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1.
It has been demonstrated that antimony (Sb) at concentrations ranging from 1.0 to 10.0 mg L−1 inhibits O2 evolution. Deeper insight into the influence of Sb on PSII was obtained with measurements of in vivo chlorophyll fluorescence. The donor and the acceptor sides of PSII were shown to be the target of Sb. Sb treatment induces inhibition of electron transport from QA to QB/QB and accumulation of P680+. S2(QAQB) charge recombination and oxidation by PQ9 molecules became more important in QA reoxidation as the electron transfer in PSII was inhibited. Sb exposure caused a steady increase in the proportion of PSIIX and PSIIβ. These changes resulted in increased fluxes of dissipated energy and decreased index of photosynthesis performance, of maximum quantum yield, and of the overall photosynthetic driving force of PSII.  相似文献   

2.
Tenuazonic acid (TeA) is a putative phytotoxin obtained from Alternaria alternata, the organism that can cause brown leaf spot disease of Crofton weed (Eupatorium adenophorum). It is demonstrated here that the tenuazonic acid inhibits the activity of photosystem II (PSII); the I50-value is 48 μg mL?1. Evidences from chlorophyll fluorescence show that tenuazonic acid interrupts electron transport between QA and QB on the acceptor side of PSII. It does not have an effect on the antenna pigments, the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) at the donor side of PSII. On the basis of the fluorescence induction kinetics and competition experiments with [14C]atrazine, it is shown that tenuazonic acid does not share the same binding environment with atrazine despite their common action target: the QB-site. It is concluded that tenuazonic acid is a member of a novel class of PSII inhibitors.  相似文献   

3.
The inhibitory effect of Cr(VI) on the PSII of Synechocystis sp. was studied. Cr(VI) reduced O2 evolution and inhibited the water‐splitting system in PSII. S‐states test and flash induction test showed that Cr(VI) exposure increased the proportion of inactivated PSII (PSIIX) and PSIIβ reaction centers, which increased the fluxes of dissipated energy. JIP test and QA? reoxidation test demonstrated that Cr(VI) treatment induces inhibition of electron transport from QA? to QB/QB? and accumulation of P680+. More QA? had to be oxidized through S2(QAQB)? charge recombination and oxidation by PQ9 molecules in PSII under Cr(VI) stress. These changes finally decreased the index of photosynthesis performance.  相似文献   

4.
Transport of electrons in spinach photosystem II (PSII) whose oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) contains heterogeneous metal clusters 2Mn2Fe and 3Mn1Fe was studied by measuring the fluorescence induction kinetics (FIK). PSII(2Mn,2Fe) and PSII(3Mn,1Fe) preparations were produced using Cadepleted PSII membranes (PSII(–Ca)). It was found that FIK in PSII(2Mn,2Fe) membranes is similar in form to FIK in PSII(–Ca) samples, but the fluorescence yield is lower in PSII(2Mn,2Fe). The results demonstrate that, just as in PSII(–Ca) preparations, there is electron transfer from the metal cluster in the OEC to the primary plastoquinone electron acceptor QA. They also show that partial substitution of Mn cations with Fe has no effect on the electron transport on the acceptor side of PSII. Thus, these data demonstrate the possibility of water oxidation either by the heterogeneous metal cluster or just by the manganese dimer. We established that FIK in PSII(3Mn,1Fe) preparations are similar in form to FIK in PSII(2Mn,2Fe) membranes but PSII(3Mn,1Fe) is characterized by a slightly higher maximal fluorescence yield, Fmax. The electron transfer rate in PSII(3Mn,1Fe) preparations significantly (by a factor of two) increases in the presence of Ca2+, whereas Ca2+ has hardly any effect on the electron transport in PSII(2Mn,2Fe) membranes. In Mndepleted PSII membranes, FIK reaches its maximum (the so-called peak K), after which the fluorescence yield starts to decrease as the result of two factors: the oxidation of reduced primary plastoquinone Q A ? and the absence of electron influx from the donor side of PSII. The replacement of Mn cations by Fe in PSII(?Mn) preparations leads to fluorescence saturation and disappearance of the K peak. This is possibly due to the deceleration of the charge recombination process that takes place between reduced primary electron acceptor Q A ? and oxidized tyrosine Y Z +. which is an electron carrier between the OEC and the primary electron donor P680.  相似文献   

