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1.
Chlorophyll fluorescence Imaging and Microscopy PAM fluorometry were applied to study spatial dynamics of photosystem II quantum yield ( DF/Fm¢ ) \left( {\Delta F/F_m^\prime } \right) and non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) in resting and electrically stimulated Chara corallina cells in the absence and presence of the hydrophilic electron acceptor methyl viologen (MV) in the external medium. Electrical excitation of the plasma membrane temporarily enhanced the heterogeneity of photosynthetic patterns under physiological conditions (in the absence of MV), but irreversibly eliminated these patterns in the presence of MV. These findings suggest that the action potential (AP) of the excitable plant cell affects the spatial patterns of photosynthesis and chlorophyll fluorescence through different pathways operated in the absence and presence of MV. Based on the extent of NPQ as an indicator of MV-dependent electron flow, it is supposed that MV cannot permeate into the chloroplasts of photosynthetically active “acid cell regions” but gains an immediate access to the stroma of these chloroplasts after triggering of an AP. The AP-triggered MV-dependent non-photochemical quenching in the chloroplasts of acidic cell regions was routinely observed at 0.1 mM Ca2+ in the medium but not at elevated (2 mM) external Ca2+ concentration. The results are interpreted in terms of competition between two permeant divalent ion species, Ca2+ and MV2+, for their passage through the voltage-gated calcium channels of the plasma membrane. It is proposed that the herbicidal activity of MV in characean cells, here serving as model object, can be manipulated by triggering AP and varying Ca2+ concentration in the environmental medium.  相似文献   

2.
Effects of inhibitors and cofactors of cyclic and noncyclic electron transport on nonphotochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence induced by action potential (AP) was investigated in Chara corallina cells. Under control conditions, energy-dependent quenching (qE) develops upon the increase in photosynthetically active radiation (PAR); it also arises and reversibly disappears after AP generation at moderate irradiances. The treatment of cells with diuron (DCMU) completely eliminated qE established at high irradiances and qE induced by AP generation. The activation of cyclic electron transport by DCMU in combination with phenazine methosulfate restored qE at high irradiances but did not restore qE imposed after AP generation. The presence in the medium of a PSI acceptor, methyl viologen at concentrations from 100 μM to 0.83 mM had no effect on fluorescence and photosynthetic activity of chloroplasts until the application of a single excitatory stimulus. Once a single AP was generated in the presence of methyl viologen, it induced irreversible qE at a wide range of irradiances, which indicates the AP-triggered redirection of a part of electron flow from the main pathway to the artificial acceptor. It is concluded that AP generation opens access for permeation of a divalent cation methyl viologen from the medium to the chloroplast stroma across two membrane barriers, the plasmalemma and the inner membrane of the chloroplast envelope.  相似文献   

3.
In isolated barley chloroplasts, the presence of 2 millimolar ZnSO4 inhibits the electron transport activity of photosystem II, as measured by photoreduction of dichlorophenolindophenol, O2 evolution, and chlorophyll a fluorescence. The inhibition of photosystem II activity can be restored by the addition of the electron donor hydroxylamine or diphenylcarbazide, but not by benzidine and MnCl2. These observations suggest that Zn inhibits electron flow at the oxidizing side of photosystem II at a site prior to the electron donating site(s) of hydroxylamine and diphenylcarbazide. No inhibition of photosystem I-dependent electron transport by 3 millimolar ZnSO4 is observed. However, with concentrations of ZnSO4 above 5 millimolar, photosystem I activity is partially inactivated. Washing Zn2+-treated chloroplasts partially restores the O2-evolving activity.  相似文献   

4.
Hardt H  Kok B 《Plant physiology》1978,62(1):59-63
Bundle sheath and mesophyll chloroplasts from Zea mays showed comparable rates of O2 evolution, which amounted to about half of the rate observed in spinach (Spinacia oleracea) chloroplasts.

Ratios of 4.5, 4.6, and 6.2 Mn2+ atoms per 400 chlorophylls were observed in mesophyll, bundle sheath, and spinach chloroplasts, respectively. These ratios roughly correspond to the observed O2 evolution rates.

