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1.
The adverse effect of low intensity, small band UV-B irradiation (λ = 305 ± 5 nm, I = 300 mW m−2) on PS II has been studied by comparative measurements of laser flash-induced changes of the absorption at 325 nm, ΔA325(t), as an indicator of redox changes in QA, and of the relative fluorescence quantum yield, F(t)/Fo, in PS II membrane fragments. The properties of untreated control were compared with those of samples where the oxygen evolution rate under illumination with continuous saturating light was inhibited by up to 95%. The following results were obtained: a) the detectable initial amplitude (at a time resolution of 30 μs) of the 325 nm absorption changes, ΔA325, remained virtually invariant whereas the relaxation kinetics exhibit significant changes, b) the 300 μs kinetics of ΔA325 dominating the relaxation in UV-B treated samples was largely replaced by a 1.3 ms kinetics after addition of MnCl2, c) the extent of the flash induced rise of the relative fluorescence quantum yield was severely diminished in UV-B treated PS II membrane fragments but the relaxation kinetics remain virtually unaffected. Based on these results the water oxidizing complex (WOC) is inferred to be the primary target of UV-B impairment of PS II while the formation of the ‘stable’ radical pair P680QA −● is almost invariant to this UV-B treatment. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

2.
The discovery of period four oscillations of the fluorescence yield under flashing light demonstrated that not only the redox state of the Photosystem II (PS II) electron acceptor QA, but also the oxygen evolving cycle (described by the S states) modulates the fluorescence yield of chlorophyll (Chl). The positive charges accumulated on the donor side of PS II act on the fluorescence yield (measured in the QA state during a strong flash) through the concentration of the quencher P680 +, the oxidized form of PS II reaction center Chl a. However, the period four oscillations of the fluorescence yield detected 1 s after a strong flash (in the P680QA state) have not yet been fully explained. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

3.
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii mutants D1-R323H, D1-R323D, and D1-R323L showed elevated chlorophyll fluorescence yields, which increased with decline of oxygen evolving capacity. The extra step K ascribed to the disturbance of electron transport at the donor side of PS II was observed in OJIP kinetics measured in mutants with a PEA fluorometer. Fluorescence decay kinetics were recorded and analyzed in a pseudo-wild type (pWt) and in mutants of C. reinhardtii with a Becker and Hickl single photon counting system in pico- to nanosecond time range. The kinetics curves were fitted by three exponentials. The first one (rapid, with lifetime about 300 ps) reflects energy migration from antenna complex to the reaction center (RC) of photosystem II (PS II); the second component (600–700 ps) has been assigned to an electron transfer from P680 to QA, while the third one (slow, 3 ns) assumingly originates from charge recombination in the radical pair [P680+• Pheo−•] and/or from antenna complexes energetically disconnected from RC II. Mutants showed reduced contribution of the first component, whereas the yield of the second component increased due to slowing down of the electron transport to QA. The mutant D1-R323L with completely inactive oxygen evolving complex did not reveal rapid component at all, while its kinetics was approximated by two slow components with lifetimes of about 2 and 3 ns. These may be due to two reasons: a) disconnection between antennae complexes and RC II, and b) recombination in a radical pair [P680+• Pheo−•] under restricted electron transport to QA. The data obtained suggest that disturbance of oxygen evolving function in mutants may induce an upshift of the midpoint redox potential of QA/QA couple causing limitation of electron transport at the acceptor side of PS II.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
An effect of desiccation (a decrease of relative water content from 97% to 10% within 35 h) on Photosystem II was studied in barley leaf segments (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Akcent) using chlorophyll a fluorescence and thermoluminescence (TL). The O-J-I-P fluorescence induction curve revealed a decrease of FP and a slight shift of the J step to a shorter time with no change in its height. The analysis of the fluorescence decline after a saturating light flash revealed an increased portion of slow exponential components with increasing desiccation. The TL bands obtained after excitation by continuous light were situated at about –27°C (Zv band – recombination of P680+QA ), –14 °C (A band – S3QA ), +12 °C (B band – S2/3QB ) and +45 °C (C band – TyrD+QA ). The bands related to the S-states of oxygen evolving complex (A and B) were reduced by desiccation and shifted to higher and lower temperatures, respectively. In accordance with this, the band observed at about +27 °C (S2QB ) after excitation by 1 flash fired at –10 °C and band at about +20 °C (S2/3QB ) after 2 flashes decreased with increasing water deficit and shifted to lower temperatures. A new band around 5 °C appeared in both regimes of TL excitation for a relative water content of under 42% and was attributed to the Q band (S2QA ). It is suggested that under desiccation, an inhibition of the formation of S2- and S3-states in OEC occurred simultaneously with a lowering of electron transport on the acceptor side of PS II. The temperature down-shift of the TL bands obtained after the flash excitation was induced at the initial phases of water stress, indicating a decrease of the activation energy for the S2/3QB recombination. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

