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1.
The divalent-cation-specific ionophore A23187 is used to define two components of the slow fluorescence quenching of type a spinach chloroplasts: ionophore-reversible and ionophore-resistant quenching. Ionophore-reversible quenching predominates at relatively low light intensities and approaches saturation as light levels are increased. It is sensitive to uncouplers and to 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) and is dark reversible. At high light intensities the bulk (> 80%) of slow fluorescence quenching is ionophore-resistant. Ionophore-resistant quenching is stimulated by carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenyl hydrazone (CCCP) at pH 7.6 and by both CCCP and methylamine at pH 9.0. It is insensitive to DCMU and is not reversed in subsequent darkness. Taken together, the two components account for all quenching observed in Type A chloroplasts.Ionophore-reversible quenching is identified with the Mg2+-mediated fluorescence quenching described by Krause (Biochim. Biophys. Acta (1974) 333, 301–313) and by Barber and Telfer (in Membrane Transport in Plants (Dainty, J., and Zimmermann, U., eds.), pp. 281–288, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1974). Ionophore-resistant quenching, a first-order process requiring high light, resembles the quenching reported by Jennings et al. (Biochim. Biophys. Acta (1976) 423, 264–274).The resolution of the fluorescence quenching phenomenon into two distinct components reconciles the apparently contradictory observations of these earlier investigations.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Huber SC  Maury W 《Plant physiology》1980,65(2):350-354
Exogenous Mg2+ (2 millimolar) altered the stromal pH of intact spinach chloroplasts. Without added KCl in the medium, Mg2+ decreased the stromal pH in the light by approximately 0.3 pH unit. External KCl (25 millimolar) largely prevented the acidification caused by Mg2+. Effects on the stromal pH were not caused by changes in H+ pumping across the thylakoid membrane because Mg2+ had no effect on the light-induced quenching of atebrin fluorescence by intact chloroplasts. However, Mg2+ affected H+ fluxes across the envelope. Addition of Mg2+ to intact chloroplasts in the dark caused a significant acidification of the medium that was dependent on the presence of K+.  相似文献   

4.
5.
The divalent-cation-specific ionophore A23187 is used to define two components of the slow fluorescence quenching of type a spinach chloroplasts: ionophore-reversible and ionophore-resistant quenching. Ionophore-reversible quenching predominates at relatively low light intensities and approaches saturation as light levels are increased. It is sensitive to uncouplers and to 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) and is dark reversible. At high light intensities the bulk (greater than 80%) of slow fluorescence quenching is ionophore-resistant. Ionophore-resistant quenching is stimulated by carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenyl hydrazone (CCCP) at pH 7.6 and by both CCCP and methylamine at pH 9.0. It is insensitive to DCMU and is not reversed in subsequent darkness. Taken together, the two components account for all quenching observed in Type A chloroplasts. Ionophore-reversible quenching is identified with the Mg2+-mediated fluorescence quenching described by Krause (Biochim. Biophys. Acta (1974) 333, 301-313) and by Barber and Telfer (in Membrane Transport in Plants (Dainty, J., AND Zimmermann, U., eds.), pp. 281-288, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1974). Ionophore-resistant quenching, a first-order process requiring high light, resembles the quenching reported by Jennings et al. (Biochim. Biophys. Acta (1976) 423, 264-274). The resolution of the fluorescence quenching phenomenon into two distinct components reconciles the apparently contradictory observations of these earlier investigations.  相似文献   