Rates of electron transport from water to methylviologen (photosystem I and II) in both types of corn chloroplasts were about one-third that in spinach. Compared to spinach, transport rates from reduced diaminodurene to methylviologen (photosystem I) were about one-third and greater than one-half in mesophyll and bundle sheath material, respectively.

In both types of corn chloroplasts, electron flow from photosystem II to P700 was abnormal. This observation, together with the low rates of all activities, suggests that damage occurred during isolation. Such damage may limit the quantitative significance of observations made with these materials (including the following data).

Measurements of flash yields of O2 evolution or O2 uptake showed that the size of the photosynthetic unit was the same in photosystems I and II and in all three types of chloroplasts (about 400 chlorophylls per equivalent).

Similarity of the photochemical cross-section of the two photosystems in the three preparations was also found in optical experiments: that is the half-times of the fluorescence rise in the presence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) (photosystem II) and of the photooxidation of P700 (photosystem I).

The ratio of P700 to chlorophyll appeared to be about 2-fold higher in bundle sheath chloroplasts than in the other materials (1/200 versus 1/400).

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5.
Photoinduced changes in the redox state of photosystem I (PSI) primary donor, chlorophyll P700 were studied by measuring differential absorbance changes of pea leaves at 810 nm minus 870 nm (ΔA 810). The kinetics of ΔA 810 induced by 5-s pulses of white light were strongly affected by preillumination. In dark-adapted leaves, the light pulse caused a transient oxidation of P700 and its subsequent reduction. An identical pulse, applied after 30-s preillumination with white light, induced sequential appearance of two peaks of P700 oxidation. These kinetic differences of ΔA 810 reflect regulatory changes of electron flow on the donor and acceptor sides of PSI induced by illumination of leaf for 20–40 s. The amplitude of ΔA 810 second peak depended nonmonotonically on the dark interval preceding illumination: it increased with the length of dark period in the range 3–10 s and decreased upon longer dark intervals. The second wave of ΔA 810 disappeared after the treatment with combination of ionophores preventing ΔpH and electric potential formation at the thylakoid membrane. In leaves treated with monensin eliminating ΔpH only, the ΔA 810 signals become incompletely reversible and were characterized by slow relaxation in darkness. The results indicate an important role of electrochemical proton gradient in generation of the second wave of light-induced P700 oxidation.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
Isolated pea chloroplasts were washed once in 10 mm NaCl and were then suspended in “low-salt” medium. Approximately one-half of the photosystem II reaction centers of these salt-depleted membranes were found to be photochemically inactive. These units became active in the presence of low concentrations of divalent cations (5–10 mm Mg2+) or high concentrations of monovalent cations (150–200 mm Na+), as evidenced by a twofold increase in the steady-state flash yield of oxygen evolution under short (~10-μs) saturating repetitive flashes (two per second). The half-maximal increase in flash yield occurred at ~2 mM Mg2+ or ~75 mm Na+. The flash yield of hydroxylamine oxidation in these low-salt chloroplasts increased twofold after Mg2+ addition, indicating that the cation action was close to the reaction-center chlorophyll complex. The relation between flash yield and dark time between flashes was not changed significantly by Mg2+, indicating that the rate-limiting step of the overall electron transport (H20 —→ ferricyanide) was not affected significantly. When the rate-limiting step was bypassed using silicomolybdate as the photosystem II electron acceptor (in the presence of diuron), the reduction rate doubled in the presence of Mg2+, even under continuous, saturating light. In glutaraldehyde-fixed chloroplasts, Mg2+ did not increase the flash yield of O2 evolution; this suggests that protein conformational changes in the chloroplast membranes were involved in Mg2+ activation of photosystem II centers.  相似文献   

