscisic acid (ABA)-treated seedlings of barley (Hordeum vulgare) was studied by light-scattering and by fluorescence measurements of isolated chloroplasts. ABA treatment markedly decreased heat damage of the chloroplast ultrastructure; an exogenous ABA concentration of 10−5 molar was most effective. Heat-induced increase of the 77 kilodalton fluorescence ratio F740/F685 was also smaller at this ABA concentration. The heat-induced increase of the initial chlorophyll fluorescence level (Fo) was virtually eliminated in ABA-treated (10−5 molar) chloroplasts up to 45°C and slightly increased at 50°C, relative to control chloroplasts where Fo increased even at 35°C and reached its maximal value at 45°C. In control chloroplasts, Fo increased with a 5-minute pretreatment temperature, an effect observed as low as 35°C. Fo was maximal at 45°C. In contrast, chloroplasts treated with 10−5 molar ABA did not exhibit a heat-induced increase in Fo until 50°C.  相似文献   

7.
The influence of mono- (K+) and divalent (Mg2+) cations and protons (pH) on the temperature sensitivity of thylakoid membranes was investigated in three groups of young bean plants (control, heat-acclimated and non-acclimated). Thylakoid-membrane function was monitored by second and millisecond delayed fluorescence and 9-aminoacridine fluorescence quenching. It was established that metal ions at investigated concentrations decreased the thermostability of the photosynthetic parameters — an increase of MgSO4 concentration from 0.1 to 20 mM decreased the temperature of their half-inactivation (T50) by 13°C. At the same time the pH dependence of the thermal stability of these parameters showed a maximum at pH 5.5–6.5. The half-inactivation temperatures of those photosynthetic parameters connected with the ability of the thylakoid membrane to form light-induced proton gradients increased by 6–7°C in the heat-acclimated plants compared with the control. It was assumed that the temperature inactivation of photosynthetic electron transfer and the energization of the thylakoid membrane was determined both by the thermoinduced dissociation of the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein complex from PSII, leading to destruction of the excitation energy transfer to the reaction centres, and by the thermal denaturation of the membrane-protein components. The rate of these processes was probably controlled by the size of the negative surface charge and the viscosity of the thylakoid membrane.Abbreviations 9-AA 9-aminoacridine - DF delayed fluorescence - LHCP light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein complex - PSI (II) photosystem I (II) - T50 temperature of 50% inhibition of photosynthetic parameter - Tricine N-[2-hydroxy-1, 1-bis(hydroxymethyl)ethyl] glycine  相似文献   

8.
The influence of oxygen and temperature on the inactivation of pyruvate, Pi dikinase and NADP-malate dehydrogenase was studied in Zea mays. O2 was required for inactivation of both pyruvate, Pi dikinase and NADP-malate dehydrogenase in the dark in vivo. The rate of inactivation under 2% O2 was only slightly lower than that at 21% O2. The in vitro inactivation of pyruvate, Pi dikinase, while dependent on adenine nucleotides (ADP + ATP), did not require O2.

The postillumination inactivation of pyruvate, Pi dikinase in leaves was strongly dependent on temperature. As temperature was decreased in the dark, there was a lag period of increasing length (e.g. at 17°C there was a lag of about 25 minutes) before inactivation proceeded. Following the lag period, the rate of inactivation decreased with decreasing temperature. The half-time for dark inactivation was about 7 minutes at 32°C and 45 minutes at 17°C. The inactivation of pyruvate, Pi dikinase in vitro following extraction from illuminated leaves was also strongly dependent on temperature, but occurred without a lag period. In contrast, NADP-malate dehydrogenase was rapidly inactivated in leaves (half-time of approximately 3 minutes) during the postillumination period without a lag, and there was little effect of temperature between 10 and 32°C. The results are discussed in relation to known differences in the mechanism of activation/inactivation of the two enzymes.

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9.
10.
General characteristics of light-induced germination of Oenothera biennis L. seeds were investigated at 24°C. During dark imbibition, seeds reached maximal respiration in 7 hours and maximal water content and photosensitivity in 24 hours. After dark imbibition of 24 hours, seeds required a long exposure (>36 hours) to red or white light for maximal germination. Two photoperiods (12 and 2 hours) separated by a period of darkness of 10 to 16 hours gave near maximal germination. For the two photoperiod regime, the first light potentiates a reversible phytochrome response by the second light. A 35°C treatment for 2 to 3 hours in the dark immediately prior or subsequent to 8 hours of light caused a higher percentage of germination. A 2 hour treatment at 35°C also potentiates a reversible phytochrome response. Halved seeds germinated at 100% in light or darkness indicating that the light requirement of the seeds is lost in the halving procedure. After-ripened seeds required less light and germinated more rapidly and at higher percentages than seeds tested shortly after maturation.  相似文献   