6.
Effects of the ionophore A23187 on isolated broken and intact chloroplasts in the pH range of 6.2 to 7.6 have been studied. In both types of chloroplasts, uncoupling of photosynthetic electron transport by A23187 (6–10 μm) was mediated either by Mg2+ or—in the absence of divalent cations (i.e., when EDTA was added to the medium)—by high concentrations of Na+, but not of K+ ions. At increased concentrations of the ionophore (above about 10 μm) and high pH (7.2 to 7.6), uncoupling in broken chloroplasts was also mediated by K+ ions. The inhibition of the energy-dependent slow decline of chlorophyll fluorescence in intact chloroplasts by the ionophore (which denotes uncoupling) is reversed by EDTA in the presence of K+, but not of Na+ ions. In 3-(3′,4′-dichlorophenyl)1,1-dimethylurea-poisoned intact chloroplasts, the yield of variable chlorophyll fluorescence is lowered by A23187 + EDTA and increased again by addition of NaCl or KCl. Chlorophyll fluorescence spectra at 77 °K of intact chloroplasts incubated with A23187 + EDTA indicated that the distribution of excitation energy had changed in favor of photosystem I, as expected from a depletion of Mg2+. This change was reversed by MgCl2+, KCl, or NaCl. From a comparison of low-temperature fluorescence spectra of broken and intact chloroplasts at different levels of Mg2+ in the medium, the concentration of free Mg2+ in the stroma of the intact chloroplasts at pH 7.6 in the dark was estimated at 1 to 4 mm. The results show that in chloroplasts the specificity of A23187 for divalent cations is limited. In the presence of EDTA, the ionophore mediates fast Na+H+ exchange across thylakoid membranes, whereas K+ is transferred much less efficiently. Both Na+ and K+ ions seem to be transported readily across the chloroplast envelope by the action of the ionophore, leading to an exchange of Mg2+ for monovalent cations at the thylakoid membrane surfaces in intact chloroplasts.  相似文献   

7.
The role of monovalent cations in the photosynthesis of isolated intact spinach chloroplasts was investigated. When intact chloroplasts were assayed in a medium containing only low concentrations of mono- and divalent cations (about 3 mval l-1), CO2-fixation was strongly inhibited although the intactness of chloroplasts remained unchanged. Addition of K+, Rb+, or Na+ (50–100 mM) fully restored photosynthesis. Both the degree of inhibition and restoration varied with the plant material and the storage time of the chloroplasts in low-salt medium. In most experiments the various monovalent cations showed a different effectiveness in restoring photosynthesis of low-salt chloroplasts (K+>Rb+>Na+). Of the divalent cations tested, Mg2+ also restored photosynthesis, but to a lesser extent than the monovalent cations.In contrast to CO2-fixation, reduction of 3-phosphoglycerate was not ihibited under low-salt conditions. In the dark, CO2-fixation of lysed chloroplasts supplied with ATP, NADPH, and 3-phosphoglycerate strictly required the presence of Mg2+ but was independent of monovalent cations. This finding excludes a direct inactivation of Calvin cycle enzymes as a possible basis for the inhibition of photosynthesis under low-salt conditions.Light-induced alkalization of the stroma and an increase in the concentration of freely exchangeable Mg2+ in the stroma, which can be observed in normal chloroplasts, did not occur under low-salt conditions but were strongly enhanced after addition of monovalent cations (50–100 mM) or Mg2+ (20–50 mM).The relevance of a light-triggered K+/H+ exchange at the chloroplast envelope is discussed with regard to the light-induced increase in the pH and the Mg2+ concentration in the stroma, which are thought to be obligatory for light activation of Calvincycle enzymes.  相似文献   

8.
Evidence is presented which suggests that N-methylphenazonium methosulfate suppresses the fluorescence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea-poisoned chloroplasts by two mechanisms: (i) indirectly, by catalyzing the buildup of the phosphorylating potential XE across the thylaknid membrane; (ii) directly, by interacting with excited chlorophyll molecules.Arguments in support of direct quenching are as follows: (i) N-methylphenazonium methosulfate is an efficient quencher of the fluorescence of chlorophyll a in methanol; (ii) the dark-irreversible portion of the light-induced fluorescence lowering in the presence of N-methylphenazonium-methosulfate increases with the concentration of the cofactor, (iii) N-methylphenazonium methosulfate lowers the fluorescence of chloroplasts at an excitation that is too weak to allow formation of XE.Ascorbate-reduced N-methylphenazonium methosulfate (PMS-SQ) is a more efficient direct quencher of chloroplast fluorescence than oxidized PMS because the thylakoid membrane is more permeable to the reduced species. The permeability to these quenchers is enhanced by the light-induced protonation of the membrane, and suppressed by added Mg2+. Different permeability barriers appear to exist for the direct and for the XE-mediated quenching by N-methylphenazonium methosulfate, since the latter is known to be insensitive to the presence of Mg2+.  相似文献   