8.
Differential absorbance measurements and fluorometry were applied to examine the impact of dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD, an inhibitor of H+ conductance in thylakoid membranes) and nigericin (a K+/H+ antiporter) on photoinduced redox state transients of chlorophyll P700 and the induction curves of chlorophyll fluorescence in pea (Pisum sativum L., cv. Premium) leaves. The treatment of leaves with DCCD strongly modified the kinetics of P700+ absorbance changes (ΔA 810) by promoting rapid photooxidation of P700. These characteristic changes in ΔA 810 induction kinetics and P700+ accumulation did not appear when the leaves were treated with DCCD in the presence of nigericin. In addition to opposite modifications of ΔA 810 kinetics evoked by permeability-modifying agents, the fluorescence induction curves differed conspicuously depending on leaf incubation in DCCD solutions with or without nigericin. The observed modifications of fluorescence induction curves and ΔA 810 indicate that DCCD suppresses electron transport from photosystem II (PSII) to P700, whereas this inhibition is removed by nigericin. The results suggest that slowing down of the electron transport rate in the presence of DCCD was caused by elevation of ΔpH in thylakoids. The prevention of pH gradient formation in the presence of protonophore lowered also the steady-state P700+ level in far-red irradiated leaves and accelerated the subsequent dark reduction of P700. These findings indicate that PSI-driven cyclic electron flow is accelerated after the removal of the pH gradient.  相似文献   

9.
After a complete removal of Mn from pea subchloroplast photosystem-II (PS II) preparations the electron phototransfer and oxygen evolution are restored upon addition of Mn2+ and Ca2+. Pre-illumination of the sample in the absence of Mn2+ leads to photoinhibition (PI) — irreversible loss of the capability of PS II to be reactivated by Mn2+. The effect of PI is considerably decreased in the presence of Mn2+ (4 Mn atoms per reaction center of PS II) and it is increased in the presence of ferricyanide or p-benzoquinone revealing the oxidative nature of the photoeffect. PI results in suppression of oxygen evolution, variable fluorescence, photoreduction of 2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol from either water or diphenylcarbazide. However, photooxidation of chlorophyll P680, the primary electron donor of PS II as well as dark and photoinduced EPR signal II (ascribed to secondary electron donors D 1 and Z) are preserved. PI is accompanied by photooxidation of 2–3 carotenoid molecules per PS II reaction center (RC) that is accelerated in the presence of ferricyanide and is inhibited upon addition of Mn2+ or diuron. The conclusion is made that PI in the absence of Mn leads to irreversible oxidative inactivation of electron transfer from water to RC of PS II which remains photochemically active. A loss of functional interaction of RC with the electron transport chain as a common feature for different types of PS II photoinhibition is discussed.Abbreviations A photoinduced absorbance changes - DPC diphenylcarbazide - DPIP 2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol - F o constant fluorescence of chlorophyll - F photoinduced changes of Chl fluorescence yield - Mn manganese - P680 the primary electron donor in PS II - PI photoinhibition - PS II photosystem II - Q the primary (quinone) electron acceptor in PS II - RC reaction center  相似文献   

10.
The OJDIP rise in chlorophyll fluorescence during induction at different light intensities was mathematically modeled using 24 master equations describing electron transport through photosystem II (PSII) plus ordinary differential equations for electron budgets in plastoquinone, cytochrome f, plastocyanin, photosystem I, and ferredoxin. A novel feature of the model is consideration of electron in- and outflow budgets resulting in changes in redox states of Tyrosine Z, P680, and QA as sole bases for changes in fluorescence yield during the transient. Ad hoc contributions by transmembrane electric fields, protein conformational changes, or other putative quenching species were unnecessary to account for primary features of the phenomenon, except a peculiar slowdown of intra-PSII electron transport during induction at low light intensities. The lower than F m post-flash fluorescence yield F f was related to oxidized tyrosine Z. The transient J peak was associated with equal rates of electron arrival to and departure from QA and requires that electron transfer from QA ? to QB be slower than that from QA ? to QB ?. Strong quenching by oxidized P680 caused the dip D. Reduced plastoquinone, a competitive product inhibitor of PSII, blocked electron transport proportionally with its concentration. Electron transport rate indicated by fluorescence quenching was faster than the rate indicated by O2 evolution, because oxidized donor side carriers quench fluorescence but do not transport electrons. The thermal phase of the fluorescence rise beyond the J phase was caused by a progressive increase in the fraction of PSII with reduced QA and reduced donor side.  相似文献   