11.
Engelbert Weis 《Planta》1981,151(1):33-39
Photosynthetic CO2 fixation rates in leaves and intact chloroplasts of spinach measured at 18°–20° C are substantially decreased by pretreatment at temperatures exceeding 20° C. Mild heating which causes 80% inhibition of CO2 fixation does not affect phosphoglyceroacid reduction and causes increases in the ATP/ADP ratio and the light-induced transthylakoid proton gradient. The inactivation of the CO2 fixation is completely reversible with half-times of recovery in the order of 15–20 min. Comparison of steady-state patterns of 14C labeled Calvin cycle intermediates of heat-treated and control samples reveals a large increase in the ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate/phosphoglyceroacid ratio and a large decrease in the phosphoglyceroacid/triosephosphate ratio. It is concluded that inactivation of CO2 fixation occurring at elevated temperatures is caused by inhibition of the ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.39). Measurements of light-induced light scattering changes of thylakoids and of the light-induced electrochromic absorption shift show that these signals are affected by mild heating in a way which is strictly correlated with the inactivation of the CO2 fixation. It is proposed that the function of the ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase in vivo requires a form of activation that involves properties of the thylakoid membrane which are affected by the heat treatment. The fact that these changes in thylakoid membrane properties and of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase activity are already affected at elevated temperatures which can still be considered physiological, and the reversible nature of these changes, suggest that they may play a role in temperature regulation of the overall photosynthetic process.Abbreviations 9-AA 9-aminoacridine - DMO 5,5-dimethyloxazolidine-2,4-dione - FBP fructose-1,6-bisphosphate - HEPES N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine N-2-ethane sulfonic acid - HMP hexose monophosphates - PGA 3-phosphoglycerate - PMP pentose monophosphates - RuBP ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate - SBP seduheptulose-1,7-bisphosphate - TP triose monophosphates  相似文献   

12.
Chloroplasts isolated from rye (Secale cereale L. cv Puma) grown at 5°C (RH) accumulated 260% more plastoquinone A (PQA) per plastid than chloroplasts isolated from rye grown at 20°C (RNH). The number of plastoglobuli increased by 270% in RH chloroplasts compared with RNH plastids. When RH plastids were lysed and washed, the number of plastoglobuli associated with thylakoid membranes decreased significantly, yet the PQA levels remained high. Room temperature fluorescence induction indicated that (a) there is no change in the size of the PQA pool immediately available for photochemistry in RNH and RH thylakoids and (b) there is a pool of oxidized PQA present in RNH and RH thylakoids which is not available for photochemistry. The accumulated PQA in RH thylakoids may reflect an increased nonphotochemical function such as regulation of thylakoid protein phosphorylation or protection against photoinhibition.  相似文献   

13.
Thylakoids isolated from winter rye (Secale cereale L. cv Muskateer) grown at 5°C or 20°C were compared with respect to their capacity to exhibit an increase in light saturated rates of photosystem I (PSI) electron transport (ascorbate/dichlorophenolindophenol → methylviologen) after dark preincubation at temperatures between 0 and 60°C. Thylakoids isolated in the presence or absence of Na+/Mg2+ from 20°C grown rye exhibited transient, 40 to 60% increases in light saturated rates of PSI activity at all preincubation temperatures between 5 and 60°C. This increase in PSI activity appeared to occur independently of the electron donor employed. The capacity to exhibit this in vitro induced increase in PSI activity was examined during biogenesis of rye thylakoids under intermittent light conditions at 20°C. Only after exposure to 48 cycles (1 cycle = 118 minutes dark + 2 min light) of intermittent light did rye thylakoids exhibit an increase in light saturated rates of PSI activity even though PSI activity could be detected after 24 cycles. In contrast to thylakoids from 20°C grown rye, thylakoids isolated from 5°C grown rye in the presence of Na+/Mg2+ exhibited no increase in light saturated PSI activity after preincubation at any temperature between 0 and 60°C. This was not due to damage to PSI electron transport in thylakoids isolated from 5°C grown plants since light saturated PSI activity was 60% higher in 5°C thylakoids than 20°C thylakoids prior to in vitro dark preincubation. However, a two-fold increase in light saturated PSI activity of 5°C thylakoids could be observed after dark preincubation only when 5°C thylakoids were initially isolated in the absence of Na+/Mg2+. We suggest that 5°C rye thylakoids, isolated in the presence of these cations, exhibit light saturated PSI electron transport which may be closer to the maximum rate attainable in vitro than 20°C thylakoids and hence cannot be increased further by dark preincubation.  相似文献   

