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1.
Initial results of the airborne LIDAR measurement of photochemical quantum yield, ΦPo, and functional absorption cross-section, σPS II, of Photosystem II (PS II) are reported. NASA's AOL3 LIDAR was modified to implement short-pulse pump-and-probe (SP-P&P) LIDAR measurement protocol. The prototype system is capable of measuring a pump-induced increase in probe-stimulated chlorophyll fluorescence, ΔF/Fsat, along with the acquisition of `conventional' LIDAR-fluorosensor products from an operational altitude of 150 m. The use of a PS II sub-saturating probe pulse increases the response signal but also results in excessive energy quenching (EEQ) affecting the ΔF/Fsat magnitude. The airborne data indicated up to a 3-fold EEQ-caused decline in ΔF/Fsat, and 2-fold variability in the EEQ rate constant over a spatial scale a few hundred kilometers. Therefore, continuous monitoring of EEQ parameters must be incorporated in the operational SP-P&P protocol to provide data correction for the EEQ effect. Simultaneous airborne LIDAR measurements of ΦPo and σPS II with EEQ correction were shown to be feasible and optimal laser excitation parameters were determined. Strong daytime ΔF/Fsat decline under ambient light was found in the near-surface water layer over large aquatic areas. An example of SP-P&P LIDAR measurement of phytoplankton photochemical and fluorescent characteristics in the Chesapeake Bay mouth is presented. Prospects for future SP-P&P development and related problems are discussed. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

2.
Chlorophyll fluorescence quenching induced by low concentrations of m-dinitrobenzene (DNB) is investigated. In intact spinach chloroplasts DNB causes photochemical and non-photochemical quenching. The two forms of quenching are distinguished by applying the saturation pulse method with a new type of modulation fluorometer. Half-maximal photochemical quenching is observed at about 3 micromolar DNB. It is inhibited by 3-(3,4 dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethylurea (DCMU) and by 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone (DBMIB). Photochemical quenching by DNB leads to suppression of the I-P transient in a fluorescence induction curve. Upon application of saturating continuous light, the increase of fluorescence yield is separated into a photochemical and a thermal part. DNB causes suppression of only the slowest sub-component of the thermal part, in analogy to the action of Hill reagents. Simultaneous measurements of oxygen exchange rate and fluorescence reveal that a part of DNB induced quenching is accompanied by oxygen uptake. Most DNB-induced non-photochemical quenching is prevented by nigericin and, hence, can be considered energy-dependent quenching. The small component persisting in the presence of nigericin is identical to the one observed with methylviologen and other Hill reagents, likely to be due to static quenching by oxidized plastoquinone. The presented data confirm the original finding of Etienne and Lavergne (Biochim Biophys Acta 283: 268–278, 1972) that low concentrations of DNB selectively affect the thermal component of variable fluorescence. However, while these authors interpreted the quenching by a non-photochemical mechanism, the present investigation emphasizes a photochemical mechanism, in analogy to the effect of electron acceptors or mediators.Abbreviations DBMIB 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethylurea - DNB m-dinitrobenzene - PGA 3-phosphoglycerate - PMS phenazinemethosulphate - PS I and PS II photosystems I and II  相似文献   

3.
Plants respond to excess light by a photoprotective reduction of the light harvesting efficiency. The notion that the non-photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence can be reliably used as an indicator of the photoprotection is put to a test here. The technique of the repetitive flash fluorescence induction is employed to measure in parallel the non-photochemical quenching of the maximum fluorescence and the functional cross-section (sigma(PS II)) which is a product of the photosystem II optical cross-section a(PS II) and of its photochemical yield Phi(PS II) (sigma (PS II) = a(PS II) Phi(PS II)). The quenching is measured for both, the maximum fluorescence found in a single-turnover flash (F(M) (ST)) and in a multiple turnover light pulse (F(M) (MT)). The experiment with the diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum confirmed that, in line with the prevalent model, the PS II functional cross-section sigma (PS II) is reduced in high light and restored in the dark with kinetics and amplitude that are closely matching the changes of the F(M) (ST) and F(M) (MT) quenching. In contrast, a poor correlation between the light-induced changes in the PS II functional cross-section sigma (PS II) and the quenching of the multiple-turnover F(M) (MT) fluorescence was found in the green alga Scenedesmus quadricauda. The non-photochemical quenching in Scenedesmus quadricauda was further investigated using series of single-turnover flashes given with different frequencies. Several mechanisms that modulate the fluorescence emission in parallel to the Q(A) redox state and to the membrane energization were resolved and classified in relation to the light harvesting capacity of Photosystem II.  相似文献   