9.
Peter Horton  Michael T. Black 《BBA》1983,722(1):214-218
Fluorescence induction curves in chloroplasts phosphorylated by the thylakoid protein kinase activated at low light intensity and high chlorophyll concentration have been measured. At 5 mM Mg2+, phosphorylation did not preferentially quench variable fluorescence. At 1 mM, preferential quenching of variable fluorescence was observed, indicating a second effect of phosphorylation at low Mg2+ (Horton, P. and Black, M.T. (1982) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 680, 22–27). Comparison of the extent of fluorescence decrease and the resulting ratio of variable to maximum fluorescence after phosphorylation and after lowering Mg2+ concentration demonstrated a difference between these two mechanisms of lowering of fluorescence. The significance of these results in terms of how phosphorylation may alter membrane organization is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
The effects of uncouplers of photophosphorylation on the P-S1 transient of the fluorescence induction in darkadapted intact chloroplasts of Bryopsis maxima were studied to examine the mechanism of light-dependent regulatory changes in electron transport. (1) Carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP) and nigericin slowed down the fluorescence quenching from P to S1, whereas the transient was significantly accelerated by the addition of NH4Cl and methylamine. (2) The P-S1 decline was slowed down at low pH of the suspending medium, suggesting sensitivity of the transient to the stroma pH. The inhibitory effect of nigericin was markedly enhanced at low pH and at low KCl concentrations, whereas the ionophore stimulated the transient at high pH and at high KCl concentrations. Similar results were obtained on the combined addition of CCCP and valinomycin. (3) Nigericin and the CCCP-valinomycin couple altered the internal pH of intact chloroplast through the H+-K+ exchange across the outer limiting membrane. The fluorescence decline was rapid at alkaline internal pH but was suppressed with lowering internal pH below 8.0 (4) A similar internal pH dependence of the transient was obtained when the internal pH was changed by the addition of NH4Cl and acetate. (5) It is proposed that the photoactivation of electron transport is regulated by the stroma pH. The progress of the photoactivation is slow at acidic or neutral pH but is significantly accelerated by light-induced alkalinization near the light-regulation site of electron transport located on the outer surface of the thylakoid membrane.  相似文献   

11.
Patricia M. Sokolove 《BBA》1979,545(1):155-164
The conditions under which ionophore A23187 can be used as a probe of Mg2+ involvement in the reactions of intact (Type A) spinach chloroplasts have been investigated by monitoring ionophore-induced reversal of slow fluorescence quenching. The following observations were made: (1) A23187-dependent reversal of quenching is a strong function of pH. This is consistent with competition between protons and divalent cations for the carboxylic acid moiety of the ionophore. (2) In the presence of exogenous Mg2+, quenching reversal by A23187 is significantly slowed. It is suggested that formation of the dimeric A23187 · Mg2+ complex delays action of the ionophore at the thylakoid membrane by slowing equilibration of the ionophore among chloroplast membrane phases. (3) In the absence of Mg2+, significant interaction of A23187 with certain monovalent cations — Li+ and Na+, but not K+ — is observed. Evaluations of the interaction of ionophore A23187 with specific biological systems and inferences of divalent cation involvement, or lack thereof, must take these limitations into account.  相似文献   