6.
The effect of cumulative over-saturating pulses (OSP) of white light (1 s, >10 000 μmol photons m−2 s−1), applied every 20 min on pea leaves, was investigated during a complete diurnal cycle of 24 h. In dark-adapted leaves, this treatment leads to a progressive decline of the optimum Photosystem II (PS II) quantum yield. Continuous low background light (except far-red light) had a protective effect against this OSP-induced photoinactivation. The lack of far-red effect could be due to its absorption mainly in PS I and not in PS II, but could be also due to the general low absorption in this wavelength region. The photoinactivation was enhanced in leaves that had been previously infiltrated with chloramphenicol. The quantum yield of CO2 assimilation, but not its maximal capacity, was inhibited by the OSP treatment. The most spectacular effects observed, in addition to an irreversible quenching of Fm, was a strong inhibition of QA reoxidation revealed by a large increase in the Fs level and consequently by a decrease of ΔF/Fm′. Under such conditions, we observed that the electron flow deduced from ΔF/Fm′ underestimated the real electron flow to CO2. Time-resolved Chlorophyll a fluorescence measurements showed that the reduced capacity of QA reoxidation in OSP treated leaves was accompanied by the appearance of a 4.7 ns component attributed to PS II charge recombination. We suggest that a modification at the QB site may influence the redox potential of QA/QA , facilitating the reversion of the primary charge separation. In addition, a 1.2 ns fluorescence component accumulated, which appeared to be responsible for the underestimation of PS II electron flow. The observed photoinactivation seemed to be different from the photoinhibition often described in the literature, which occurs under continuous light. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

7.
Many of the core proteins in Photosystem II (PS II) undergo reversible phosphorylation. It is known that protein phosphorylation controls the repair cycle of Photosystem II. However, it is not known how protein phosphorylation affects the partial electron transport reactions in PS II. Here we have applied variable fluorescence measurements and EPR spectroscopy to probe the status of the quinone acceptors, the Mn cluster and other electron transfer components in PS II with controlled levels of protein phosphorylation. Protein phosphorylation was induced in vivo by varying illumination regimes. The phosphorylation level of the D1 protein varied from 10 to 58% in PS II membranes isolated from pre-illuminated spinach leaves. The oxygen evolution and QA to QB(QB ) electron transfer measured by flash-induced fluorescence decay remained similar in all samples studied. Similar measurements in the presence of DCMU, which reports on the status of the donor side in PS II, also indicated that the integrity of the oxygen-evolving complex was preserved in PS II with different levels of D1 protein phosphorylation. With EPR spectroscopy we examined individual redox cofactors in PS II. Both the maximal amplitude of the charge separation reaction (measured as photo-accumulated pheophytin) and the EPR signal from the QA Fe2+ complex were unaffected by the phosphorylation of the D1 protein, indicating that the acceptor side of PS II was not modified. Also the shape of the S2 state multiline signal was similar, suggesting that the structure of the Mn-cluster in Photosystem II did not change. However, the amplitude of the S2 multiline signal was reduced by 35% in PS II, where 58% of the D1 protein was phosphorylated, as compared to the S2 multiline in PS II, where only 10% of the D1 protein was phosphorylated. In addition, the fraction of low potential Cyt b 559 was twice as high in phosphorylated PS II. Implications from these findings, were precise quantification of D1 protein phosphorylation is, for the first time, combined with high-resolution biophysical measurements, are discussed. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

