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1.
A multi-biosensor for detection of herbicides and pollutants was constructed using various photosynthetic preparations as biosensing elements. The photosynthetic thylakoid from Spinacia oleracea L., Senecio vulgaris and its mutant resistant to atrazine were immobilized with (BSA-GA) on the surface of screen-printed sensors composed of a graphite-working electrode and Ag/AgCl reference electrode deposited on a polymeric substrate. The biosensor was composed of four flow cells with independent illumination of 650 nm to activate electron transfer in Photosystem II. The principle of the detection was based on the fact that herbicides selectively block electron transport activity in a concentration-dependent manner and that the four PSII biomediators show differential recognition activity toward herbicides. Changes of the activity were registered amperometrically as rate of photoreduction of the artificial electron acceptor DQ. The setup resulted in a reusable herbicide multibiosensor with a good stability (half-life of 16.7 h for spinach thylakoids) and limit of detection of about 10(-8) M for herbicides recovered in spring in river.  相似文献   

2.
By assaying partial reactions of the photosynthetic electron transport system using thylakoids from spinach as well as from the algae Bumilleriopsis, Dunaliella , and Anabaena , it was demonstrated that the polyene antibiotic amphotericin B has no specific effect on plastocyanin. Pretreating spinach and algal thylakoids with this antibiotic decreased photosystem-II as well as photosystem-I activity regardless of whether the membranes contained plastocyanin or cytochrome c-553. Different sensitivity of cell-free electron transport activity against this antibiotic was observed due to the species used. With Dunaliella , the photosystem-II region was inhibited more strongly than photosystem-I, while Bumilleriopsis chloroplasts – although not containing plastocyanin – exhibited a stronger inhibition of the photosystem-I region. Apparently, amphotericin B mainly solubilizes redox compounds that form connecting pools in the photosynthetic electron transport chain.  相似文献   

3.
Chloroplast thylakoid membranes of higher plants are damaged by freezing both in vivo and in vitro. The resulting inactivation of photosynthetic electron transport has been related to transient membrane rupture, leading to the loss of soluble electron transport proteins and osmotically active solutes from the thylakoid lumen. We have recently purified and sequenced a protein from cold acclimated cabbage, that protects thylakoids from this freeze-thaw damage. The protein belongs to the WAX9 family of nonspecific lipid transfer proteins, but has no detectable lipid transfer activity. Conversely, other transport-active lipid transfer proteins show no cryoprotective activity. We show here that cryoprotectin binds to thylakoid membranes. Both cryoprotective activity and membrane binding were inhibited in the presence of specific sugars, most effectively by Glc-6-S. The binding of cryoprotectin to thylakoids reduced the fluidity of the membrane lipids close to the membrane/solution interface, but not in the hydrophobic core region. Using immobilized liposomes we could show that cryoprotectin was able to bind to pure lipid membranes.  相似文献   

4.
Chloroplasts developed at cold-hardening (5°C) and non-hardening temperatures (20°C) were compared with respect to the stability of photosynthetic electron transport activities, the capacity to produce and maintain a H+ gradient and the capacity fat photophosphorylation as a function of resuspension in the presence or absence of osmoticum. The results for electron transport indicate that whole chain, photosystem I and pfaotosystem II activities in non-hardened chloroplast thyalkoids were unaffected by resuspension in the presence of high or low osmoticum. In contrast, the same electron transport activities in cold-hardened chloroplast thylakoids exhibited a 3- to 4-fold decrease in activity when resuspended in the presence of low osmoticum. Impairment of electron transport through photosystem II of cold-hardened thylakoids resuspended in the presence of low osmoticum was supported by room temperature fluorescence induction kinetics. Since the presence of Mn2+ partially overcame this inhibition, it is concluded that this osmotically-induced inhibition of PSII activity in cold-hardened chloroplast thylakoids may, in part, be due to damage to the H2O-splitting side of photosystem II. Both the initial rate and the maximum capacity for cyclic photophosphorylation were significantly inhibited in cold-hardened as compared to non-hardened thylakoids upon resuspension in the presence of low concentrations of osmoticum. This was correlated with an inability of the cold-hardened chloroplast thylakoids to maintain a significant transrnembrane H+ gradient. The results indicate that cold-hardened thylakoid membranes required an osmotic concentration (0.8 M) twice as high as non-hardened thylakoids (0.4 M) to produce the same initial rate of H+ uptake. In addition, the capacity to produce a proton gradient in cold-hardened thylakoids was less stable than that in non-hardened thylakoids regardless of the osmotic concentration tested. It is concluded that development of rye thylakoid membranes at low temperature results in a differential sensitivity to low osmoticum and thus extreme caution should be exercised when comparing the structure and function of isolated thylakoids developed under contrasting thermal regimes.  相似文献   