11.
A fifteen minute incubation of spinach chloroplasts with the divalent Ca2+ chelator, EGTA, in concentrations 50–250 μM, inhibits electron transport through both photosystems. All photosystem II partial reactions, including indophenol, ferricyanide and the DCMU-insensitive silicomolybdate reduction are inhibited from 70–100%. The photosystem II donor reaction, diphenyl carbazide → indophenol, is also inhibited, indicating that the inhibition site comes after the Mn2+ site, and that the first Ca2+ effect noted (site II) is not on the water oxidation enzyme, as is commonly assumed, but between the Mn2+ site and plastoquinone A pool. The other photosystem II effect of EGTA (Ca2+ site I), occurs in the region between plastoquinone A and P700 in the electron transport chain of chloroplasts. About 50% inhibition of the reaction ascorbate + TMPD → methyl viologen is given by incubation with 200 μM EGTA for 15 min. Ca2+ site II activity can be restored with 20 mM CaCl2. Ca2+ site I responds to Ca2+ and plastocyanin added jointly. More than 90% activity in the ascorbate + TMPD → methylviologen reaction can be restored. Various ways in which Ca2+ ions could affect chloroplast structure and function are discussed. Since EGTA is more likely to penetrate chloroplast membranes than EDTA, which is known to remove CF1, the coupling factor, from chloroplast membranes, and since Mg2+ ions are ineffective in restoring activity, it is concluded that Ca2+ may function in the electron transport chain of chloroplasts in a hitherto unsuspected manner.  相似文献   

12.
A comparative study of H2 photoproduction by chloroplasts and solubilized chlorophyll was performed in the presence of hydrogenase preparations of Clostridium butyricum. The photoproduction of H2 by chloroplasts in the absence of exogenous electron donors, and with irreversibly oxidized dithiothreitol and cysteine, is thought to be limited by a cyclic transport of electrons wherein methylviologen short-circuits the electron transport in photosystem I. The efficiency of H2 photoproduction by chloroplasts with ascorbate and NADPH is limited by a back reaction between light-reduced methylviologen and the oxidized electron donors. The use of a combination of electron donors (dithiothreitol and ascorbate), providing anaerobiosis without damage to chloroplasts, makes it possible to avoid consumption of reduced methylviologen for the reduction of oxidized electron donors and to exclude the short-circuiting of electron transfer. Under these conditions, photoproduction of H2 was observed to occur with a rate of 350 to 400 micromoles H2 per milligram chlorophyll per hour. In this case, the full electron-transferring capability of photosystem I (measured by irreversible photoreduction of methyl red or O2) is used to produce H2.  相似文献   

13.
《FEBS letters》1985,183(1):161-166
Exposure of chloroplasts to pH < 4.5, or incubation in the presence of phospholipase A2, leads to membrane lipid phase separations and the irreversible formation of non-bilayer lipid structures. Freeze-fracture replicas of the thylakoid membranes of treated chloroplasts are characterized by the presence of aggregates of cylindrical inverted lipid micelles. These structural changes are accompanied by an inhibition of photosystem II-mediated electron transport and a stimulation of photosystem I-mediated transport. These data have important implications both with respect to the factors governing the stability of thylakoid membranes and the use of lipases as probes of chloroplast structure.MembranelipidHexagonalphaseFreeze-fractureChloroplast  相似文献   

14.
Redox Reactions between Kaempferol and Illuminated Chloroplasts   总被引:5,自引:2,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Bleaching of kaempferol by illuminated chloroplasts was observed at 380 nanometers. The photobleaching was stimulated by methyl viologen and suppressed by superoxide dismutase indicating the participation of O2 in the reaction. An electron transfer inhibitor on the oxidizing side of photosystem II, carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP), stimulated the photobleaching and 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea partially suppressed it. The stimulation by CCCP suggests that kaempferol is also bleached on the oxidizing side of photosystem II. The spectrum of kaempferol bleaching in the presence of methyl viologen was the same as that in the presence of CCCP having a maximum in absorbance decrease at around 380 nanometers. When kaempferol was oxidized by KMnO2 or KO2, the oxidized minus reduced difference spectra had also a negative peak at about 380 nanometers. The results suggest that kaempferol was oxidized by illuminated chloroplasts.

