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1.
H. Conjeaud  P. Mathis  G. Paillotin 《BBA》1979,546(2):280-291
Absorption changes at 820 or 515 nm after a short laser flash were studied comparatively in untreated chloroplasts and in chloroplasts in which oxygen evolution is inhibited.In chloroplasts pre-treated with Tris, the primary donor of Photosystem II (P-680) is oxidized by the flash, as observed by an absorption increase at 820 nm. After the first flash it is re-reduced in a biphasic manner with half-times of 6 μs (major phase) and 22 μs. After the second flash, the 6 μs phase is nearly absent and P-680+ decays with half-times of 130 μs (major phase) and 22 μs. Exogenous electron donors (MnCl2 or reduced phenylenediamine) have no direct influence on the kinetics of P-680+.In untreated chloroplasts the 6 and 22 μs phases are of very small amplitude, either at the 1st, 2nd or 3rd flash given after dark-adaptation. They are observed, however, after incubation with 10 mM hydroxylamine.These results are interpreted in terms of multiple pathways for the reduction of P-680+: a rapid reduction (<1 μs) by the physiological donor D1; a slower reduction (6 and 22 μs) by donor D′1, operative when O2 evolution is inhibited; a back-reaction (130 μs) when D′1 is oxidized by the pre-illumination in inhibited chloroplasts. In Tris-treated chloroplasts the donor system to P-680+ has the capacity to deliver only one electron.The absorption change at 515 nm (electrochromic absorption shift) has been measured in parallel. It is shown that the change linked to Photosystem II activity has nearly the same magnitude in untreated chloroplasts or in chloroplasts treated with hydroxylamine or with Tris (first and subsequent flashes). Thus we conclude that all the donors (P-680, D1, D′1) are located at the internal side of the thylakoid membrane.  相似文献   

2.
Absorption changes (deltaA) at 820 nm, following laser flash excitation of spinach chloroplasts and Chlorella cells, were studied in order to obtain information on the reduction time of the photooxidized primary donor of Photosystem II at physiological temperatures. In the microsecond time range the difference spectrum of deltaA between 750 and 900 nm represents a peak at 820 nm, attributable to a radical-cation of chlorophyll a. In untreated dark-adapted material the signal can be attributed solely to P+-700; it decays in a polyphasic manner with half-times of 17 microseconds, 210 microseconds and over 1 ms. The oxidized primary donor of Photosystem II (P+II) is not detected with a time resolution of 3 microseconds. After treatment with 3--10 mM hydroxylamine, which inhibits the donor side of Photosystem II, P+II is observed and decays biphasically (a major phase with t1/2=20--40 microseconds, and a minor phase with t1/2 congruent to 200 microseconds), probably by reduction by an accessory electron donor. In the nanosecond range, which was made accessible by a new fast-response flash photometer operating at 820 nm, it was found the P+II is reduced with a half-time of 25--45 ns in untreated dark-adapted chloroplasts. It is assumed that the normal secondary electron donor is responsible for this fast reduction.  相似文献   

3.
Flash-induced absorption changes at 820 nm were studied as a function of redox potential in Tris-extracted Photosystem II oxygen-evolving particles and Triton subchloroplast fraction II particles. The rereduction kinetics of P-680+ in both preparations showed biphasic recovery phases with half-times of 42 and 625 microseconds at pH 4.5. The magnitude of the 42 microseconds phase of P-680+ rereduction was strongly dependent on the redox potential of the medium. This absorption transient, attributed to electron donation from D1 (the secondary electron donor in oxygen-inhibited chloroplasts), titrated as a single redox component with a midpoint potential of +240 +/- 35 mV. The experimentally determined midpoint potential was found to be independent of pH over the tested range 4.5-6.0. In contrast, the magnitude of the 625 microseconds phase of P-680+ rereduction was independent of redox potential between +350 and +100 mV. These results are interpreted in terms of a model in which an alternate electron donor with Em approximately equal to 240 mV, termed D0, serves as a rapid donor (t 1/2 less than or equal to 2 microseconds) to P-680+ in Tris-extracted and Triton-treated Photosystem-II preparations. According to this model, the slower electron donor, D1, is functional only when D0 becomes oxidized.  相似文献   