5.
Although glutaraldehyde alkylates protein NH2 groups to the same extent in unstacked and stacked thylakoids, the photosynthetic electron transport of the stacked membranes is always more inhibited. Inhibition of photosystem II electron transport, measured in the presence of lipophilic Hill oxidants, is 20–30% in unstacked and 60–70% in stacked thylakoids. Photosystem I electron transport is nearly completely inhibited in both preparations, but in the case of stacked thylakoids maximal inhibition occurs at a lower glutaraldehyde level than in unstacked thylakoids. In contrast, the photooxidation of the reaction center chromophore of photosystem I (P700) is unaffected by the glutaraldehyde treatment of either stacked or unstacked chloroplasts. The results are discussed with regard to the accessibility of membrane sites to exogenous electron transport cofactors, in view of the observation that N-methylphenazonium methosulfate, a quencher of electronically excited chlorophyll a, partitions more easily into the pigment domains of the glutaraldehyde-fixed unstacked thylakoids.  相似文献   

6.
The plastoquinone pool is the central switching point of both respiratory and photosynthetic electron transport in cyanobacteria. Its redox state can be monitored noninvasively in whole cells using chlorophyll fluorescence induction, avoiding possible artifacts associated with thylakoid membrane preparations. This method was applied to cells of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 to study respiratory reactions involving the plastoquinone pool. The role of the respiratory oxidases known from the genomic sequence of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 was investigated by a combined strategy using inhibitors and deletion strains that lack one or more of these oxidases. The putative quinol oxidase of the cytochrome bd-type was shown to participate in electron transport in thylakoid membranes. The activity of this enzyme in thylakoids was strongly dependent on culture conditions; it was increased under conditions where the activity of the cytochrome b(6)f complex alone may be insufficient for preventing over-reduction of the PQ pool. In contrast, no indication of quinol oxidase activity in thylakoids was found for a second alternative oxidase encoded by the ctaII genes.  相似文献   

7.
The large form of ferredoxin-NADP reductase (FNR-L) was prepared by reassociating the small form of the enzyme (FNR-S) and connectein isolated from spinach leaves. The re-formed FNR-L could be rebound to depleted thylakoids from which most of the "built-in" FNR-L had been extracted. This rebinding of FNR-L brought about good restoration of the diminished NADP photoreducing activity of depleted thylakoids. Although rebinding of FNR-S to the depleted thylakoids took place with or without connectein, restoration of the NADP photoreducing activity required involvement of connectein. It becomes clear that involvement of connectein in the binding of FNR to thylakoids is indispensable for giving the physiological function of NADP photoreducing activity to the flavin enzyme on the surface of thylakoid membranes. It is most likely that FNR-L is the functional entity at the final step of the photosynthetic electron transport system in chloroplasts.  相似文献   

8.
The interactions of four nytroxyl spin labels with photosynthetic membranes (thylakoids and liposomes) have been investigated by the Electron Paramagnetic Resonance technique (EPR). The obtained data (shapes of EPR spectra and kinetics of light induced reactions) allow us to localize the interactions between the markers and photosynthetic membranes. The pH influence on the reaction kinetics has also been investigated. On the basis of these experimental data, a theoretical model of the interaction between spin labels and the photosynthetic electron transport chain is proposed.  相似文献   

9.
This article deals with aspects of the reciprocal interaction between the activity of chloroplast membranes and their microenvironment. The artificial matrices used in the present work to immobilize thylakoids (albumin-glutaraldehyde matrix, polyurethane foam) can be regarded as weak ion exchangers. Thus, the distribution of the solute between the matrix surface and the external solution should, at least in part, be governed by a Donnan equilibrium. The influence of a high ionic strength medium (750mM potassium citrate) on the kinetic parameters (K(p1) V(m)) and on the stability of the photosynthetic activity of immobilized chloroplast membranes has been studied. The results show similarities in behavior of the two supports studied in that, for both, a high concentration of salt (citrate) increases the apparent affinity for ferricyanide and allows a better transformation of this electron acceptor in CSTR experiments.  相似文献   