5.
6.
The nature of Cu2+ inhibition of photosystem II (PSII) photochemistry in pea (Pisum sativum L.) thylakoids was investigated monitoring Hill activity and light emission properties of photosystem II. In Cu2+-inhibited thylakoids, diphenyl carbazide addition does not relieve the loss of Hill activity. The maximum yield of fluorescence induction restored by hydroxylamine in Tris-inactivated thylakoids is markedly reduced by Cu2+. This suggests that Cu2+ does not act on the donor side of PSII but on the reaction center of PSII or on components beyond. Thermoluminescence and delayed luminescence studies show that charge recombination between the positively charged intermediate in water oxidation cycle (S2) and negatively charged primary quinone acceptor of pSII (QA) is largely unaffected by Cu2+. The S2QB charge recombination, however, is drastically inhibited which parallels the loss of Hill activity. This indicates that Cu2+ inhibits photosystem II photochemistry primarily affecting the function of the secondary quinone electron acceptor, QB. We suggest that Cu2+ does not block electron flow between the primary and secondary quinone acceptor but modifies the QB site in such a way that it becomes unsuitable for further photosystem II photochemistry.  相似文献   

7.
Ca2+ and Cl? ions are essential elements for the oxygen evolution activity of photosystem II (PSII). It has been demonstrated that these ions can be exchanged with Sr2+ and Br?, respectively, and that these ion exchanges modify the kinetics of some electron transfer reactions at the Mn4Ca cluster level (Ishida et al., J. Biol. Chem. 283 (2008) 13330–13340). It has been proposed from thermoluminescence experiments that the kinetic effects arise, at least in part, from a decrease in the free energy level of the Mn4Ca cluster in the S3 state though some changes on the acceptor side were also observed. Therefore, in the present work, by using thin-layer cell spectroelectrochemistry, the effects of the Ca2+/Sr2+ and Cl?/Br? exchanges on the redox potential of the primary quinone electron acceptor QA, Em(QA/QA?), were investigated. Since the previous studies on the Ca2+/Sr2+ and Cl?/Br? exchanges were performed in PsbA3-containing PSII purified from the thermophilic cyanobacterium Thermosynechococcus elongatus, we first investigated the influences of the PsbA1/PsbA3 exchange on Em(QA/QA?). Here we show that i) the Em(QA/QA?) was up-shifted by ca. + 38 mV in PsbA3-PSII when compared to PsbA1-PSII and ii) the Ca2+/Sr2+ exchange up-shifted the Em(QA/QA?) by ca. + 27 mV, whereas the Cl?/Br? exchange hardly influenced Em(QA/QA?). On the basis of the results of Em(QA/QA?) together with previous thermoluminescence measurements, the ion-exchange effects on the energetics in PSII are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Studies on the reconstitution of o(2)-evolution of chloroplasts   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Sayre RT  Cheniae GM 《Plant physiology》1982,69(5):1084-1095
Extraction of spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) chloroplasts with cholate-asolectin in the absence of Mg2+ results in the rapid and selective inactivation of O2 evolution and a partial (30 to 40%) loss of photosystem II (PSII) donor activity without extraction of thylakoid bound Mn (~5 to 6 Mn per 400 Chlorophyll). Inclusion of ethylene glycol in the extractions inhibits loss of O2 evolution and results in quantitative and qualitative differences in proteins solubilized but does not significantly inhibit the partial loss of PSII donor activity. Similarly, in two stage experiments (extraction followed by addition of organic solvent and solubilized thylakoid protein), O2 evolution (V and Vmax) of extracted chloroplasts is enhanced approximately 2.5- to 8-fold. However, PSII donor activity remains unaffected. This reversal of cholate inactivation of O2 evolution can be induced by solvents including ethanol, methanol, 2-propanol, and dimethyl sulfoxide. Such enhancements of O2 evolution specifically required cholate-solubilized proteins, which are insensitive to NH2OH and are only moderately heat-labile. NH2OH extraction of chloroplasts prior to cholate-asolectin extraction abolishes reconstitutability of O2 evolution. Thus, the protein(s) affecting reconstitution is unlike those of the O2·Mn enzyme. The specific activity of the protein fraction effecting reconstitution of O2 evolution is greatest in fractions depleted of the reported Mn-containing, 65-kilodalton, and the Fe-heme, 232-kilodalton (58-kilodalton monomer), proteins. Divalent (~3 millimolar) and monovalent (~30 millimolar) cations do not affect reconstitution of PSII donor activity but do affect reconstitution of O2 evolution by decreasing the protein(s) concentration required for reconstitution of O2 evolution in nonfractionated, cholate-asolectin extractions. The data indicate a reconstitution of the PSII segment linking the PSII secondary donor(s) to O2-evolving centers.  相似文献   