4.
The kinetics of reduction of P-680, oxidized by a flash, have been measured with chloroplasts treated with Tris, hydroxylamine or cholate, with PS-II particles from Phormidium (Tris-treated) and with subchloroplast particles prepared with digitonin or Triton. In all cases the electron transfer from D1 to P-680+ has similar rates, influenced similarly by pH and D1 has a one-electron capacity.  相似文献   

5.
Herman Kramer  Paul Mathis   《BBA》1980,593(2):319-329
The formation of the triplet state of carotenoids (detected by an absorption peak at 515 nm) and the photo-oxidation of the primary donor of Photosystem II, P-680 (detected by an absorption increase at 820 nm) have been measured by flash absorption spectroscopy in chloroplasts in which the oxygen evolution was inhibited by treatment with Tris. The amount of each transient form has been followed versus excitation flash intensity (at 590 or 694 nm). At low excitation energy the quantum yield of triplet formation (with the Photosystem II reaction center in the state Q) is about 30% that of P-680 photo-oxidation. The yield of carotenoid triplet formation is higher in the state Q than in the state Q, in nearly the same proportion as chlorophyll a fluorescence. It is concluded that, for excited chlorophyll a, the relative rates of intersystem crossing to the triplet state and of fluorescence emission are the same in vivo as in organic solvent. At high flash intensity the signal of P-680+ completely saturates, whereas that of carotenoid triplet continues to increase.

The rate of triplet-triplet energy transfer from chlorophyll a to carotenoids has been derived from the rise time of the absorption change at 515 nm, in chloroplasts and in several light-harvesting pigment-protein complexes. In all cases the rate is very high, around 8 · 107 s−1 at 294 K. It is about 2–3 times slower at 5 K. The transitory formation of chlorophyll triplet has been verified in two pigment-protein complexes, at 5 K.  相似文献   


6.
Electron paramagnetic resonance studies of the primary reactants of Photosystems I and II have been conducted at cryogenic temperatures after laser-flash activation with monochromatic light.P-700 photooxidation occurs irreversibly in chloroplasts and in Photosystem I fragments after activation with a 730 nm laser flash at a temperature of 35 degrees K. Flash activation of chloroplasts or Photosystem II chloroplast fragments with 660 nm light results in the production of a free-radical signal (g = 2.002, linewidth approximately 8 gauss) which decays with a half-time of 5.0 ms at 35 degrees K. The half-time of decay is independent of temperature in the range of 10-77 degrees K. This reversible signal can be eliminated by preillumination of the sample at 35 degrees K with 660 nm light (but not by 730 nm light), by preillumination with 660 nm light at room temperature in the presence of 3-(3',4'-dichlorophenyl)-1,1'-dimethylurea (DCMU) plus hydroxylamine, or by adjustment of the oxidation-reduction potential of the chloroplasts to - 150 mV prior to freezing. In the presence of ferricyanide (20-50 mM), two free-radical signals are photoinduced during a 660 nm flash at 35 degrees K. One signal decays with a half-time of 5 ms, whereas the second signal is formed irreversibly. These results are discussed in terms of a current model for the Photosystem II primary reaction at low temperature which postulates a back-reaction between P-680+ and the primary electron acceptor.  相似文献   

7.
A comparative study is made, at 15 degrees C, of flash-induced absorption changes around 820 nm (attributed to the primary donors of Photosystems I and II) and 705 nm (Photosystem I only), in normal chloroplasts and in chloroplasts where O2 evolution was inhibited by low pH or by Tris-treatment. At pH 7.5, with untreated chloroplasts, the absorption changes around 820 nm are shown to be due to P-700 alone. Any contribution of the primary donor of Photosystem II should be in times shorter than 60 mus. When chloroplasts are inhibited at the donor side of Photosystem II by low pH, an additional absorption change at 820 nm appears with an amplitude which, at pH 4.0, is slightly higher than the signal due to oxidized P-700. This additional signal is attributed to the primary donor of Photosystem II. It decays (t 1/2 about 180 mus) mainly by back reaction with the primary acceptor and partly by reduction by another electron donor. Acid-washed chloroplasts resuspended at pH 7.5 still present the signal due to Photosystem II (t 1/2 about 120 mus). This shows that the acid inhibition of the first secondary donor of Photosystem II is irreversible. In Tris-treated chloroplasts, absorption changes at 820 nm due to the primary donor of Photosystem II are also observed, but to a lesser extent and only after some charge accumulation at the donor side. They decay with a half-time of 120 mus.  相似文献   