12.
Engelbert Weis 《Planta》1982,154(1):41-47
The heat-sensitivity of photosynthetic oxygen evolution of thylakoids isolated from spinach increases by increasing the pH above neutral value. The temperature for inactivation (transition temperature) is lowered from about 45° C (pH 6.0–7.4) to 33°C (pH 8.5). Similar results are obtained with intact chloroplasts. At pH 7.0 the transition temperature of washed thylakoids decreases by lowering the salt concentration below 20 mM with monovalent cations (Li+, Na+, K+) and below 3–4 mM with divalent cations (Mg2+, Ca2+, Sr2+). Illumination decreases the heat-sensitivity of oxygen evolution in intact chloroplasts, but even increases the heat-sensitivity in uncoupled chloroplasts. In intact chloroplasts the transition temperature of the heat-induced rise in chlorophyll fluorescence yield (Fo; see Schreiber and Armond 1978) decreases from 44° C to 38° C when the pH of the suspending medium is increased from 6.5 to 8.5. At 20° C, Fo is almost insensitive to pH (6.0–8.5). At 40° C, however, Fo is constant between 6.0 and 7.0, but strongly increases by increasing the pH above neutral value. The results are discussed in terms of a close relation between electrostatic forces at the thylakoid membrane and thermal sensitivity of photosynthetic apparatus. It is suggested that the heat-sensitivity of the photosystem II complex partially depends on the ionization state of fixed groups having alkaline pK. The packed volume of thylakoids suspended in a low salt medium increases when the temperature is increased above 30° C (pH 7.0) and above 20° C (pH 8.0), respectively. This result suggests a heat-induced increase in surface charge density of the thylakoid membrane.Abbreviations HEPES N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N-2-ethane sulfonic acid - MES morpholinoethane sulfonic acid - MOPS 2-N-morpholinopropane sulfonic acid - TRICIN N-[tris(hydroxymethyl)-methyl] glycine  相似文献   

13.
The nature of the light-induced ΔpH-dependent decline of chlorophyll a fluorescence in intact and broken spinach chloroplasts was investigated. Fluorescence spectra at 77 K of chloroplasts frozen in the low-fluorescent (high ΔpH) state showed increased ratios of the band peak at 735 nm (Photosystem (PS) I fluorescence) to the peak at 695 nm (PS II fluorescence). The increase in the F735F695 ratio at 77 K was related to the extent of fluorescence quenching at room temperature. Normalization of low-temperature spectra with fluorescein as an internal standard revealed a lowering of F695 that was not accompanied by an increase in F735: preillumination before freezing decreased both F695 and, to a lesser extent, F735 in the spectra recorded at 77 K. Fluorescence induction of chloroplasts frozen in the low-fluorescent state showed a markedly decreased variable fluorescence (Fv) of PS II, but no concomitant increase in initial fluorescence (F0) of PS I. Thus, the buildup of a proton gradient at the thylakoid membrane, as reflected by fluorescence quenching at room temperature, affects low-temperature fluorecence emission in a manner entirely different from the effect of removal of Mg2+, which is thought to alter the distribution of excitation energy in favor of PS I. The ΔpH-dependent quenching therefore cannot be caused by such change in energy distribution and is suggested to reflect increased thermal deactivation.  相似文献   