14.
Spinach (Spinacia oleracea) chloroplasts were aged at 4°C under red light and in the dark. The electron transport activity was monitored together with the thylakoid polypeptide patterns in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The light-induced decay of photosystem II (PSII) activity (half-life, about 4 hours) was correlated with a decrease in polypeptides with apparent molecular weights of 36, 48, and 50 kilodaltons. There was very little decay of photosystem I (PSI) activity until after 8 hours illumination. Prior freezing of the chloroplasts enhanced the decrease in PSI activity which was correlated with chlorophyll-protein complex I (CPI) disappearance and an increase in a polypeptide with apparent molecular weight of 60 kilodalton. No variations were detected in the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein. In the dark, the decay of PSII started at 4 to 6 hours and showed a half life of about 30 hours. PSI activity decay (half life about 6 days) occurred simultaneously with the disappearance of CPI. The use of bovine serum albumin (30 mg/mg of chlorophyll) in the light-induced decay experiments increased the stability of PSII more than 2-fold; in the dark experiments, the stability of both photosystems was also more than doubled and the stability of the CPI complex was considerably improved. Comparative electrophoresis of the purified proteins indicated no changes in the cytochrome f band or in the subunits of the ATPase coupling factor during the light-induced decay experiments. Heating of purified PSI particles prior to electrophoresis showed that the 60 kilodaltons polypeptide increased with the disappearance of CPI.  相似文献   

15.
The heat resistance of foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) strains isolated from outbreaks in Thailand was investigated in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) at 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, and 100°C. The first-order kinetic model fitted most of the observed linear inactivation curves. The ranges of decimal-reduction time (D value) of FMDV strains at 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, and 100°C were 732 to 1,275 s, 16.37 to 42.00 s, 6.06 to 10.87 s, 2.84 to 5.99 s, 1.65 to 3.18 s, and 1.90 to 2.94 s, respectively. The heat resistances of FMDV strains at lower temperature (50°C) were not serotype specific. The effective inactivating temperature is approximately 60°C. Heat resistances of FMDV strains at 90 and 100°C were not statistically different (P > 0.05), while the FMDV serotype O (OPN) appeared to be the most heat resistant at 60 to 80°C. The other observed inactivation curves were linear with shoulder or tailing (biphasic curves). The shoulder effect was mostly observed at 90 and 100°C, while the tailing effect was mostly observed at 50 to 80°C. The adjusted D values in the case of shoulder and tailing effects did not affect the overall estimated heat resistance of these FMDV strains, so even unadjusted D values of deviant inactivation curves were legitimate. The z values of FMDV serotypes O, A, and Asia 1 were 21.78 to 23.26, 20.75 to 22.79, and 19.87°C, respectively. The z values of FMDV strains studied were not statistically significantly different (P > 0.05). The results of this study indicated that the heat resistance in PBS of FMDV strains from Thailand was much less than had been reported for foreign epidemic FMDV strains.  相似文献   

16.
Choe HT  Whang M 《Plant physiology》1986,80(2):305-309
Chloroplasts, isolated from the primary leaves of 7-day-old seedlings, were incubated in vitro at 25°C with 2-chloroethylphosphonic acid (ethephon) under light (0.16 milliwatts per square centimeter) and dark conditions. Ethephon at 1 micromolar (0.1445 ppm), 0.1 and 1 millimolar, or 5 microliters ethylene promoted the deterioration of chloroplasts, increased proteolysis, and reduced the chlorophyll content and PSI and PSII during 72 hours under both light and dark conditions. The decline in PSI and PSII occurred prior to a measurable loss of chlorophyll. The loss of photosynthetic activity affected by ethephon was initiated prior to 12 hours of incubation. After 24 hours in light, 0.1 millimolar (1.445 ppm) epthephon significantly reduced PSI and PSII and promoted the total free amino acid liberation in isolated chloroplasts. In darkness the rate of loss of PSI activity was about 50% of that in light. After 24 hours, in light at 1 millimolar epthephon, PSII activity was 55% of the control, yet nearly 90% of the chlorophyll remained, which indicates that the loss of thylakoid integrity was promoted by ethephon. Ethylene injected in the chloroplast medium at 5 microliters (0.22 micromolar per milliliter) reduced PSI by nearly 50% of the initial in 12 hours. In leaf sections floated in 5 microliters per milliliter suspension medium, a 36% loss of chlorophyll of the control in 36 hours was observed. Cycloheximide at 0.5 millimolar masked the effect of 1 millimolar ethephon and maintained the initial chlorophyll content during the 72 hour period.  相似文献   