8.
1. The amplitudes of the fast (0-20 microseconds) and slow (20 microseconds-2 ms) fluorescence rise induced by a 2 microseconds flash have been measured as a function of the energy of the flash in chloroplasts inhibited by 3(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethylurea. The saturation curve for the slow rise shows a characteristic lag which is not observed for the fast fluorescence rise. This lag indicates that Photosystem II centers undergo a double hit process which implies that (a), each photocenter includes two acceptors Q1 and Q2; (B), after the first hit, oxidized chlorophyll Chl+ is reduced by a secondary acceptor Y in a time shor compared to the duration of the flash; (c), after the second hit, Chl+ is reduced by another secondary donor, D. 2. According to Den Haan et al. (1974) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 368, 409-421), hydroxylamine destroys the secondary donor responsible for the fast reduction of Chl+. In the presence of 3 mM hydroxylamine, only the secondary donor D is functional and a flash induses mainly a single hit process. 3. The saturation curves for the fast and the slow rises have been studied in the presence of 3(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethylurea for a second actinic flash given 2.5 s after a first saturating one. The large decrease in the half-saturating energy indicates the existence of efficient energy transfer occuring between potosynthetic units. 4. Two alternate hypotheses are discussed (a) in which D is an auxiliary donor and (b) in which D is included in the main electron transfer chain.  相似文献   

9.
The rise time, of Signal IIf and the decay time of P-680+ have been measured kinetically as a function of pH by using EPR. The Photosystem II-enriched preparations which were used as samples were derived from spinach chloroplasts, and they evolved oxygen before Tris washing. The onset kinetics of Signal IIf are in agreement, within experimental error, with the fast component of the decay of an EPR signal attributable to P-680+. The signal IIf rise kinetics also show good agreement with published values of the pH dependence of the decay of P-680+ measured optically (Conjeaud, H. and Mathis, P. (1980) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 590, 353–359). These results are consistent with a model where the species Z (or D1) responsible for Signal IIf is the immediate electron donor to P-680+ in tris-washed Photosystem II fragments.  相似文献   

10.
Sally Reinman  Paul Mathis 《BBA》1981,635(2):249-258
The influence of temperature on the rate of reduction of P-680+, the primary donor of Photosystem II, has been studied in the range 5–294 K, in chloroplasts and subchloroplasts particles. P-680 was oxidized by a short laser flash. Its oxidation state was followed by the absorption level at 820 nm, and its reduction attributed to two mechanisms: electron donation from electron donor D1 and electron return from the primary plastoquinone (back-reaction).Between 294 and approx. 200 K, the rate of the back-reaction, on a logarithmic scale, is a linear function of the reciprocal of the absolute temperature, corresponding to an activation energy between 3.3 and 3.7 kcal · mol?1, in all of the materials examined (chloroplasts treated at low pH or with Tris; particles prepared with digitonin). Between approx. 200 K and 5 K the rate of the back-reaction is temperature independent, with t12 = 1.6 ms. In untreated chloroplasts we measured a t12 of 1.7 ms for the back-reaction at 77 and 5 K.The rate of electron donation from the donor D1 has been measured in darkadapted Tris-treated chloroplasts, in the range 294–260 K. This rate is strongly affected by temperature. An activation energy of 11 kcal · mol?1 was determined for this reaction.In subchloroplast particles prepared with Triton X-100 the signals due to P-680 were contaminated by absorption changes due to the triplet state of chlorophyll a. This triplet state has been examined with pure chlorophyll a in Triton X-100. An Arrhenius plot of its rate of decay shows a temperature-dependent region (292–220 K) with an activation energy of 9 kcal · mol?1, and a temperature-independent region (below 200 K) with t12 = 1.1 ms.  相似文献   