14.
The fluorescent probe 9-amino-6-chloro-2-methoxy acridine was used to study the energy transduction in the thylakoid and cell membranes of the cyanobacterium Plectonema boryanum. Apart from light-driven electron transfer, the dark endogenous respiration also leads to energization resulting in an ACMA fluorescence response, that is sensitive to the electron flow inhibitor 2, 5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone, to the energy transfer inhibitors dicyclohexylcarbodiimide and venturicidine and to the uncoupler 5-chloro-3-t-butyl-2-chloro-4-nitrosalicylanilide.In spheroplasts, in which the cell membranes have lost their capacity to maintain a proton gradient, the respiration-and light-induced ACMA fluorescence changes (quenching) are similar to those in chloroplasts. In intact cells a combination of reversible quenching and enhancement of ACMA fluorescence was found. This dualistic behaviour is supposedly caused by an opposite orientation of the thylakoid and cell membranes. ACMA quenching at the level of the thylakoids was obtained either by respiratory or photosynthetic electron transfer and gave similar responses to those obtained in the spheroplasts. The slower ACMA fluorescence enhancement, only observed in cells with intact cell membranes, also evoked by both respiration and light-induced energization is sensitive to the compounds mentioned above and in addition to KCN.Our results support the view [8] that dark oxidation of substrates by O2 proceeds via the thylakoid membrane and terminates at a CN- sensitive oxidase located in the cell membrane which requires the involvement of a mobile cytoplasmic redox mediator.Abbreviations ACMA 9-amino-6-chloro-2-methoxy acridine - chl a chlorophyll a - DBMIB 2, 5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone - DCCD dicyclohexylcarbodiimide - DNP dinitrophenol - DNP-INT dinitrophenyl ether of 2-iodo-4-nitrothymol - FCCP carbonylcyanide-p-trifluoro-methoxy phenylhydrazone - S-13 5-chloro-3-t-butyl-2-chloro-4-nitrosalicylanilide - tricine N-2 (2-Hydroxy-1, 1-bis (hydroxymethyl) ethyl)-glycine - Tris Tris (hydroxymethyl) amino methane  相似文献   

15.
The effects of the tertiary amines tetracaine, brucine and dibucaine on photophosphorylation and control of photosynthetic electron transport in isolated chloroplasts of Spinacia oleracea were investigated. Tertiary amines inhibited photophosphorylation while the related electron transport decreased to the rates, observed under non-phosphorylating conditions. Light induced quenching of 9-aminoacridine fluorescence and uptake of 14C-labelled methylamine in the thylakoid lumen declined in parallel with photophosphorylation, indicating a decline of the transthylakoid proton gradient. In the presence of ionophoric uncouplers such as nigericin, no effect of tertiary amines on electron transport was seen in a range of concentration where photophosphorylation was inhibited. Under the influence of the tertiary amines tested, pH-dependent feed-back control of photosystem II, as indicated by energy-dependent quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence, was unaffected or even increased in a range of concentration where 9-aminoacridine fluorescence quenching and photophosphorylation were inhibited. The data are discussed with respect to a possible involvement of localized proton flow pathways in energy coupling and feed-back control of electron transport.Abbreviations 9-AA 9-aminoacridine - J e flux of photosynthetic electron transport - PC photosynthetic control - pH1 H+ concentration in the thylakoid lumen - pmf proton motive force - P potential quantum yield of photochemistry of photosystem II (with open reaction centers) - Q A primary quinone-type electron acceptor of photosystem II - q Q photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence - q E energy-dependent quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence - q AA light-induced quenching of 9-amino-acridine fluorescence  相似文献   

16.
A. Vianello  F. Macrì 《Planta》1981,153(5):443-446
At 5 and 10 g ml-1 concentration, zearalenone (F-2), a mycotoxin produced by a number of species of the genus Fusarium, causes an inhibition of the oxidative phosphorylation of isolated plant mitochondria, while at 20 and 40 g ml-1 it causes uncoupling. However, when the mitochondria are pre-incubated for 20 min with F-2, the uncoupling appears to be the prevailing effect. F-2 is also able to inhibit the mitochondrial ATPase activity (Mg2+-dependent). Conversely, F-2 (40 g ml-1) does not alter the ATP level of maize roots and only slightly affects the ATPase activity of pea stem and maize root microsomal fractions. In addition, F-2 (10–40 g ml-1) inhibits ATP synthesis catalyzed by rat liver mitochondria. It is suggested that the phytotoxicity of F-2, also known for its ability to collapse the transmembrane electric potential of maize roots, may be mainly linked to its ability to increase the proton permeability of the cell, similar to the common uncouplers.Abbreviations F-2 zearalenone - DCCD N,N-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide - PCCP carbonyl cyanide, p-trifluoromethoxiphenylhydrazone - CBT Cerospora beticola toxin  相似文献   

17.
Light increased the initial rate and the extent of glycerate uptake by intact isolated chloroplasts. Half-maximum stimulation occurred with 10 to 20 watts per square meter of red light. Preillumination of chloroplasts enhanced uptake in a subsequent dark period. The light effect was abolished by DCMU and also by uncoupling agents such as nigericin and carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenyl hydrazone.