The rate of kaempferol photooxidation increased as its concentration was increased from 1 to 100 micromolar. The rate of quercetin photooxidation also increased as its concentration was increased from 1 to 100 micromolar. Concentration of quercetin glycosides higher than 10 micromolar was required to detect their photobleaching by illuminated chloroplasts. From these results, it is postulated that flavonols function as antioxidants in chloroplasts.

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15.
The influence of a series of anions on photosynthetic reaction rates in spinach chloroplasts is descibed. For the most part, the stimulatory and inhibitory effects of these ions can be related to their chaotropic properties, although F, a nonchaotropic anion, inhibits photosystem II reactions and SO 4 2− and F inhibit photophosphorylation. Other exceptions include less severe effects of nitrate than expected and unusual sensitivity to iodide by photosystem I. Since free iodine inhibits photosystem I the iodine effect may be related to photooxidation of I to I0 by photosystem I. Cyclic and noncyclic photophosphorylation usually show greater sensitivity to each chaotrope than photosystems I and II activity, which suggests that phosphorylation factors, such as CF1, are easily detached or dissociated. Bromide is unusual in that it appears to affect photophosphorylation and electron transport at similar low concentrations. The type of cation appears to influence the response to the chaotropic anion, especially as increased inhibition by chloride in the presence of magnesium in photophosphorylation reactions.  相似文献   

16.
Ort DR  Izawa S 《Plant physiology》1973,52(6):595-600
Artificial electron donors to photosystem II provide an important means for characterizing the newly discovered site of energy coupling near photosystem II. However, water oxidation must be completely abolished, without harming the phosphorylation mechanism, for these donor reactions and the associated phosphorylation to withstand rigorous quantitative analysis. In this paper we have demonstrated that treatment of chloroplasts with hydroxylamine plus EDTA at pH 7.5 in the presence of Mg2+ followed by washing to remove the amine is a highly reliable technique for this purpose. The decline of the Hill reaction and the coupled phosphorylation during the treatment were carefully followed. No change in the efficiency of phosphorylation (P/e2 1.0-1.1) was observed until the reactions became immeasurable. Photosystem I-dependent reactions, such as the transfer of electrons from diaminodurene or reduced 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol to methylviologen, and the associated phosphorylation were totally unaffected. It is clear that the hydroxylamine treatment is highly specific, with no adverse effect on the mechanism of phosphorylation itself. Benzidine photooxidation via both photosystems II and I in hydroxylamine-treated chloroplasts (electron acceptor, methylviologen; assayed as O2 uptake) supports phosphorylation with the same efficiency as that observed for the normal Hill reaction (P/e2 = 1.1). An apparent P/e2 ratio of 0.6 was computed for the photooxidation of ascorbate.  相似文献   

17.
Transport of electrons in spinach photosystem II (PSII) whose oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) contains heterogeneous metal clusters 2Mn2Fe and 3Mn1Fe was studied by measuring the fluorescence induction kinetics (FIK). PSII(2Mn,2Fe) and PSII(3Mn,1Fe) preparations were produced using Cadepleted PSII membranes (PSII(–Ca)). It was found that FIK in PSII(2Mn,2Fe) membranes is similar in form to FIK in PSII(–Ca) samples, but the fluorescence yield is lower in PSII(2Mn,2Fe). The results demonstrate that, just as in PSII(–Ca) preparations, there is electron transfer from the metal cluster in the OEC to the primary plastoquinone electron acceptor QA. They also show that partial substitution of Mn cations with Fe has no effect on the electron transport on the acceptor side of PSII. Thus, these data demonstrate the possibility of water oxidation either by the heterogeneous metal cluster or just by the manganese dimer. We established that FIK in PSII(3Mn,1Fe) preparations are similar in form to FIK in PSII(2Mn,2Fe) membranes but PSII(3Mn,1Fe) is characterized by a slightly higher maximal fluorescence yield, Fmax. The electron transfer rate in PSII(3Mn,1Fe) preparations significantly (by a factor of two) increases in the presence of Ca2+, whereas Ca2+ has hardly any effect on the electron transport in PSII(2Mn,2Fe) membranes. In Mndepleted PSII membranes, FIK reaches its maximum (the so-called peak K), after which the fluorescence yield starts to decrease as the result of two factors: the oxidation of reduced primary plastoquinone Q A ? and the absence of electron influx from the donor side of PSII. The replacement of Mn cations by Fe in PSII(?Mn) preparations leads to fluorescence saturation and disappearance of the K peak. This is possibly due to the deceleration of the charge recombination process that takes place between reduced primary electron acceptor Q A ? and oxidized tyrosine Y Z +. which is an electron carrier between the OEC and the primary electron donor P680.  相似文献   