11.
Time-resolved spectroscopic techniques, including optical flash photolysis and electron spin resonance spectroscopy, have been utilized to monitor electron-transport activity in Photosystem II subchloroplast particles. These studies have indicated that in the presence of 100 microM linolenic acid (1) a high initial fluorescence yield (Fi) is observed upon steady-state illumination of the dark-adapted sample; (2) flash-induced absorption transients (t greater than 10 mus) in the region of 820 nm, attributed to P-680+, are first slowed, then abolished; and (3) electron spin resonance Signal IIs and Signal IIf (Z+) are not detectable. Upon reversal of linolenic acid inhibition by washing with bovine serum albumin, optical and electron spin resonance transients originating from the photooxidation of P-680 are restored. Similarly, the variable component of fluorescence is recovered with an accompanying restoration of Signal IIs and Signal IIf. The data indicate that linolenic acid affects two inhibition sites in Photosystem II: one located between pheophytin and QA on the reducing side, and the other between electron donor Z and P-680 on the oxidizing side. Since both sites are associated with bound quinone molecules, we suggest that linolenic acid interacts at the level of quinone binding proteins in Photosystem II.  相似文献   

12.
A 300 mus decay component of ESR Signal I (P-700+) in chloroplasts is observed following a 10 mus actinic xenon flash. This transient is inhibited by treatments which block electron transfer from Photosystem II to Photosystem I (e.g. 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU), 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone (DBMIB), KCN and HgCl2). The fast transient reduction of P-700+ can be restored in the case of DCMU or DBMIB inhibition by addition of an electron donor couple (2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol (Cl2Ind)/ascorbate) which supplies electrons to cytochrome f. However, this donor couple is inefficient in restoring electron transport in chloroplasts which have been inhibited with the plastocyanin inactivators, KCN and HgCl2. Oxidation-reduction measurements reveal that the fast P-700+ reduction component reflects electron transfer from a component with Em = 375 +/- 10 mV (pH = 7.5). These data suggest the assignment of the 300-mus decay kinetics to electron transfer from cytochrome f (Fe2+) to P-700+, thus confirming the recent observations of Haehnel et al. (Z. Naturforsch. 26b, 1171-1174 (1971)).  相似文献   

13.
The kinetics of fluorescence yield inChlorella pyrenoidosa and spinach chloroplasts were studied in the time range of 0.5 μs to several hundreds of microseconds in the presence of hydroxylamine. Fluorescence was excited with a just-saturating xenon flash with a halfwidth of 13 μs (λ = 420 nm). The fast rise of the fluorescence yield which was limited by the rate of light influx, was, in the presence of 10−3–10−2 M hydroxylamine, replaced by a slow component which had a half risetime of 25 μs in essence independent of light intensity. This slow fluorescence yield increase reflects a dark reaction on the watersplitting side of Photosystem II. Simultaneous oxygen evolution measurements suggested that a fast fluorescence component is only present in organisms with intact O2-evolving system, whereas a slow rise predominantly occurs in organisms with the watersplitting system irreversibly inhibited by hydroxylamine.

The results can be explained by the following hypotheses: (a) The primary donor of Photosystem II in its oxidized state, P+, is a fluorescence quencher. (b) Hydroxylamine prevents the secondary electron donor Z from reducing the oxidized reaction center pigment P+ rapidly. This inhibition is dependent on hydroxylamine concentration and is complete at a concentration of 10−2 M. (c) A second donor (not transporting electrons from water) transfers electrons to P+ with a half time of roughly 25 μs.  相似文献   