Arsenate and phlorizin only inhibited glycerate uptake to the extent that metabolism in the chloroplast was decreased by insufficient ATP. The concentration of glycerate accumulated in the chloroplast stroma was not significantly decreased. Chloroplasts isolated from young pea shoots (Pisum sativum, L. cv Massey Gem) were depleted of ATP by incubation with inorganic pyrophosphate or with ATP analogs. These treatments also decreased metabolism of glycerate but the actual concentration of glycerate accumulated in the chloroplast stroma was not decreased.

The results indicate that glycerate uptake is driven by ion gradients established across the chloroplast envelope in the light. ATP is not involved in the transport of glycerate into chloroplasts, being required only for the subsequent metabolism of glycerate in the chloroplast stroma. It is proposed that glycerate transport may be coupled to the proton gradient established in the light across the chloroplast envelope.

  相似文献   

18.
The light-dependent quenching of 9-aminoacridine fluorescence was used to monitor the state of the transthylakoid proton gradient in illuminated intact chloroplasts in the presence or absence of external electron acceptors. The absence of appreciable light-dependent fluorescence quenching under anaerobic conditions indicated inhibition of coupled electron transport in the absence of external electron acceptors. Oxygen relieved this inhibition. However, when DCMU inhibited excessive reduction of the plastoquinone pool in the absence of oxygen, coupled cyclic electron transport supported the formation of a transthylakoid proton gradient even under anaerobiosis. This proton gradient collapsed in the presence of oxygen. Under aerobic conditions, and when KCN inhibited ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase and ascorbate peroxidase, fluorescence quenching indicated the formation of a transthylakoid proton gradient which was larger with oxygen in the Mehler reaction as electron acceptor than with methylviologen at similar rates of linear electron transport. Apparently, cyclic electron transport occured simultaneously with linear electron transport, when oxygen was available as electron acceptor, but not when methylviologen accepted electrons from Photosystem I. The ratio of cyclic to linear electron transport could be increased by low concentrations of DCMU. This shows that even under aerobic conditions cyclic electron transport is limited in isolated intact chloroplasts by excessive reduction of electron carriers. In fact, P700 in the reaction center of Photosystem I remained reduced in illuminated isolated chloroplasts under conditions which resulted in extensive oxidation of P700 in leaves. This shows that regulation of Photosystem II activity is less effective in isolated chloroplasts than in leaves. Assuming that a Q-cycle supports a H+/e ratio of 3 during slow linear electron transport, vectorial proton transport coupled to Photosystem I-dependent cyclic electron flow could be calculated. The highest calculated rate of Photosystem I-dependent proton transport, which was not yet light-saturated, was 330 mol protons (mg chlorophyll h)–1 in intact chloroplasts. If H+/e is not three but two proton transfer is not 330 but 220 mol (mg Chl H)–1. Differences in the regulation of cyclic electron transport in isolated chloroplasts and in leaves are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
20.
John D. Mills  Geoffrey Hind 《BBA》1979,547(3):455-462
Intense illumination of isolated, intact, spinach chloroplasts triggers the well known proton-pumping Mg2+ ATPase activity of coupling factor, which can be assayed in subsequently lysed chloroplasts by monitoring ATP-driven quenching of 9-aminoacridine fluorescence. The light-triggered ATPase activity decays slowly in the dark and is inhibited by N,N′-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide. After osmotic lysis and washing of the chloroplasts, preillumination no longer triggers maximal proton-pumping ATPase until methylviologen and dithiothreitol are added to the medium. It is suggested that intact organelles contain soluble or loosely bound cofactors necessary for light-triggering of coupling factor ATPase. On osmotic lysis, these endogenous cofactors are diluted or inactivated and must be replaced by addition of a dithiol reagent and an electron acceptor.  相似文献   

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