9.
Peroxynitrite is a strong oxidant that has been proposed to form in chloroplasts. The interaction between peroxynitrite and photosystem II (PSII) has been investigated to determine whether this oxidant could be a hazard for PSII. Peroxynitrite is shown to inhibit oxygen evolution in PSII membranes in a dose-dependent manner. Analyses by PAM fluorimetry and EPR spectroscopy have demonstrated that the inhibition target of peroxynitrite is on the PSII acceptor side. In the presence of the herbicide DCMU, the chlorophyll (Chl) a fluorescence induction curve is inhibited by peroxynitrite, but the slow phase of the Chl a fluorescence decay does not change. EPR studies demonstrate that the Signal IIslow and Signal IIfast of peroxynitrite-treated Tris-washed PSII membranes are induced at room temperature, implying that the redox active tyrosines YZ and YD of PSII are not significantly nitrated. A featureless EPR signal with a g value of approximately 2.0043 ± 0.0003 and a line width of 10 ± 1 G is induced under continuous illumination in the presence of peroxynitrite. This new EPR signal corresponds with the semireduced plastoquinone QA in the absence of magnetic interaction with the non-heme Fe2+. We conclude that peroxynitrite impairs PSII electron transport in the QAFe2+ niche.  相似文献   

10.
Treatment with the herbicide acifluorfen-sodium (AF-Na), an inhibitor of protoporphyrinogen oxidase, caused an accumulation of protoporphyrin IX (Proto IX) , light-induced necrotic spots on the cucumber cotyledon within 12-24 h, and photobleaching after 48-72 h of light exposure. Proto IX-sensitized and singlet oxygen (1O2)-mediated oxidative stress caused by AF-Na treatment impaired photosystem I (PSI), photosystem II (PSII) and whole chain electron transport reactions. As compared to controls, the Fv/Fm (variable to maximal chlorophyll a fluorescence) ratio of treated samples was reduced. The PSII electron donor NH2OH failed to restore the Fv/Fm ratio suggesting that the reduction of Fv/Fm reflects the loss of reaction center functions. This explanation is further supported by the practically near-similar loss of PSI and PSII activities. As revealed from the light saturation curve (rate of oxygen evolution as a function of light intensity), the reduction of PSII activity was both due to the reduction in the quantum yield at limiting light intensities and impairment of light-saturated electron transport. In treated cotyledons both the Q (due to recombination of QA with S2) and B (due to recombination of QB with S2/S3) band of thermoluminescence decreased by 50% suggesting a loss of active PSII reaction centers. In both the control and treated samples, the thermoluminescence yield of B band exhibited a periodicity of 4 suggesting normal functioning of the S states in centers that were still active. The low temperature (77 K) fluorescence emission spectra revealed that the F695 band (that originates in CP-47) increased probably due to reduced energy transfer from the CP47 to the reaction center. These demonstrated an overall damage to the PSI and PSII reaction centers by 1O2 produced in response to photosensitization reaction of protoporphyrin IX in AF-Na-treated cucumber seedlings.  相似文献   