17.
Both red light (10 minutes) and 35°C treatment (60 minutes) stimulate the germination of seeds of Rumex obtusifolius otherwise maintained in darkness at 25°C. Fluence response curves were determined for the effect of red light to stimulate germination of seeds with and without 35°C treatment. The endogenous far-red absorbing form (Pfr) level in the seeds was determined using short saturating fluences of wavelengths of light which maintain different proportions of phytochrome as Pfr at equilibrium. In the seed batches investigated, the endogenous Pfr level was found to be 4% or less of the total phytochrome. High dark germination after 35°C treatment does not result from an increase in sensitivity of the whole population to Pfr. Calculated fluence response curves for germination which best fit the experimental data suggest that seeds germinate in darkness after 35°C treatment because of a nonphytochrome-related process (overriding factor).  相似文献   

18.
Nitrate reductase from wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv Bindawarra) leaves is inactivated by pretreatment with NADH, in the absence of nitrate, a 50% loss of activity occurring in 30 minutes at 25°C with 10 micromolar NADH. Nitrate (50 micromolar) prevented inactivation by 10 micromolar NADH while cyanide (1 micromolar) markedly enhanced the degree of inactivation.

A rapid reactivation of NADH-inactivated nitrate reductase occurred after treatment with 0.3 millimolar ferricyanide or exposure to light (230 milliwatts per square centimeter) plus 20 micromolar flavin adenine dinucleotide. When excess NADH was removed, the enzyme was also reactivated by autoxidation. Nitrate did not influence the rate of reactivation.

Leaf nitrate reductase, from plants grown for 12 days on 1 millimolar nitrate, isolated in the late photoperiod or dark period, was activated by ferricyanide or light treatment. This suggests that, at these times of the day, the nitrate reductase in the leaves of the low nitrate plants is in a partially inactive state (NADH-inactivated). The nitrate reductase from moisture-stressed plants showed a greater degree of activation after light treatment, and inactive enzyme in them was detected earlier in the photoperiod.

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19.
Differential scanning calorimetry was employed to investigate the structure of spinach (Spinacia oleracea) chloroplast membranes. In a low ionic strength Hepes-buffered medium, major calorimetric transitions were resolved at 42.5°C. (A), 60.6°C (B), 64.9°C (C1), 69.6°C (C2), 75.8°C (D), 84.3°C (E), and 88.9°C (F). A lipid melting transition was also commonly seen at 17°C in scans starting at lower temperatures. The D transition was demonstrated by four independent methods to derive from denaturation of the light harvesting complex associated with photosystem II (LHC-II). Evidence for this conclusion was as follows: (a) the endotherm of the isolated LHC-II (74.0°C) was very similar to that of D (75.8°C); (b) the denaturation temperature of the 27 kilodalton LHC-II polypeptide determined in intact chloroplast membranes by thermal gel analysis was identical to the temperature of the D transition at pH 7.6 and after destabilization by shifting the pH to 6.6 or by addition of Mg2+; (c) analysis of the stability of the LHC-II complex by electrophoresis in native gels demonstrated that the complex dissociates during the D transition, both at pH 7.6 and 6.6; and (d) the 77 Kelvin fluorescence maximum of LHC-II in chloroplasts was seen to shift to lower wavelengths (indicating gross denaturation of LHC-II), at the temperature of the D transition when examined at either of the above pHs. With this identification, five of the eight major endotherms of the chloroplast membrane have now been assigned.  相似文献   

20.
Enzymes that are used as animal feed supplements should be able to withstand temperatures of 60 to 90°C, which may be reached during the feed pelleting process. The thermostability properties of three histidine acid phosphatases, Aspergillus fumigatus phytase, Aspergillus niger phytase, and A. niger optimum pH 2.5 acid phosphatase, were investigated by measuring circular dichroism, fluorescence, and enzymatic activity. The phytases of A. fumigatus and A. niger were both denatured at temperatures between 50 and 70°C. After heat denaturation at temperatures up to 90°C, A. fumigatus phytase refolded completely into a nativelike, fully active conformation, while in the case of A. niger phytase exposure to 55 to 90°C was associated with an irreversible conformational change and with losses in enzymatic activity of 70 to 80%. In contrast to these two phytases, A. niger pH 2.5 acid phosphatase displayed considerably higher thermostability; denaturation, conformational changes, and irreversible inactivation were observed only at temperatures of ≥80°C. In feed pelleting experiments performed at 75°C, the recoveries of the enzymatic activities of the three acid phosphatases were similar (63 to 73%). At 85°C, however, the recovery of enzymatic activity was considerably higher for A. fumigatus phytase (51%) than for A. niger phytase (31%) or pH 2.5 acid phosphatase (14%). These findings confirm that A. niger pH 2.5 acid phosphatase is irreversibly inactivated at temperatures above 80°C and that the capacity of A. fumigatus phytase to refold properly after heat denaturation may favorably affect its pelleting stability.  相似文献   

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