14.
J.A. Van Best  P. Mathis 《BBA》1978,503(1):178-188
Absorption changes (ΔA) at 820 nm, following laser flash excitation of spinach chloroplasts and Chlorella cells, were studied in order to obtain information on the reduction time of the photooxidized primary donor of Photosystem II at physiological temperatures.In the microsecond time range the difference spectrum of ΔA between 750 and 900 nm represents a peak at 820 nm, attributable to a radical-cation of chlorophyll a. In untreated dark-adapted material the signal can be attributed solely to P+?700; it decays in a polyphasic manner with half-times of 17 μs, 210 μs and over 1 ms. The oxidized primary donor of Photosystem II (P+II) is not detected with a time resolution of 3 μs. After treatment with 3–10 mM hydroxylamine, which inhibits the donor side of Photosystem II, P+II is observed and decays biphasically (a major phase with t12 = 20–40 μs, and a minor phase with t12 ? 200 μs), probably by reduction by an accessory electron donor.In the nanosecond range, which was made accessible by a new fast-response flash photometer operating at 820 nm, it was found the P+II is reduced with a half-time of 25–45 ns in untreated dark-adapted chloroplasts. It is assumed that the normal secondary electron donor is responsible for this fast reduction.  相似文献   

15.
We compare the absorption changes, in the near infrared and in the green part of the spectrum, induced in spinach chloroplasts suspensions, at -- 170 degrees C, by continuous light and by flashes. (1) Following flash excitation, an absorption increase peaking at 825 nm which reverses rapidly (t 1/2 = 3.0 ms) is not affected by ferricyanide; it is suppressed when chloroplasts are preilluminated in the presence of 3-(3',4'-dichlorophenyl)-1,1'-dimethylurea (DCMU) and hydroxylamine. The reversion of that signal is simultaneous with a partial back reoxidation of C-550 (fully reduced by the flash) and with partial (about 25%) oxidation of cytochrome b559. The magnitude of the signal peaking at 825 nm (that we attribute to the radical cation of the trap chlorophyll of Photosystem II, acting as a primary electron donor) decreases progressively within a series of successive flashes. (2) An absorption increase (40% of which is slowly reversible) with a broad peak around 810 nm is induced by continuous light or by a flash. It is suppressed by pretreatment with ferricyanide, but it is little affected by the treatment with 3-(3',4'-dichlorophenyl)-1,1'-dimethylurea and hydroxylamine. We attribute it to oxidized P700. (3) With chloroplasts pretreated with 10 mM ferricyanide, an absorption increase, whose magnitude is nearly independent of wavelength between 790 and 870 nm, can be induced by continuous light. One saturating flash produces only 20% of the signal. This absorption change (20% of which is reversible in 30 s) might be due to a secondary donor of Photosystem II.  相似文献   

16.
Richard Malkin  Alan J. Bearden 《BBA》1975,396(2):250-259
Electron paramagnetic resonance studies of the primary reactants of Photosystems I and II have been conducted at cryogenic temperatures after laser-flash activation with monochromatic light.P-700 photooxidation occurs irreversibly in chloroplasts and in Photosystem I fragments after activation with a 730 nm laser flash at a temperature of 35 °;K. Flash activation of chloroplasts or Photosystem II chloroplast fragments with 660 nm light results in the production of a free-radical signal (g = 2.002, linewidth ~ 8 gauss) which decays with a half-time of 5.0 ms at 35 °;K. The half-time of decay is independent of temperature in the range of 10–77 °;K. This reversible signal can be eliminated by preillumination of the sample at 35 °;K with 660 nm light (but not by 730 nm light), by preillumination with 660 nm light at room temperature in the presence of 3-(3′, 4′-dichlorophenyl)-1,1′-dimethylurea (DCMU) plus hydroxylamine, or by adjustment of the oxidation-reduction potential of the chloroplasts to — 150 mV prior to freezing. In the presence of ferricyanide (20–50 mM), two free-radical signals are photoinduced during a 660 nm flash at 35 °;K. One signal decays with a half-time of 5 ms, whereas the second signal is formed irreversibly. These results are discussed in terms of a current model for the Photosystem II primary reaction at low temperature which postulates a back-reaction between P-680+ and the primary electron acceptor.  相似文献   

17.
Triton-solubilized Photosystem I particles from spinach chloroplasts exhibit largely reversible P-700 absorption changes over the temperature range from 4.2 K to room temperature. For anaerobic samples treated with dithionite and neutral red at pH 10 and illuminated during cooling, a brief (1 microseconds) saturating flash produces absorption changes in the long wavelength region that decay in 0.95 +/- 0.2 ms from 4.2 to 50 K. Above 80 K a faster (100 +/- 30 microseconds) component dominates in the decay process, but this disappears again above about 180 K. The major decay at temperatures above 200 K occurs in about 1 ms. The difference spectrum of these absorption changes between 500 and 900 nm closely resembles that of P-700. Using ascorbate and 2.6-dichlorophenolindophenol as the reducing system with a sample of Photosystem I particles cooled in darkness to 4.2 K, a fully reversible signal is seen upon both the first and subsequent flashes. The decay time in this case is 0.9 +/- 0.3 ms.  相似文献   