11.
In photosynthetic organisms, light energy is absorbed by a complex network of chromophores embedded in light-harvesting antenna complexes. In photosystem II (PSII), the excitation energy from the antenna is transferred very efficiently to an active reaction center (RC) (i.e., with oxidized primary quinone acceptor Q A), where the photochemistry begins, leading to O2 evolution, and reduction of plastoquinones. A very small part of the excitation energy is dissipated as fluorescence and heat. Measurements on chlorophyll (Chl) fluorescence and oxygen have shown that a nonlinear (hyperbolic) relationship exists between the fluorescence yield (Φ F ) (or the oxygen emission yield, $ \Phi _{{{\text{O}}_{2} }} $ ) and the fraction of closed PSII RCs (i.e., with reduced Q A). This nonlinearity is assumed to be related to the transfer of the excitation energy from a closed PSII RC to an open (active) PSII RC, a process called PSII excitonic connectivity by Joliot and Joliot (CR Acad Sci Paris 258: 4622–4625, 1964). Different theoretical approaches of the PSII excitonic connectivity, and experimental methods used to measure it, are discussed in this review. In addition, we present alternative explanations of the observed sigmoidicity of the fluorescence induction and oxygen evolution curves.  相似文献   

12.
Recent evidence has indicated the presence of novel plastoquinone-binding sites, QC and QD, in photosystem II (PSII). Here, we investigated the potential involvement of loosely bound plastosemiquinones in superoxide anion radical (O2•−) formation in spinach PSII membranes using electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spin-trapping spectroscopy. Illumination of PSII membranes in the presence of the spin trap EMPO (5-(ethoxycarbonyl)-5-methyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide) resulted in the formation of O2•−, which was monitored by the appearance of EMPO-OOH adduct EPR signal. Addition of exogenous short-chain plastoquinone to PSII membranes markedly enhanced the EMPO-OOH adduct EPR signal. Both in the unsupplemented and plastoquinone-supplemented PSII membranes, the EMPO-OOH adduct EPR signal was suppressed by 50% when the urea-type herbicide DCMU (3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea) was bound at the QB site. However, the EMPO-OOH adduct EPR signal was enhanced by binding of the phenolic-type herbicide dinoseb (2,4-dinitro-6-sec-butylphenol) at the QD site. Both in the unsupplemented and plastoquinone-supplemented PSII membranes, DCMU and dinoseb inhibited photoreduction of the high-potential form of cytochrome b559 (cyt b559). Based on these results, we propose that O2•− is formed via the reduction of molecular oxygen by plastosemiquinones formed through one-electron reduction of plastoquinone at the QB site and one-electron oxidation of plastoquinol by cyt b559 at the QC site. On the contrary, the involvement of a plastosemiquinone formed via the one-electron oxidation of plastoquinol by cyt b559 at the QD site seems to be ambiguous. In spite of the fact that the existence of QC and QD sites is not generally accepted yet, the present study provided more spectroscopic data on the potential functional role of these new plastoquinone-binding sites.  相似文献   