4.
Michael Bradbury  Neil R. Baker 《BBA》1981,635(3):542-551
An analysis of the photo-induced decline in the in vivo chlorophyll a fluorescence emission (Kautsky phenomenon) from the bean leaf is presented. The redox state of PS II electron acceptors and the fluorescence emission from PS I and PS II were monitored during quenching of fluorescence from the maximum level at P to the steady state level at T. Simultaneous measurement of the kinetics of fluorescence emission associated with PS I and PS II indicated that the ratio of PS I/PS II emission changed in an antiparallel fashion to PS II emission throughout the induction curve. Estimation of the redox state of PS II electron acceptors at given points during P to T quenching was made by exposing the leaf to additional excitation irradiation and determining the amount of variable PS II fluorescence generated. An inverse relationship was found between the proportion of PS II electron acceptors in the oxidised state and PS II fluorescence emission. The interrelationships between the redox state of PS II electron acceptors and fluorescence emission from PS I and PS II remained similar when the shape of the induction curve from P to T was modified by increasing the excitation photon flux density. The contributions of photochemical and non-photochemical quenching to the in vivo fluorescence decline from P to T are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Koblížek  M.  Ciscato  M.  Komenda  J.  Kopencký  J.  Šiffel  P.  Masojídek  J. 《Photosynthetica》1999,37(2):307-323
The dark-adapted cells of the green alga Spongiochloris sp. were exposed to "white light" of 1000 μmol(photon) m−2 s−1 for 2 h and then dark adapted for 1.5 h. Changes of photochemical activities during photoadaptation were followed by measurement of chlorophyll (Chl) fluorescence kinetics, 77 K emission spectra, photosynthetic oxygen evolution, and pigment composition. We observed a build-up of slowly-relaxing non-photochemical quenching which led to a decrease of the Fv/Fm parameter and the connectivity. In contrast to the depression of Fv/Fm (35 %) and the rise of non-photochemical quenching (∼ 1.6), we observed an increase in effective absorption cross-section (20 %), Hill reaction (30 %), photosynthetic oxygen evolution (80 %), and electron transport rate estimated from the Chl fluorescence analysis (80 %). We showed an inconsistency in the presently used interpretation schemes, and ascribe the discrepancy between the increase of effective absorption cross-section and the photosynthetic activities on one side and the effective non-photochemical quenching on the other side to the build-up of a quenching mechanism which dissipates energy in closed reaction centres. Such a type of quenching changes the ratio between thermal dissipation and fluorescence without any effect on photochemical yield. In this case the Fv/Fm ratio cannot be used as a measure of the maximum photochemical yield of PS2. This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