8.
The effect of desiccation and rehydration on the function of Photosystem II has been studied in the desiccation tolerant lichen Cladonia convoluta by thermoluminescence. We have shown that in functional fully hydrated thalli thermoluminescence signals can be observed from the recombination of the S2(3)QB (B band), S2QA (Q band), Tyr-D+QA (C band) and Tyr-Z+(His+)QA (A band) charge stabilization states. These thermoluminescence signals are completely absent in desiccated thalli, but rapidly reappear on rehydration. Flash-induced oscillation in the amplitude of the thermoluminescence band from the S2(3)QB recombination shows the usual pattern with maxima after 2 and 6 flashes when rehydration takes place in light. However, after rehydration in complete darkness, there is no thermoluminescence emission after the 1 st flash, and the maxima of the subsequent oscillation are shifted to the 3rd and 7th flashes. It is concluded that desiccation of Cladonia convoluta converts PS II into a nonfunctional state. This state is characterized by the lack of stable charge separation and recombination, as well as by a one-electron reduction of the water-oxidizing complex. Restoration of PS II function during rehydration can proceed both in the light and in darkness. After rehydration in the dark, the first charge separation act is utilized in restoring the usual oxidation state of the water-oxidizing comples.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DT desiccation tolerant - PS II Photosystem II - TL thermoluminescence - P680 reaction center Chl of PS II - QA and QB puinone electron acceptors of PS II - S0,...,S4 the redox states of the water-oxidizing complex - Tyr-Z and Tyr-D redox-active tyrosine electron donors of PS II  相似文献   

9.
Photoinhibition under aerobic and anaerobic conditions was analyzed in O2-evolving and in Tris-treated PS II-membrane fragments from spinach by measuring laser-flash-induced absorption changes at 826 nm reflecting the transient P680+ formation and the chlorophyll fluorescence lifetime. It was found that anaerobic photoinhibitory treatment leads in both types of samples to the appearence of two long-lived fluorescence components with lifetimes of 7 ns and 16 ns, respectively. The extent of these fluorescence kinetics depends on the state of the reaction center (open/closed) during the fluorescence measurements: it is drastically higher in the closed state. It is concluded that this long-lived fluorescence is mainly emitted from modified reaction centers with singly reduced QA(QA -). This suggests that the observation of long-lived fluorescence components cannot necessarily be taken as an indicator for reaction centers with missing or doubly reduced and protonated QA (QAH2). Time-resolved measurements of 826 nm absorption changes show that the rate of photoinhibition of the stable charge separation (P680*QA P680+QA -), is nearly the same in O2-evolving and in Tris-treated PS II-membrane fragments. This finding is difficult to understand within the framework of the QAH2-mechanism for photoinhibition of stable charge separation because in that case the rate of photoinhibition should strongly depend on the functional integrity of the donor side of PS II. Based on the results of this study it is inferred, that several processes contribute to photoinhibition within the PS II reaction center and that a mechanism which comprises double reduction and protonation of QA leading to QAH2 formation is only of marginal – if any – relevance for photoinhibition of PS II under both, aerobic and anaerobic, conditions.  相似文献   

10.
Loss by recombination of the charge separated state P680+QA limits the performance of Photosystem II (PS II) as a photochemical energy converter. Time constants reported in literature for this process are mostly either near 0.17 ms or near 1.4 ms. The shorter time is found in plant PS II when reduction of P680+ by the secondary electron donor Tyrosine Z cannot occur because YZ is already oxidized. The 1.4 ms recombination is seen in YZ-less mutants of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis. However, the rate of P680+QA recombination that actually competes with the stabilization of the charge separation has not been previously reported. We have measured the kinetics of the flash-induced fluorescence yield changes in the microsecond time domain in Tris-washed spinach chloroplasts. In this way the kinetics and yield of P680+ reduction by YZ were obtained, and the rate of the competing P680+QA recombination could be evaluated. The recombination time was less than 0.5 ms; the best-fitting time constant was 0.1 ms. The presence of YZox slightly decreased the efficiency of excitation trapping but did not seem to accelerate P680+QA recombination. The two P680+QA lifetimes in the literature probably reflect a significant difference between plant and cyanobacterial PS II.  相似文献   

11.
The effect of iron deficiency on photosynthetic electron transport in Photosystem II (PS II) was studied in leaves and thylakoid membranes of lettuce (Lactuca sativa, Romaine variety) plants. PS II electron transport was characterized by oxygen evolution and chlorophyll fluorescence parameters. Iron deficiency in the culture medium was shown to affect water oxidation and the advancement of the S-states. A decrease of maximal quantum yield of PS II and an increase of fluorescence intensity at step J and I of OJIP kinetics were also observed. Thermoluminescence measurements revealed that charge recombination between the quinone acceptor of PS II, QB, and the S2 state of the Mn-cluster was strongly perturbed. Also the dark decay of Chl fluorescence after a single turnover white flash was greatly retarded indicating a slower rate of QA reoxidation.  相似文献   