10.
The mechanism of chilling resistance was investigated in 4-week-old plants of the chilling-sensitive cultivated tomato, Lycopersicon esculentum Mill. cv H722, and rooted cuttings of its chilling-resistant wild relative, L. hirsutum Humb. and Bonpl., which were chilled for 3 days at 2°C with a 14-hour photoperiod and light intensity of 250 micromoles per square meter per second. This chilling stress reduced the chlorophyll fluorescence ratio, stomatal conductance, and dry matter accumulation more in the sensitive L. esculentum than in the resistant L. hirsutum. Photosynthetic CO2 uptake at the end of the chilling treatment was reduced more in the resistant L. hirsutum than in L. esculentum, but recovered at a faster rate when the plants were returned to 25°C. The reduction of the spin trap, Tiron, by isolated thylakoids at 750 micromoles per square meter per second light intensity was taken as a relative indication of the tendency for the thylakoids to produce activated oxygen. Thylakoids isolated from the resistant L. hirsutum with or without chilling treatment were essentially similar, whereas those from chilled leaves of L. esculentum reduced more Tiron than the nonchilled controls. Whole chain photosynthetic electron transport was measured on thylakoids isolated from chilled and control leaves of the two species at a range of assay temperatures from 5 to 25°C. In both species, electron transport of the thylakoids from chilled leaves was lower than the controls when measured at 25°C, and electron transport declined as the assay temperature was reduced. However, the temperature sensitivity of thylakoids from chilled L. esculentum was altered such that at all temperatures below 20°C, the rate of electron transport exceeded the control values. In contrast, the thylakoids from chilled L. hirsutum maintained their temperature sensitivity, and the electron transport rates were proportionately reduced at all temperatures. This sublethal chilling stress caused no significant changes in thylakoid galactolipid, phospholipid, or protein levels in either species. Nonchilled thylakoid membranes from L. hirsutum had fourfold higher levels of the fatty acid 16:1, than those from L. esculentum. Chilling caused retailoring of the acyl chains in L. hirsutum but not in L. esculentum. The chilling resistance of L. hirsutum may be related to an ability to reduce the potential for free radical production by close regulation of electron transport within the chloroplast.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Thylakoid membranes isolated from spinach leaves were used as the biological sensing material to elaborate a biosensor for the detection of small amount of the herbicides atrazine and diuron. Free and immobilized thylakoid membranes were compared for their responses to inhibition by herbicides by following the variation of the photocurrent. Immobilized thylakoid membranes were twice as sensitive to inhibition by herbicides than the native thylakoids.  相似文献   

12.
A micro-test using immobilized thylakoid membranes as sensing element in a micro-electrochemical cell has been developed to assess impairment at the level of the light-driven transport of electrons. In this study, thylakoids isolated from spinach leaves were either immobilized by entrapment in poly(vinylalcohol) bearing styrylpyridinium groups or by chemical immobilization in an albumin-glutaraldehyde crosslinked matrix. The two immobilization procedures were compared upon the sensitivity of the immobilized materials to detect nine herbicides targetting photosystem II. Despite the largely differing mode of immobilization, the procedures led to strikingly similar detection capabilities for herbicides. Inherent characteristics of both immobilization procedures are also discussed.  相似文献   

13.
A simple and rapid procedure for preparing thylakoid membranes that are active in photosynthetic electron transport from diverse phytoplankton species is described. The method requires disruption of algal cells with glass beads, exposure to mild hypotonic stress, and subsequent enrichment of the thylakoid membranes by differential centrifugation. Isolated thylakoid membranes were assayed for photosynthetic electron transport activity by measuring rates of oxygen consumption and oxygen production, using a variety of electron donors and acceptors. In the dinoflagellate Gonyaulax polyedra Stein, a relatively broad pH optimum between 7.0 and 8.0 was determined for the whole chain electron transport from water to methyl viologen. The preparation maintained maximum activity for 45 min following the preparation. The assay for photosystem I activity in G. polyedra, determined as electron flow from ascorbate/2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol to methyl viologen, had a somewhat narrower pH optimum around 8.0. Rates of whole chain photosynthetic electron transport on a per cell and on a per chlorophyll a basis were shown to decrease dramatically with cell age in batch cultures of G. polyedra. Using the procedures optimized for G. polyedra, reproducible rates of electron transport on a per cell chlorophyll a basis were also measured in cultures of the dinoflagellate Glenodinium sp., the diatom Nitzschia closterium (Ehrenberg 1839) Wm. Smith 1853 and the chrysophyte Monochrysis lutheri Droop {= Pavlova lutheri (Droop) Green}. Other electron transport assays applied to G. polyedra, and that resulted in comparable rates to those found in other algal groups, include the photosystem II assay from water to diaminodurene/ferricyanide and the photosystem I assay from durohydroquinone to methyl viologen.  相似文献   