6.
Synechococcus sp. PCC 7942 (Anacystis nidulans R2) contains two forms of the Photosystem II reaction centre protein D1, which differ in 25 of 360 amino acids. D1: 1 predominates under low light but is transiently replaced by D1:2 upon shifts to higher light. Mutant cells containing only D1:1 have lower photochemical energy capture efficiency and decreased resistance to photoinhibition, compared to cells containing D1:2. We show that when dark-adapted or under low to moderate light, cells with D1:1 have higher non-photochemical quenching of PS II fluorescence (higher qN) than do cells with D1:2. This is reflected in the 77 K chlorophyll emission spectra, with lower Photosystem II fluorescence at 697–698 nm in cells containing D1:1 than in cells with D1:2. This difference in quenching of Photosystem II fluorescence occurs upon excitation of both chlorophyll at 435 nm and phycobilisomes at 570 nm. Measurement of time-resolved room temperature fluorescence shows that Photosystem II fluorescence related to charge stabilization is quenched more rapidly in cells containing D1:1 than in those with D1:2. Cells containing D1:1 appear generally shifted towards State II, with PS II down-regulated, while cells with D1:2 tend towards State I. In these cyanobacteria electron transport away from PS II remains non-saturated even under photoinhibitory levels of light. Therefore, the higher activity of D1:2 Photosystem II centres may allow more rapid photochemical dissipation of excess energy into the electron transport chain. D1:1 confers capacity for extreme State II which may be of benefit under low and variable light.Abbreviations D1 the atrazine-binding 32 kDa protein of the PS II reaction centre core - D1:1 the D1 protein constitutively expressed during acclimated growth in Synechococcus sp. PCC 7942 - D1:2 an alternate form of the D1 protein induced under excess excitation in Synechococcus sp. PCC 7942 - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethyl urea - Fo minimal fluorescence in the dark-adapted state - Fo minimal fluorescence in a light-adapted state - FM maximum fluorescence with all quenching mechanisms at a minimum, measured in presence of DCMU - FM maximal fluorescence in a light-adapted state, measured with a saturating flash - FMdark maximal fluorescence in the dark-adapted state - FV variable fluorescence in a light-adapted state (FM-Fo) - PAM pulse amplitude modulated fluorometer - qN non-photochemical quenching of PS II fluorescence - qN (dark) qN in the dark adapted state - qP photochemical quenching of fluorescence  相似文献   

7.
Temperature response curves of chlorophyll a fluorescence parameters were used to assess minimum sub-zero temperature assuring functioning of photosynthetic photochemical processes in photosystem II (PS II) of Antarctic lichens. Umbilicaria Antarctica and Xanthoria elegans were measured within the temperature range from −20 to +10°C by a fluorometric imaging system. For potential (F V/F M) and actual (Φ II) quantum yields of photochemical processes the minimum temperature was found to be between −10 and −20°C. Non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) of absorbed excitation energy increased with temperature drop reaching maximum NPQ at −15°C. Image analysis revealed intrathalline heterogeneity of chlorophyll a fluorescence parameters with temperature drop. Temperature response of Φ II exhibited an S-curve with pronounced intrathalline differences in X. elegans. The same relation was linear with only limited intrathalline difference in U. antarctica. The results showed that Antarctic lichen species were well adapted to sub-zero temperatures and capable of performing primary photosynthesis at −15°C.  相似文献   

8.
热锻炼对甘蓝幼苗叶片激发能分配的影响   总被引:3,自引:1,他引:2  
以喜温凉的蔬菜甘蓝为试材,研究了热锻炼与对照甘蓝幼苗叶片光合速率和叶绿素荧光参数对高温胁迫的响应.结果表明,叶片温度在25-35℃之间,热锻炼苗和对照苗叶片叶绿素可变荧光(Fv)、光化学猝灭(qP)、非光化学猝灭(qN)、PSⅡ化学效率(ФPSⅡ)没有明显的变化;当叶温高于35℃时。热锻炼苗的Fv、qP和中ФPSⅡ均明显高于对照,37℃时Fv、qP和ФPSⅡ分别比对照高53%、24%和86%;qN较对照低22%,尤其是与光抑制(光破坏)有关的qNs明显降低,以维持较高的高能态猝灭(qNf)耗散过剩激发能。保护PSⅡ反应中心不受破坏。减轻了光抑制,这与热锻炼幼苗叶片在高温下具有较高的光合能力是一致的。  相似文献   