12.
Lazár  D.  Pospíšil  P.  Nauš  J. 《Photosynthetica》1999,37(2):255-265
Chlorophyll a fluorescence induction measured by a fluorometer with a high temperature stressed plant material shows a new K step which is a clear peak due to fast fluorescence rise and subsequent decrease of fluorescence intensity. We focused on an explanation of the decrease of fluorescence after the K step using artificial electron acceptors and donors to photosystem 2 (PS2). Addition of the artificial electron acceptors or donors suppressed the decrease of fluorescence after the K step. We suggest that the decrease mainly reflects (by more than 81 %) an energy loss process in the reaction centre of PS2 which is most probably a nonradiative charge recombination between P680+ (oxidised primary electron donor in PS2) and a negative charge stored on either Pheo or QA (reduced primary electron acceptor of PS2 and reduced primary quinone electron acceptor of PS2, respectively). We suggest that the energy loss process is only possible when the inhibition of both the donor and the acceptor sides of PS2 occurs. This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

13.
Extraction of PS II particles with 50 mM cholate and 1 M NaCl releases several proteins (33-, 23-, 17- and 13 kDa) and lipids from the thylakoid membrane which are essential for O2 evolution, dichlorophenolindophenol (DCIP) reduction and for stable charge separation between P680+ and QA -. This work correlates the results on the loss of steady-state rates for O2 evolution and PS II mediated DCIP photo-reduction with flash absorption changes directly monitoring the reaction center charge separation at 830 nm due to P680+, the chlorophyll a donor. Reconstitution of the extracted lipids to the depleted membrane restores the ability to photo-oxidize P680 reversibly and to reduce DCIP, while stimulating O2 evolution minimally. Addition of the extracted proteins of masses 33-, 23- and 17- kDa produces no further stimulation of DCIP reduction in the presence of an exogenous donor like DPC, but does enhance this rate in the absence of exogenous donors while also stimulating O2 evolution. The proteins alone in the absence of lipids have little influence on charge separation in the reaction center. Thus lipids are essential for stable charge separation within the reaction center, involving formation of P680+ and QA -.Abbreviations A830 Absorption change at 830 nm - Chl Chlorophyll - D1 primary electron donor to P680 - DCIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - DPC 1,5-diphenylcarbazide - MOPS 3-(N-morpholino)propanesulfonic acid - P680 reaction center chlorophyll a molecule of photosystem II - PPBQ Phenyl-p-benzoquinone - PS II Photosystem II - QA, QB first and second quinone acceptors in PS II - V-DCIP rate of DCIP reduction - V-O2 rate of oxygen evolution - Y water-oxidizing enzyme system - CHAPS 3-Cyclohexylamino-propanesulfonic acid  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
Krisztián Cser 《BBA》2007,1767(3):233-243
The mechanism of charge recombination was studied in Photosystem II by using flash induced chlorophyll fluorescence and thermoluminescence measurements. The experiments were performed in intact cells of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis 6803 in which the redox properties of the primary pheophytin electron acceptor, Phe, the primary electron donor, P680, and the first quinone electron acceptor, QA, were modified. In the D1Gln130Glu or D1His198Ala mutants, which shift the free energy of the primary radical pair to more positive values, charge recombination from the S2QA and S2QB states was accelerated relative to the wild type as shown by the faster decay of chlorophyll fluorescence yield, and the downshifted peak temperature of the thermoluminescence Q and B bands. The opposite effect, i.e. strong stabilization of charge recombination from both the S2QA and S2QB states was observed in the D1Gln130Leu or D1His198Lys mutants, which shift the free energy level of the primary radical pair to more negative values, as shown by the retarded decay of flash induced chlorophyll fluorescence and upshifted thermoluminescence peak temperatures. Importantly, these mutations caused a drastic change in the intensity of thermoluminescence, manifested by 8- and 22-fold increase in the D1Gln130Leu and D1His198Lys mutants, respectively, as well as by a 4- and 2.5-fold decrease in the D1Gln130Glu and D1His198Ala mutants, relative to the wild type, respectively. In the presence of the electron transport inhibitor bromoxynil, which decreases the redox potential of QA/QA relative to that observed in the presence of DCMU, charge recombination from the S2QA state was accelerated in the wild type and all mutant strains. Our data confirm that in PSII the dominant pathway of charge recombination goes through the P680+Phe radical pair. This indirect recombination is branched into radiative and non-radiative pathways, which proceed via repopulation of P680* from 1[P680+Ph] and direct recombination of the 3[P680+Ph] and 1[P680+Ph] radical states, respectively. An additional non-radiative pathway involves direct recombination of P680+QA. The yield of these charge recombination pathways is affected by the free energy gaps between the Photosystem II electron transfer components in a complex way: Increase of ΔG(P680* ↔ P680+Phe) decreases the yield of the indirect radiative pathway (in the 22-0.2% range). On the other hand, increase of ΔG(P680+Phe ↔ P680+QA) increases the yield of the direct pathway (in the 2-50% range) and decreases the yield of the indirect non-radiative pathway (in the 97-37% range).  相似文献   