14.
Triazine-resistant (R) and susceptible (S) biotypes of Chenopodium album, Conyza bonaeriensis and Setaria glauca were compared in terms of photosynthetic activity, chloroplast ultrastructure, and polar-lipid composition of thylakoid membranes. Concerning photosynthetic activity, R relative to S biotypes showed lower rates in photosystem II electron transport (R/S ratios in the 0.3-0.5 range), which were correlated with increases in the ratio of I to P levels of the fluorescence emission curve, but similar rates in both whole-chain electron transport by thylakoids and photosynthetic oxygen evolution at different light intensities and at temperatures of 20 and 30°C by leaf discs. Concerning chloroplast structural characteristics, R and S biotypes did not show differences in degree of thylakoid appression and chlorophyll a/b ratio. However, thylakoid polar-lipids of R biotypes exhibited a higher degree of unsaturation, specially, in its monogalactosyl diglyceride fraction; they were richer in trans-hexadecenoic acid in its phospholipid fraction and they had higher contents in monoglactosyl diglyceride. The above results are discussed in relation to possible differences in photosynthetic performance between R and S plants.  相似文献   

15.
Light-induced proton translocation coupled to sulfide-dependent electron transport has been studied in isolated thylakoids of the cyanobacterium Oscillatoria limnetica. The thylakoids are obtained by osmotic shock of washed spheroplasts, prepared with glycine-betaine as the osmotic stabilizer. 13C NMR studies suggests that betaine is the major osmoregulator in O. limnetica. Thylakoid preparations obtained from both sulfide-induced anoxygenic cells and noninduced oxygenic cells are capable of proton pumping coupled to phenazinemethosulfate-mediated cyclic electron flow. However, only in the induced thylakoids can sulfide-dependent proton gradient (delta pH) formation be measured, using either NADP or methyl viologen as the terminal acceptor. Sulfide-dependent delta pH formation correlates with a high-affinity electron donation site (apparent Km 44 microM at pH 7.9). This site is not lost upon washing of the thylakoids. In addition, both sulfide-dependent electron transport and delta pH formation are sensitive to inhibitors of the cytochrome b6f complex such as 2-n-nonyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide, 2,4-dinitrophenyl ether of 2-iodo-4-nitrothymol, or stigmatellin. Sulfide-dependent NADP photoreduction of low affinity (which does not saturate by as much as 7 mM sulfide) is detected in both induced and noninduced thylakoids, but this activity is insensitive to the inhibitors and is not coupled to proton transport. It is suggested that the adaptation of O. limnetica to anoxygenic photosynthesis involves the induction of a thylakoid factor(s) which creates a high-affinity site for sulfide, and the transfer of its electrons via the cytochrome b6f complex, coupled to proton translocation.  相似文献   

16.
The interactions between chloroplast membranes and their microenvironment within artificial matrices (albumin-glutaraldehyde matrix, polyurethane foam) where investigated. Particularly, the influence of a high-ionic-strength medium (0.75 M potassium citrate) on the stability of the photosynthetic ferricyanide reduction by immobilized thylakoids has been studied. A method of data analysis based on a nonlinear identification method combined with the numerical integration of the equation of the transient state of the continuous stirred tank reactor (CSTR) is proposed to estimate the actual degradation of the photosynthetic electron transfer. A statistical analysis achieved on the parameter values has allowed a quantitative assessment of the global behavior of immobilized chloroplast membranes. From the mathernatical analysis of the experimental data, we demonstrate that citrate used in the reaction media prevents the photoinactivation of the electron transfer chain whatever the nature of the matrix or the type of the reactor. The use of an albumin-glutaraldehyde matrix or an open reactor during experiments also has allowed a better stabilization of the photosystems under operational conditions.  相似文献   