9.
10.
Chlorophyll fluorescence constitutes a simple, rapid, and non-invasive means to assess light utilization in Photosystem II (PS II). This study examines aspects relating to the accuracy and applicability of fluorescence for measurement of PS II photochemical quantum yield in intact leaves. A known source of error is fluorescence emission at 730 nm that arises from Photosystem I (PS I). We measured this PS I offset using a dual channel detection system that allows measurement of fluorescence yield in the red (660 nm < F < 710 nm) or far red (F > 710 nm) region of the fluorescence emission spectrum. The magnitude of the PS I offset was equivalent to 30% and 48% of the dark level fluorescence F0 in the far red region for Helianthus annuus and Sorghum bicolor, respectively. The PS I offset was therefore subtracted from fluorescence yields measured in the far red spectral window prior to calculation of PS II quantum yield. Resulting values of PS II quantum yield were consistently higher than corresponding values based on emission in the red region. The basis for this discrepancy lies in the finite optical thickness of the leaf that leads to selective reabsorption by chlorophyll of red fluorescence emission originating in deeper cell layers. Consequently, red fluorescence measurements preferentially sense emission from chloroplasts in the uppermost layer of the leaf where levels of photoprotective nonphotochemical quenching are higher due to increased photon density. It is suggested that far red fluorescence, corrected for the PS I offset, provides the most reliable quantitative basis for calculation of PS II quantum yield because of reduced sensitivity of these measurements to gradients in leaf transmittance and quenching capacity. This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Diurnal measurements of chlorophyll a fluorescence from cacti (Nopalea cochenillifera, Opuntia ficus-indica, and Opuntia wentiana) growing in northern Venezuela were used to determine photochemical fluorescence quenching related to the reduction state of the primary electron acceptor of PS II as well as non-photochemical fluorescence quenching which reflects the fraction of energy going primarily into radiationless deexcitation. The cladodes used in this study were oriented such that one surface received direct sunlight in the morning and the other one during the afternoon. Both surfaces exhibited large increases in radiationless energy dissipation from the photochemical system accompanied by decreases in PS II photochemical efficiency during direct exposure to natural sunlight. During exposure to sunlight in the morning, dissipation of absorbed light energy through photosynthesis and radiationless energy dissipation was sufficient to maintain Q, the primary electron acceptor for PS II, in a low reduction state. During exposure to sunlight in the afternoon, however, the reduction state of Q rose to levels greater than 50%, presumably due to a decrease in photosynthetic electron transport as the decarboxylation of the nocturnally accumulated malic acid was completed. Exposure to direct sunlight in the afternoon also led to more sustained increases in radiationless energy dissipation. Furthermore, the increases in radiationless energy dissipation during exposure of a water-stressed cladode of O. wentiana to direct sunlight were much greater than those from other well-watered cacti, presumably due to sustained stomatal closure and decreased rates of photosynthetic electron transport. These results indicate that the radiationless dissipation of absorbed light is an important process in these CAM plants under natural conditions, and may reflect a protective mechanism against the potentially damaging effects of the accumulation of excessive energy, particularly under conditions where CO2 availability is restricted.Abbreviations CAM crassulacean acid metabolism - F o instantaneous fluorescence emission - F M maximum fluorescence emission - F v variable fluorescence emission - K D rate constant for radiationless energy dissipation in the antenna chlorophyll - PFD photon flux density - PS I photosystem I - PS II photosystem II - Q primary electron acceptor of photosystem II - q NP non-photochemical fluorescence quenching - q P photochemical fluorescence quenching - T C cladode temperature  相似文献   