13.
Chl fluorescence induction (FI) was recorded in sunflower leaves pre-adapted to darkness or low preferentially PSI light, or inhibited by DCMU. For analysis the FI curves were plotted against the cumulative number of excitations quenched by PSII, n q, calculated as the cumulative complementary area above the FI curve. In the +DCMU leaves n q was <1 per PSII, suggesting pre-reduction of Q A during the dark pre-exposure. A strongly sigmoidal FI curve was constructed by complementing (shifting) the recorded FI curves to n q = 1 excitation per PSII. The full FI curve in +DCMU leaves was well fitted by a model assuming PSII antennae are excitonically connected in domains of four PSII. This result, obtained by gradually reducing Q A in PSII with pre-blocked Q B (by DCMU or PQH2), differs from that obtained by gradually blocking the Q B site (by increasing DCMU or PQH2 level) in leaves during (quasi)steady-state e? transport (Oja and Laisk, Photosynth Res 114, 15–28, 2012). Explanations are discussed. Donor side quenching was characterized by comparison of the total n q in one and the same dark-adapted leaf, which apparently increased with increasing PFD during FI. An explanation for the donor side quenching is proposed, based on electron transfer from excited P680* to oxidized tyrosine Z (TyrZox). At high PFDs the donor side quenching at the J inflection of FI is due mainly to photochemical quenching by TyrZox. This quenching remains active for subsequent photons while TyrZ remains oxidized, following charge transfer to Q A. During further induction this quenching disappears as soon as PQ and Q A become reduced, charge separation becomes impossible and TyrZ is reduced by the water oxidizing complex.  相似文献   

14.
Many heavy metals inhibit electron transfer reactions in Photosystem II (PSII). Cd2+ is known to exchange, with high affinity in a slow reaction, for the Ca2+ cofactor in the Ca/Mn cluster that constitutes the oxygen-evolving center. This results in inhibition of photosynthetic oxygen evolution. There are also indications that Cd2+ binds to other sites in PSII, potentially to proton channels in analogy to heavy metal binding in photosynthetic reaction centers from purple bacteria. In search for the effects of Cd2+-binding to those sites, we have studied how Cd2+ affects electron transfer reactions in PSII after short incubation times and in sites, which interact with Cd2+ with low affinity. Overall electron transfer and partial electron transfer were studied by a combination of EPR spectroscopy of individual redox components, flash-induced variable fluorescence and steady state oxygen evolution measurements. Several effects of Cd2+ were observed: (i) the amplitude of the flash-induced variable fluorescence was lost indicating that electron transfer from YZ to P680+ was inhibited; (ii) QA to QB electron transfer was slowed down; (iii) the S2 state multiline EPR signal was not observable; (iv) steady state oxygen evolution was inhibited in both a high-affinity and a low-affinity site; (v) the spectral shape of the EPR signal from QAFe2+ was modified but its amplitude was not sensitive to the presence of Cd2+. In addition, the presence of both Ca2+ and DCMU abolished Cd2+-induced effects partially and in different sites. The number of sites for Cd2+ binding and the possible nature of these sites are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
The allelopathic effect of the cyanobacterium Tychonema bourrellyi against the cyanobacterium Microcystis aeruginosa is reported for the first time in this paper. The filtrate of T. bourrellyi CHAB663 culture showed strong inhibitory effect on M. aeruginosa NIES-843, but the inhibitory effect was weakened by shaking culture, and such results implied that the allelopathic effect was probably mediated by the volatile substances secreted by T. bourrellyi. β-Ionone was identified as a major ingredient in the volatile substances in the cultures of T. bourrellyi, and it may act as an important allelochemical responsible for this allelopathic activity. The filtrates of T. bourrellyi culture were shown to decrease the maximum electron transport rate (ETRmax) and elevate the reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels in the cells of M. aeruginosa NIES-843.  相似文献   