17.
Leaves of Spinacia oleracea inoculated with tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) strain PV230 develop mild chlorotic and mosaic symptoms of infection. Thylakoid membranes isolated from these infected leaves showed a reduced Fv/Fm ratio for chlorophyll fluorescence kinetics, at 25 degrees C. The photosystem II (PS II)-mediated electron-transport rate was inhibited 50%, whereas PS I activity was unaffected by virus infection. Protein analysis indicated that TMV coat protein was associated with thylakoids, in particular with the PS II fraction. The results demonstrate that TMV-infected S. oleracea shows inhibition of photosynthetic electron transport through PS II. We propose that the inhibition of photosynthetic activity results from the association of viral coat protein with the PS II complex.  相似文献   

18.
Chloroplasts were isolated from the diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutumby French press treatment and centrifugation. Electron micrographsof the isolated chloroplasts indicated that they lacked mostof the envelope membranes but retained the lamellar structurecharacteristic of the diatom chloroplast; three thylakoids weregrouped to form a band which transversed the chloroplast. Agirdle lamella also composed of three thylakoids surroundedthese transversal lamellae. The isolated chloroplasts were activein photosynthetic electron transport reactions including theHill reaction, the Mehler reaction and the system I reaction. (Received May 18, 1979; )  相似文献   

19.
Thylakoid membranes isolated from cold tolerant, herbaceous monocots and dicots grown at 5°C exhibit a 1.5-fold to 2.7-fold increase in light saturated rates of photosystem I (PSI) electron transport compared to thylakoids isolated from the same plant species grown at 20°C. This was observed only when either water or reduced dichlorophenolindophenol was used as an electron donor. The apparent quantum yield for PSI electron transport was not affected by growth temperature. The higher light saturated rates of PSI electron transport in 5°C thylakoids had an absolute requirement for the presence of Na+ and Mg+2. The accessibility of reduced dichlorophenolindophenol to the donor site was not affected by growth temperature since 5°C and 20°C thylakoids exhibited no significant difference in the concentration of this electron donor required for half-maximal PSI activity. The cation dependent higher rates of light saturated PSI activity were also observed when rye thylakoids were developed under intermittent light conditions at 5°C. Thus, this cation effect on PSI activity appeared to be independent of light harvesting complex I and II. The extent of the in vitro reversibility of this cation effect appeared to be limited by an inherent decay process for PSI electron transport. The rate of decay for PSI activity was greatest when thylakoids were isolated in the absence of NaCl and MgCl2. We conclude that exposure of plants to low growth temperatures induces a reorganization of thylakoid membranes which increases the light saturated rates of PSI electron transport with no change in the apparent quantum efficiency for this reaction. Cations are required to stabilize this reorganization.  相似文献   

20.
S. Grafflage  G. H. Krause 《Planta》1986,168(1):67-76
Chloroplast thylakoid membranes were isolated from leaves of unhardened and cold-acclimated spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.). For freezethaw treatment, the membranes were suspended in complex media composed to simulate the solute concentrations in the chloroplast stroma in the unhardened and hardened states of the leaves. In particular, high concentrations of amino acids were applied for simulating the hardened state. After frost treatment, photosynthetic activities and chlorophyll fluorescence parameters of the thylakoids were tested to determine the degree of freezing damage. The results revealed a pattern of freezing injury similar to that observed upon frost treatment of thylakoids in situ. A major manifestation of damage was the inhibition of photosynthetic electron transport. Uncoupling of photophosphorylation, which is the dominating effect of freezing of thylakoids suspended in binary solutions (e.g., containing one sugar and one inorganic salt), was also visible but less pronounced in the complex media. Thylakoids obtained from cold-acclimated leaves did not exhibit an increased frost tolerance in vitro, as compared with thylakoids from unhardened plants. The results, furthermore, indicated a strong protective effect of free amino acids at the concentrations and composition found in chloroplasts of hardened leaves. The presence of inorganic salts in the complex media slightly stabilized rather than damaged the membranes during freezing. It is concluded that inactivation of thylakoids in situ may be understood as the destabilizing action of the combined solutes surrounding the thylakoids, occurring when solute concentration is raised due to freezing of water.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - Hepes 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piper-azineethanesulfonic acid - PSI photosystem I - PSII photosystem II  相似文献   

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