12.
The light-induced chlorophyll (Chl) fluorescence decline at 77 K was investigated in segments of leaves, isolated thylakoids or Photosystem (PS) II particles. The intensity of chlorophyll fluorescence declines by about 40% upon 16 min of irradiation with 1000 μmol m−2 s−1 of white light. The decline follows biphasic kinetics, which can be fitted by two exponentials with amplitudes of approximately 20 and 22% and decay times of 0.42 and 4.6 min, respectively. The decline is stable at 77 K, however, it is reversed by warming of samples up to 270 K. This proves that the decline is caused by quenching of fluorescence and not by pigment photodegradation. The quantum yield for the induction of the fluorescence decline is by four to five orders lower than the quantum yield of QA reduction. Fluorescence quenching is only slightly affected by addition of ferricyanide or dithionite which are known to prevent or stimulate the light-induced accumulation of reduced pheophytin (Pheo). The normalised spectrum of the fluorescence quenching has two maxima at 685 and 695 nm for PS II emission and a plateau for PS I emission showing that the major quenching occurs within PS II. ‘Light-minus-dark’ difference absorbance spectra in the blue spectral region show an electrochromic shift for all samples. No absorbance change indicating Chl oxidation or Pheo reduction is observed in the blue (410–600 nm) and near infrared (730–900 nm) spectral regions. Absorbance change in the red spectral region shows a broad-band decrease at approximately 680 nm for thylakoids or two narrow bands at 677 and 670–672 nm for PS II particles, likely resulting also from electrochromism. These absorbance changes follow the slow component of the fluorescence decline. No absorbance changes corresponding to the fast component are found between 410 and 900 nm. This proves that the two components of the fluorescence decline reflect the formation of two different quenchers. The slow component of the light-induced fluorescence decline at 77 K is related to charge accumulation on a non-pigment molecule of the PS II complex. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

13.
In the late 1960s, I identified an aspect of the kinetics of chlorophyll fluorescence in algal cells that I was unable to explain in terms of photochemical quenching. I proposed a novel regulatory mechanism for the distribution of light energy to photosystems I and II, which is now known by the term of “state transitions.” I also examined the “cation-dependent redistribution of light energy” to photosystems I and II and the “energy-dependent quenching” of chlorophyll fluorescence. At that time, financial constraints prevented me from measuring the emission and action spectra of chlorophyll fluorescence at liquid-nitrogen temperature and the light quality-dependent changes in the yield of chlorophyll fluorescence at room temperature. The financial problems were solved by constructing several pieces of electronic equipment using skills obtained by repairing radios when I was a high-school and college student.  相似文献   

14.
Diurnal cycle of chlorophyll fluorescence parameters was done in Colocasia esculenta L. (swamp taro) grown in marshy land under sun or under shade. The sun leaves maintained higher electron transport rate (ETR) and steady state to initial fluorescence ratio (Fs/F0) than shade leaves. In spite of lower ETR, higher photochemical quenching (PQ), and effective quantum yield of photosystem 2 (ΦPS2) was evident in shade plants compared to plants exposed to higher irradiance. ETR increased linearly with increase in irradiance more under low irradiance (r 2 = 0.84) compared to higher irradiance (r 2 = 0.62). The maximum quantum yield of PS 2 (Fv/Fm) did not differ much in sun and shade leaves with the exception of midday when excess of light energy absorbed by plants under sun was thermally dissipated. Hence swamp taro plants adopted different strategies to utilize radiation under different irradiances. At higher irradiance, there was faster decline in proportion of open PS 2 centers (PQ) and excess light energy was dissipated through non-photochemical quenching (NPQ). Under shade, absorbed energy was effectively utilized resulting in higher ΦPS2.  相似文献   

15.

The saturation pulse method provides a means to distinguish between photochemical and non-photochemical quenching, based on the assumption that the former is suppressed by a saturating pulse of light (SP) and that the latter is not affected by the SP. Various types of non-photochemical quenching have been distinguished by their rates of dark relaxation in the time ranges of seconds, minutes, and hours. Here we report on a special type of non-photochemical quenching, which is rapidly induced by a pulse of high-intensity light, when PS II reaction centers are closed, and rapidly relaxes again after the pulse. This high-intensity quenching, HIQ, can be quantified by pulse-amplitude-modulation (PAM) fluorimetry (MULTI-COLOR-PAM, high sensitivity combined with high time resolution) via the quasi-instantaneous post-pulse fluorescence increase that precedes recovery of photochemical quenching in the 100–400-µs range. The HIQ amplitude increases linearly with the effective rate of quantum absorption by photosystem II, reaching about 8% of maximal fluorescence yield. It is not affected by DCMU, is stimulated by anoxic conditions, and is suppressed by energy-dependent non-photochemical quenching (NPQ). The HIQ amplitude is close to proportional to the square of maximal fluorescence yield, Fm′, induced by an SP and varied by NPQ. These properties are in line with the working hypothesis of HIQ being caused by the annihilation of singlet excited chlorophyll a by triplet excited carotenoid. Significant underestimation of maximal fluorescence yield and photosystem II quantum yield in dark-acclimated samples can be avoided by use of moderate SP intensities. In physiologically healthy illuminated samples, NPQ prevents significant lowering of effective photosystem II quantum yield by HIQ, if excessive SP intensities are avoided.