16.
Photoinhibition was analyzed in O2-evolving and in Tris-treated PS II membrane fragments by measuring flash-induced absorption changes at 830 nm reflecting the transient P680+ formation and oxygen evolution. Irradiation by visible light affects the PS II electron transfer at two different sites: a) photoinhibition of site I eliminates the capability to perform a stable charge separation between P680+ and QA - within the reaction center (RC) and b) photoinhibition of site II blocks the electron transfer from YZ to P680+. The quantum yield of site I photoinhibition (2–3×10-7 inhibited RC/quantum) is independent of the functional integrity of the water oxidizing system. In contrast, the quantum yield of photoinhibition at site II depends strongly on the oxygen evolution capacity. In O2-evolving samples, the quantum yield of site II photoinhibition is about 10-7 inhibited RC/quantum. After selective elimination of the O2-evolving capacity by Tris-treatment, the quantum yield of photoinhibition at site II depends on the light intensity. At low intensity (<3 W/m2), the quantum yield is 10-4 inhibited RC/quantum (about 1000 times higher than in oxygen evolving samples). Based on these results it is inferred that the dominating deleterious effect of photoinhibition cannot be ascribed to an unique target site or a single mechanism because it depends on different experimental conditions (e.g., light intensity) and the functional status of the PS II complex.Abbreviations A830 absorption change at 830 nm - P680 primary electron donor of PS II - PS II photosystem II - Mes 2(N-morpholino)ethansulfonic acid - QA, QB primary and secondary acceptors of PS II - DCIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - DPC 1,5-diphenylcarbohydrazide - FWHM fullwidth at half maximum - Ph-p-BQ phenyl-p-benzoquinone - PFR photon fluence rate - Pheo pheophytin - RC reaction center  相似文献   

17.
Methyl viologen (MV) is a well-known electron mediator that works on the acceptor side of photosystem I. We investigated the little-known, MV-induced inhibition of linear electron flow through photosystem II (PS II) in spinach-leaf discs. Even a low [MV] decreased the (1) average, light-adapted photochemical efficiency of PS II traps, (2) oxidation state of the primary quinone acceptor QA in PS II during illumination, (3) photochemical efficiency of light-adapted open PS II traps, (4) fraction of absorbed light energy dissipated constitutively in a light-independent manner or as chlorophyll (Chl) a fluorescence emission, (5) Chl a fluorescence yield corresponding to dark-adapted open reaction-center traps (F o) and closed reaction-center traps (F m), and (6) half-time for re-oxidation of QA in PS II after a single-turnover flash. These effects suggest that the presence of MV accelerates various “downhill” electron-transfer steps in PS II. Therefore, when using the MV to quantify cyclic electron flow, the inhibitory effect of MV on PS II should be taken into account.  相似文献   