18.
In chloroplasts, photosynthetic electron transport complexes interact with each other via the mobile electron carriers (plastoquinone and plastocyanin) which are in surplus amounts with respect to photosystem I and photosystem II (PSI and PSII), and the cytochrome b 6 f complex. In this work, we analyze experimental data on the light-induced redox transients of photoreaction center P700 in chloroplasts within the framework of our mathematical model. This analysis suggests that during the action of a strong actinic light, even significant attenuation of PSII [for instance, in the result of inhibition of a part of PSII complexes by DCMU or due to non-photochemical quenching (NPQ)] will not cause drastic shortage of electron flow through PSI. This can be explained by “electronic” and/or “excitonic” connectivity between different PSII units. At strong AL, the overall flux of electrons between PSII and PSI will maintain at a high level even with the attenuation of PSII activity, provided the rate-limiting step of electron transfer is beyond the stage of PQH2 formation. Results of our study are briefly discussed in the context of NPQ-dependent mechanism of chloroplast protection against light stress.  相似文献   

19.
Isolated Euglena chloroplasts retain up to 50% of cytochrome 552 on a chlorophyll basis compared to the content of cells. Cytochrome 563 is found in equal amount in chloroplasts and cells. The amount of cytochrome 552 retained depends on the isolation procedure of chloroplasts.Cytochrome 552 can be further liberated from chloroplasts by mechanical treatment or incubation with detergent. It is concluded that cytochrome 552 is not tightly bound in the membrane but rather trapped in the thylakoids of the chloroplasts.In photosynthetic electron flow, cytochrome 552 is functioning as donor for photosystem I, mediating electron flow from cytochrome 558 to P700 under our conditions.Antimycin A stimulates the photooxidation of cytochrome 552 and of cytochrome 558.The rates of electron flow from water to NADP+ and of cyclic photophosphorylation mediated by phenazine methosulfate correlate with the content of endogenous cytochrome 552 in the chloroplasts. External readdition of cytochrome 552 to deficient chloroplasts causes reconstitution of NADP+ reduction but not of cyclic photophosphorylation. Mechanical treatment or other means of fragmentation of chloroplasts results in the exposure of originally buried reaction sites for external cytochrome 552.  相似文献   

20.
The possible functions of a light-induced electron transfer to oxygen in the photosynthetic electron transport chain of higher plant chloroplasts are considered. The thermodynamic preconditions, as well as the experimental data about the participations of ferredoxin, the components of photosystems I and II, and plastoquinone in oxygen reduction are examined. It is concluded that, even in the presence of ferredoxin and ferredoxin + NADP+, oxygen reduction is carried out mainly by the membrane-bound carriers of the photosynthetic electron transport chain. The hypothesis is put forward that most superoxides, which are produced by reduction of O2 molecules by the intramembrane components of the acceptor side of photosystem I, are reduced within the membrane by the plastohydroquinone molecules to the hydrogen peroxide. It is assumed that the H2O2 molecules that originate as the result of this process serve for signaling about the redox state of the plastoquinone pool. Published in Russian in Biokhimiya, 2008, Vol. 73, No. 1, pp. 137–144.  相似文献   

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