  相似文献   

16.
The fluorescence induction F(t) of dark-adapted chloroplasts has been studied in multi-turnover 1 s light flashes (MTFs). A theoretical expression for the initial fluorescence rise is derived from a set of rate equations that describes the sequence of transfer steps associated with the reduction of the primary quinone acceptor Q A and the release of photochemical fluorescence quenching of photosystem II (PSII). The initial F(t) rise in the hundreds of μs time range is shown to follow the theoretical function dictated by the rate constants of light excitation (k L) and release of donor side quenching (k si ). The bi-exponential function shows sigmoidicity when one of the two rate constants differs by less than one order of magnitude from the other. It is shown, in agreement with the theory, that the sigmoidicity of the fluorescence rise is variable with light intensity and mainly, if not exclusively, determined by the ratio between rate of light excitation and the rate constant of donor side quenching release.  相似文献   

17.
1. The curves representing the reciprocal fluorescence yield of chlorophyll a of Photosystem II (PS II) in Chlorella vulgaris as a function of the concentration of m-dinitrobenzene in the states P Q and P Q-, are found to be straight parallel lines; P is the primary donor and Q the primary acceptor of PS II. In the weakly trapping state P Q- the half-quenching of dinitrobenzene is about 0.2 mM, in vitro it is of the order of 10 mM. The fluorescence yield as a function of the concentration of a quencher is described for three models for the structure of pigment systems: the model of separate units, the model of limited energy transfer between the units, and the matrix model. If it is assumed that the rate constant of quenching by dinitrobenzene is high and thus the number of dinitrobenzene molecules per reaction center low, it can be concluded that the pigment system of PS II in C. vulgaris is a matrix of chlorophyll molecules in which the reaction centers are embedded. Theoretical and experimental evidence is consistent with such an assumption.

For Cyanidium caldarium the zero fluorescence yield Ф0 and its quenching by dinitrobenzene were found to be much smaller than the corresponding quantities for C. vulgaris. Nevertheless, our measurements on C. caldarium could be interpreted by the assumption that the essential properties (rate constants, dinitrobenzene quenching) of PS II are the same for these two species belonging to such widely different groups.

2. The measured dinitrobenzene concentrations required for half-quenching in vivo and other observations are explained by (non-rate-limiting) energy transfer between the chlorophyll a molecules of PS II and by the assumptions that dinitrobenzene is approximately distributed at random in the membrane and does not diffuse during excitation.

3. The fluorescence kinetics of C. vulgaris during a 350 ns laser flash of variable intensity could be simulated on a computer using the matrix model. From the observed fluorescence quenching by the carotenoid triplet (CT) and the measurement of the number of CT per reaction center via difference absorption spectroscopy, the rate constant for quenching of CT is calculated to be kT = 3.3 · 1011 s−1 which is almost equal to the rate constant of trapping by an open reaction center (Duysens, L.N.M. (1979) CIBA Foundation Symposium 61 (New Series), pp. 323–340).

4. The fluorescence quenching by CT in non-treated spinach chloroplasts after a 500 ns laser flash (Breton, J., Geacintov, N.E. and Swenberg, C.E. (1979) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 548, 616–635) could be explained within the framework of the matrix model when the value for kT is used as given in point 3.