18.
The mode of photoinhibition as a function of the ambient redox potential (Eambient) in suspensions of Tris-washed PS II membrane fragments has been analyzed by monitoring flash-induced absorption changes at 830 nm. It was found: (a) the detectable initial amplitude, ΔAtotal 830, as a measure of the capacity to form the `stable' radical pair, P680 Q−ċ A, drastically decreases during a 10 min photoinhibition at Eambient values below +350 mV; (b) conversely, the normalized extent of the 18 μs relaxation kinetics, ΔA18 μ s 830 as a measure of the electron transfer from YZ to P680 becomes highly susceptible to light stress when Eambient exceeds values of about +350 mV; (c) effects of the ambient redox potentials are highly pronounced during light exposure under anaerobic conditions, while much smaller differences arise under aerobic conditions; (d) the extent of damage does not correlate with the total concentration of K3[Fe(CN)6] and K4[Fe(CN)6] in the suspension during photoinhibition but rather depends on the Em-values; (e) qualitatively similar features are observed when the redox buffer system K3[Fe(CN)6]/Na2S2O4 is replaced by K2[IrCl6]/Na2S2O4; (f) the characteristic Eambient-dependence of photoinhibition is observed only under anaerobic conditions. The results are discussed with respect to different redox components that might be involved, including brief comments on a possible role of Cyt b559. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

19.
Photosystem II particles were exposed to 800 W m–2 white light at 20 °C under anoxic conditions. The Fo level of fluorescence was considerably enhanced indicating formation of stable-reduced forms of the primary quinone electron acceptor, QA. The Fm level of fluorescence declined only a little. The g=1.9 and g=1.82 EPR forms characteristic of the bicarbonate-bound and bicarbonate-depleted semiquinone-iron complex, QA Fe2+, respectively, exhibited differential sensitivity against photoinhibition. The large g=1.9 signal was rapidly diminished but the small g=1.82 signal decreased more slowly. The S2-state multiline signal, the oxygen evolution and photooxidation of the high potential form of cytochrome b-559 were inhibited approximately with the same kinetics as the g=1.9 signal. The low potential form of oxidized cytochrome b-559 and Signal IIslow arising from TyrD + decreased considerably slower than the g=1.9 semiquinone-iron signal. The high potential form of oxidized cytochrome b-559 was diminished faster than the low potential form. Photoinhibition of the g=1.9 and g=1.82 forms of QA was accompanied with the appearance and gradual saturation of the spin-polarized triplet signal of P 680. The amplitude of the radical signal from photoreducible pheophytin remained constant during the 3 hour illumination period. In the thermoluminescence glow curves of particles the Q band (S2QA charge recombination) was almost completely abolished. To the contrary, the C band (TyrD +QA charge recombination) increased a little upon illumination. The EPR and thermoluminescence observations suggest that the Photosystem II reaction centers can be classified into two groups with different susceptibility against photoinhibition.Abbreviations C band thermoluminescence band associated with Tyr-D+Q a charge recombination - Chl chlorophyll - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - EPR electron paramagnetic resonance - Fo initial fluorescence - Fm maximum fluorescence - Q band thermoluminescence band originating from S2Q a -charge recombination - Q a the primary quinone electron acceptor of PS II - P 680 the primary electron donor chlorophyll of PS II - S2 oxidation state of the water-splitting system - Phe pheophytin - TL thermoluminescence - Tyr d redox active tyrosine-160 of the D2 protein  相似文献   

20.
Photoacoustics (PA) allows the determination of enthalpy and volume changes of photoreactions in photosynthetic reaction centers on the 0.1–10 μs time scale. These include the bacterial centers from Rb. sphaeroides, PS I and PS II centers from Synechocystis and in whole cells. In vitro and in vivo PA data on PS I and PS II revealed that both the volume change (–26 A3) and reaction enthalpy (–0.4 eV) in PS I are the same as those in the bacterial centers. However the volume change in PS II is small and the enthalpy far larger, –1 eV. Assigning the volume changes to electrostriction allows a coherent explanation of these observations. One can explain the large volume decrease in the bacterial centers with an effective dielectric coefficient of ∼4. This is a unique approach to this parameter so important in estimation of protein energetics. The value of the volume contraction for PS I can only be explained if the acceptor is the super- cluster (Fe4S4)(Cys4) with charge change from –1 to –2. The small volume change in PS II is explained by sub-μs electron transfer from YZ anion to P680 cation, in which charge is only moved from the YZ anion to the QA with no charge separation or with rapid proton transfer from oxidized YZ to a polar region and thus very little change in electrostriction. At more acid pH equally rapid proton transfer from a neighboring histidine to a polar region may be caused by the electric field of the P680 cation. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

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