16.
The desmid Staurastrum luetkemuellerii Donat et Ruttner and the cyanobacterium Microcystis aeruginosa Kütz. showed pronounced differences in chemical composition and ability to maintain P fluxes. The cellular P:C ratio (Qp) and the surplus P:C ratio (Qsp) were higher in M. aeruginosa, indicating a lower yield of biomass C per unit of P. The subsistence quota (Qp) was 1.85 μg P·mg C?1in S. luetkemuellerii and 6.09 μg P·mg C?1in M. aeruginosa, whereas the respective Qp of P saturnted organisms (Qs) were 43 and 63 μg P·mg C?1. These stores could support four divisions in S. luetkemuellerii and three divisions in M. aeruginosa, which suggests that the former exhibited highest storage capacity (Qs/Q0). M. aeruginosa showed a tenfold higher activity of alkaline phosphatase than S. luetkemuellerii when P starved. The optimum N:P ratio (by weight) was 5 in S. luetkemuellerii and 7 in M. aeruginosa. The initial uptake of Pi pulses in the organisms was not inhibited by rapid (<1 h) internal feedback mechanisms and the short term uptake rote could be expressed solely as a function of ambient Pi. The maximum cellular C-based uptake rate (Vm) in P starved M. aeruginosa was up to 50 times higher than that of S. luetkemuellerii. It decreased with increasing growth rate (P status) in the former species and remained fairly constant in the latter. The corresponding cellular P-based value (Um= Vm/Qp) decreased with growth rate in both species and was about 10 times higher in P started M. aeruginosa than in S. luetkemuellerii. The average half saturation constant for uptake (Km) was equal for both species (22 μg P·L?1) and varied with the P status. S. luetkemuellerii exhibited shifts in the uptake rate of Pi that were characterized by increased affinity (Um/Km) at low Pi, concentrations (<4 μg P·L?1) compared to that at higher concentrations. The species thus was well adapted to uptake at low ambient Pi, but M. aeruginosa was superior in Pi uptake under steady state and transient conditions when the growth rate was lower than 0.75 d?1. Moreover, M. aeruginosa was favored by pulsed addition of Pi. M. aeruginosa relpased Pi at a higher rate than S. luetkemuellerii. Leakage of Pi from the cells caused C-shaped μ vs. Pi curves. Therefore, no unique Ks for growth could be estimated. The maximum growth rate (μm) (23° C) was 0.94 d?1for S. luetkemuellerii and 0.81 d?1for M. aeruginosa. The steady state concentration of Pi (P*) was lower in M. aeruginosa than in S. luetkemuellerii at medium growth rates. The concentration of Pi at which the uptake and release of Pi was equal (Pc was, however, lower in S. luetkemuellerii.  相似文献   

17.
Barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) plants were grown at different photon flux densities ranging from 100 to 1800 μmol m−2 s−1 in air and/or in atmospheres with reduced levels of O2 and CO2. Low O2 and CO2 partial pressures allowed plants to grow under high photosystem II (PSII) excitation pressure, estimated in vivo by chlorophyll fluorescence measurements, at moderate photon flux densities. The xanthophyll-cycle pigments, the early light-inducible proteins, and their mRNA accumulated with increasing PSII excitation pressure irrespective of the way high excitation pressure was obtained (high-light irradiance or decreased CO2 and O2 availability). These findings indicate that the reduction state of electron transport chain components could be involved in light sensing for the regulation of nuclear-encoded chloroplast gene expression. In contrast, no correlation was found between the reduction state of PSII and various indicators of the PSII light-harvesting system, such as the chlorophyll a-to-b ratio, the abundance of the major pigment-protein complex of PSII (LHCII), the mRNA level of LHCII, the light-saturation curve of O2 evolution, and the induced chlorophyll-fluorescence rise. We conclude that the chlorophyll antenna size of PSII is not governed by the redox state of PSII in higher plants and, consequently, regulation of early light-inducible protein synthesis is different from that of LHCII.  相似文献   

18.
Oxygen-evolving Photosystem II particles (crude PSII) retaining a high oxygen-evolving activity have been prepared from a marine centric diatom, Chaetoceros gracilis (Nagao et al., 2007). The crude PSII, however, contained a large amount of fucoxanthin chlorophyll a/c-binding proteins (FCP). In this study, a purified PSII complex which was deprived of major components of FCP was isolated by one step of anion exchange chromatography from the crude PSII treated with Triton X-100. The purified PSII was still associated with the five extrinsic proteins of PsbO, PsbQ', PsbV, Psb31 and PsbU, and showed a high oxygen-evolving activity of 2135 μmol O2 (mg Chl a)− 1 h− 1 in the presence of phenyl-p-benzoquinone which was virtually independent of the addition of CaCl2. This activity is more than 2.5-fold higher than the activity of the crude PSII. The activity was completely inhibited by 3-(3,4)-dichlorophenyl-(1,1)-dimethylurea (DCMU). The purified PSII contained 42 molecules of Chl a, 2 molecules of diadinoxanthin and 2 molecules of Chl c on the basis of two molecules of pheophytin a, and showed typical absorption and fluorescence spectra similar to those of purified PSIIs from the other organisms. In this study, we also found that the crude PSII was significantly labile, as a significant inactivation of oxygen evolution, chlorophyll bleaching and degradation of PSII subunits were observed during incubation at 25 °C in the dark. In contrast, these inactivation, bleaching and degradation were scarcely detected in the purified PSII. Thus, we succeeded for the first time in preparation of a stable PSII from diatom cells.  相似文献   