5. The observations mentioned under point 1 indicate that the fluorescence yield Ф0 for centers in trapping state P Q is probably for a fraction exceeding 0.8 emitted by PS II.  相似文献   


18.
The relation between oxygen evolution rate (OER) and quantum yield of photochemical reactions in photosystem 2 (ΦPS2) was examined in lichen symbiotic alga Trebouxia erici Ahmadjian (strain UTEX 911) exposed to different irradiances and osmotic stress (2 M sucrose for 60 h). Linear relationship was found between OER and ΦPS2 in control cell suspension within irradiance range of 0 – 500 μmol m−2 s−1. Under osmotic stress, OER and ΦPS2 were significantly reduced. Relation between OER and ΦPS2 was curvilinear due to strong osmotically-induced inhibition of OER at high irradiance. The highest used irradiance (500 μmol m−2 s−1) was photoinhibitory for osmotically-stressed T. erici because non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) increased substantially. Energy-dependent quenching represented major part of NPQ increase. Osmotic stress led also to the reduction of capacity of photochemical processes in PS 2 (FV/FM) and increase in F0/FM. These changes indicated negative effects of osmoticum on structure and function of photosynthetic apparatus.  相似文献   

19.
Comparative analysis revealed that a xantha rice mutant (cv. Huangyu B) had higher ratios of chlorophyll (Chl) a/b and carotenoids/Chl, and higher photosynthetic efficiency than its wild type parent (cv. II32 B). Unexpectedly, the mutant had higher net photosynthetic rate (P N) than II32 B. This might have resulted from its lower non-photochemical quenching (qN) but higher maximal photochemical efficiency (FV/FM), higher excitation energy capture efficiency of photosystem 2 (PS2) reaction centres (FV′/FM′), higher photochemical quenching (qP), higher effective PS2 quantum yield (ΦPS2), and higher non-cyclic electron transport rate (ETR). This is the first report of a chlorophyll mutant that has higher photosynthetic efficiency and main Chl fluorescence parameters than its wild type. This mutant could become a unique material both for the basic research on photosynthesis and for the development of high yielding rice cultivars.  相似文献   

20.
《BBA》1985,806(1):81-92
Fluorescence enhancement phenomena and quenching by exciton-exciton annihilation on subnanosecond and nanosecond time-scales were investigated in spinach chloroplasts utilizing picosecond laser pulse pairs (530 nm, 30 ps wide) of equal intensity, spaced apart in time by variable delays of Δt = 0−6 ns. This new method was devised to study the effect of pulse energies (1·1010–2·1015 photons per cm2) on the overall fluorescence yield in order to deduce the degree of correlation between the two pulses as a function of Δt. In the case of open reaction centers (F0 state) in Photosystem II (PS II), it is shown that the quenching effect of excitons generated by the first pulse on the fluorescence yield of the second pulse diminishes with increasing Δt with a characteristic decorrelation time of 140 ± 60 ps. This effect is attributed to either (1) the decay of mobile excitons in the light-harvesting antenna pigment bed as these excitons migrate towards the PS II reaction centers and the associated smaller core antenna pigment pools, or (2) the decay of a quenching state of the reaction center (and/or core antenna) which appears following a rapid (less than 140 ps) trapping of the excitons initially created in the antenna pigment bed. The absence of a significant decay component of exciton quenchers with a lifetime comparable to the 300–600 ps intermediate phase of fluorescence decay kinetics suggests that this phase, although contributing to more than half of the integrated fluorescence emission signal, is not caused by freely mobile exitons migrating in a lake of pigments, but originates instead from smaller pigment pools to which the excitons have migrated. It is proposed that bimolecular exciton-exciton annihilation in these smaller domains dominates annihilation in the larger antenna pigment bed. In the case of closed reaction centers (Fmax state), the decorrelation time between the two pulses is increased to 400 ± 100 ps, which is also attributed to either a mobile exciton component or to the decay of a quenching state of the reaction center. At low pulse intensities (below approx. 2 · 1012 photons per cm2) anomalous fluorescence enhancement effects are noted, which are clearly linked to the existence of initially open PS II reaction centers. These enhancement effects are different from the well-known fluorescence induction phenomena which occur on longer time-scales, and are tentatively attributed to variations in the quenching efficiencies of transitory photochemical states of PS II reaction centers.  相似文献   

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