18.
Hlne Conjeaud  Paul Mathis 《BBA》1980,590(3):353-359
The primary donor of Photosystem II (PS II), P-680, was photo-oxidized by a short flash and its rate of reduction was measured at different pH values by following the recovery of the absorption change at 820 nm in chloroplasts pretreated with a high concentration of Tris. The re-reduction is biphasic with a fast phase (dominant after the first flash) attributed to the donation by a donor, D1, and a slow phase (usually dominant after the second flash) attributed to a back-reaction with the primary acceptor.

It is found that pH has a strong influence on the donation from D1 (τ = 2 μs at pH 9, 44 μs at pH 4), but no influence on the back reaction (τ ≈ 200 μs). pH also influences the stability of the charge separation since the contribution of donation from D1 at the second flash increases at lower pH, getting close to 100% at pH 4.  相似文献   


19.
Lars F. Olsen 《BBA》1982,682(3):482-490
The kinetics of redox changes of P-700, plastocyanin and cytochrome f in chloroplasts suspended in a fluid medium at sub-zero temperatures have been studied following excitation of the chloroplasts with either a single-turnover flash, a series of flashes or continuous light. The results show that: (1) The kinetics of reduction of P-700+ and those of oxidation of plastocyanin are consistent with a bimolecular reaction between these two components as previously suggested (Olsen, L.F., Cox, R.P. and Barber, J. (1980) FEBS Lett. 122, 13–16). (2) Cytochrome f shows heterogeneity with respect to its kinetics of oxidation by Photosystem I. (3) In contrast to the situation when plastoquinol is the electron donor, reduction of cytochrome f by electrons derived from diaminodurene occurs with sigmoidal kinetics that shows a good fit to an apparent equilibrium constant of 12 between the cytochrome and P-700. (4) The rate of electron transfer from plastoquinol to Photosystem I depends on the redox state of the plastoquinone pool. (5) In relation to current ideas about the lateral heterogeneity of Photosystem I and Photosystem II in the thylakoid membrane, the results are consistent with the function of plastocyanin as a mobile carrier of electrons in the intrathylakoid space.  相似文献   

20.
Masaru Nanba  Sakae Katoh 《BBA》1984,767(3):396-403
The effects of 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-p-benzoquinone (DBMIB) on the reduction kinetics of flash-oxidized P-700 and cytochrome c-553 were studied in the thermophilic cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. (1) The reduction kinetics of P-700 showed two exponential phases with half-times of 0.2 and 2 ms at the recording time used (Nanba, M. and Katoh, S. (1983) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 725, 272–279). DBMIB strongly slowed down the 2 ms reduction phase but not the 0.2 ms phase. (2) The content of an electron donor which transfers its electrons to P-700 with the half time of 0.2 ms was estimated to be comparable to that of cytochrome f. (3) The magnitudes of the 0.2 ms reduction phase and cytochrome c-553 oxidation decreased as the flash interval was shortened below 2 s in the poisoned cells. Assuming a rapid equilibrium of electrons in the electron donor pool of Photosystem I, the midpoint potential of the 0.2 ms donor was estimated as 280 mV by comparing its percent reduction with that of cytochrome c-553 at three different flash intervals. (4) A similar value was obtained for the midpoint potential of the 0.2 ms donor in the cells in which the plastoquinone pool had been oxidized by dark starvation. It is concluded that the 0.2 ms reduction phase of P-700 is due to the electron donation from the Rieske iron-sulfur center and that DBMIB inhibits strongly but incompletely the reduction of the iron-sulfur center with electrons from the plastoquinone pool, whereas the inhibitor has no effect on the midpoint potential and Photosystem-I-dependent oxidation of the iron-sulfur center.  相似文献   

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