19.
Cyanobacterial blooms are found in many freshwater ecosystems around the world, but the effect of environmental factors on their growth and the proportion of species still require more investigation. In this study, the physiological responses of bloom‐forming cyanobacteria M icrocystis aeruginosa FACHB912, M icrocystis flos‐aquae FACHB1028 and P seudanabaena sp. FACHB1282 to iron deficiency were investigated. Their specific growth rates were found to decrease as the available iron concentration decreased. At low available iron concentrations of 1 × 10?7 M (pFe 21.3) and 5 × 10?8 M (pFe 21.6), M . aeruginosa had the lowest specific growth rate among three studied species. The cell sizes of M . flos‐aquae and Pseudanabaena sp. were significantly smaller under the lowest iron concentration. The chlorophyll a content of the three species decreased at the lowest iron concentration. The maximal relative electron transport rate, photosynthetic efficiency, and light‐saturation parameter of M . aeruginosa were lower than the other two cyanobacteria at pFe 21.3. Therefore, M . aeruginosa was the least able to adapt to iron deficiency. Under iron deficiency, the functional absorption cross‐section of PSII and electron transport rate on the acceptor side of PSII decreased in M . aeruginosa, while the connectivity factor between individual photosynthetic units increased in M . flos‐aquae, and the electron transport rate on the acceptor side of PSII and between PSII and PSI decreased in P seudanabaena sp. The ability to store iron was highest in M . flos‐aquae, followed by P seudanabaena sp. and M . aeruginosa. Thus, these results provide necessary information for detecting the role of iron in the succession of cyanobacterial species in Lake Taihu, the third largest freshwater lake in China, because all three species were isolated from this lake.  相似文献   

20.
《BBA》2019,1860(12):148082
Redox titration using fluorescence measurements of photosystem II (PSII) has long shown that impairment of the water-oxidizing Mn4CaO5 cluster upshifts the redox potential (Em) of the primary quinone electron acceptor QA by more than 100 mV, which has been proposed as a photoprotection mechanism of PSII. However, the molecular mechanism of this long-distance interaction between the Mn4CaO5 cluster and QA in PSII remains unresolved. In this study, we reinvestigated the effect of depletion of the Mn4CaO5 cluster on Em(QA/QA) using Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroelectrochemistry, which can directly monitor the redox state of QA at an intended potential. Light-induced FTIR difference measurements at a series of electrode potentials for intact and Mn-depleted PSII preparations from spinach and Thermosynechococcus elongatus showed that depletion of the Mn4CaO5 cluster hardly affected the Em(QA/QA) values. In contrast, fluorescence spectroelectrochemical measurement using the same PSII sample, electrochemical cell, and redox mediators reproduced a large upshift of apparent Em upon Mn depletion, whereas a smaller shift was observed when weaker visible light was used for fluorescence excitation. Thus, the possibility was suggested that the measuring light for fluorescence disturbed the titration curve in Mn-depleted PSII, in contrast to no interference of infrared light with the PSII reactions in FTIR measurements. From these results, it was concluded that the Mn4CaO5 cluster does not directly regulate Em(QA/QA) to control the redox reactions on the electron acceptor side of PSII.  相似文献   

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