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1.
The role of Cl? in the electron transfer reactions of the oxidizing side of Photosystem II (PS II) has been studied by measuring the fluorescence yield changes corresponding to the reduction of P+-680, the PS II reaction center chlorophyll, by the secondary PS II donor, Z. In Cl?-depleted chloroplasts, a rapid rise in fluorescence yield was observed following the first and second flashes, but not during the third or subsequent flashes. These results indicate that there exists an additional endogenous electron donor beyond P-680 and Z in Cl?-depleted systems. In contrast, the terminal endogenous donor on the oxidizing side of PS II in Tris-washed preparations has previously been shown to be Z, the component giving rise to EPR signals IIf and IIvf. The rate of reduction of P+-680 in the Cl?-depleted chloroplasts was as rapid as that measured in uninhibited systems, within the time resolution of our instrument. Again, this is in contrast to Tris-washed preparations in which a dramatic decrease in the rate if this reaction has been previously reported. We have also carried out a preliminary study on the rate of rereduction of Z+ in the Cl?-depleted system. Under steady-state conditions, the reduction half-time of Z+ in uninhibited systems was about 450 μs, while in the Cl?-depleted chloroplasts, the reduction of Z+ was biphasic, one phase with a half-time of about 120 ms, and a slower phase with a half-time of several seconds. The appearance of the quenching state due to P+-680 observed following the third flash on excitation of Cl?-depleted chloroplasts was delayed by two flashed when low concentrations of NH2OH (20–50 μM) were included in the medium. Hydrazine at somewhat higher concentrations showed the same effect. This is taken to indicate that the reactions leading to PS II oxidation of NH2OH or NH2NH2 are uninhibited by Cl? depletion. Addition of NH2OH at low concentrations to Tris-washed chloroplasts did not alter the pattern of the fluorescence yield, indicating that the reactions leading to the NH2OH oxidation present in Cl?-depleted systems are absent following Tris inhibition. The results are discussed in terms of an inhibition by Cl? depletion of the reactions of the oxygen-evolving complex. It is suggested that no intermediary redox couple exists between the oxygen-evolving complex and Z, and that Z+ is reduced directly by Mn of the complex. In terms of the S-state model, Cl? depletion appears to inhibit the advancement of the mechanism beyond S2, but not to inhibit the transitions from S0 to S1, or from S1 to S2.  相似文献   

2.
Patrick M. Kelley  S. Izawa 《BBA》1978,502(2):198-210
1. Chloroplasts washed with Cl?-free, low-salt media (pH 8) containing EDTA, show virtually no DCMU-insensitive silicomolybdate reduction. The activity is readily restored when 10 mM Cl? is added to the reaction mixture. Very similar results were obtained with the other Photosystem II electron acceptor 2,5-dimethylquinone (with dibromothymoquinone), with the Photosystem I electron acceptor FMN, and also with ferricyanide which accepts electrons from both photosystems.2. Strong Cl?-dependence of Hill activity was observed invariably at all pH values tested (5.5–8.3) and in chloroplasts from three different plants: spinach, tobacco and corn (mesophyll).3. In the absence of added Cl? the functionally Cl?-depleted chloroplasts are able to oxidize, through Photosystem II, artificial reductants such as catechol, diphenylcarbazide, ascorbate and H2O2 at rates which are 4–12 times faster than the rate of the residual Hill reaction.4. The Cl?-concentration dependence of Hill activity with dimethylquinone as an electron acceptor is kinetically consistent with the typical enzyme activation mechanism: E(inactive) + Cl?ag E · Cl? (active), and the apparent activation constant (0.9 mM at pH 7.2) is unchanged by chloroplast fragmentation.5. The initial phase of the development of inhibition of water oxidation in Cl?-depleted chloroplasts during the dark incubation with NH2OH (12 H2SO4) is 5 times slower when the incubation medium contains Cl? than when the medium contains NH2OH alone or NH2OH plus acetate ion. (Acetate is shown to be ineffective in stimulating O2 evolution.)6. We conclude that the Cl?-requiring step is one which is specifically associated with the water-splitting reaction, and suggests that Cl? probably acts as a cofactor (ligand) of the NH2OH-sensitive, Mn-containing O2-evolving enzyme.  相似文献   

3.
《FEBS letters》1986,203(2):215-219
The re-reduction course of P-680+, the photooxidized PS II primary donor, was measured as a function of excitation number in Cl-depleted PS II membranes. After the 1st and 2nd excitations the signal amplitude of P-680+ is small, indicating a submicrosecond reduction of P-680+ by Z, the secondary donor of PS II. After the 3rd excitation, however, a larger P-680+ signal with a 40–50 μs half-life is observed. The slow decay of this signal is attributed to a back-reaction with a reduced acceptor in the presence of the Z+S2 state on the donor side. The state Z+S2 has a lifetime longer than 300 ms and its formation was found to depend on the presence of the abnormal S2 state created by the 1st excitation. The P-680 data and thermoluminescence measurements show that the S-state advancement beyond S2 is blocked in the absence of Cl and that the Cl-free abnormal S2 state has a lifetime about 10-times longer than the normal S2 state.  相似文献   

4.
A class of compounds, usually referred to as ADRY reagents, destabilize intermediates in the photosynthetic water-oxidizing process. The effects of these species on the reduction kinetics of Z?, the oxidized donor to P-680, have been monitored in Tris-washed chloroplasts by following the decay of EPR Signal IIf. In the presence of ADRY reagents (e.g., sodium picrate, carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone) this process follows an exponential time course, the decay half-time of which decreases as the ADRY reagent concentration increases. From this pseudo-first-order behavior, the second-order rate constants for four commonly used ADRY reagents have been extracted. The ADRY-induced acceleration in Z? reduction proceeds independently of conditions imposed on the acceptor side of Photosystem II and shows no synergism with exogenous electron donors. These observations are most easily rationalized in terms of a model which proposes direct reduction of Z? by the ADRY reagent followed by regeneration of the reduced ADRY reagent in a nonspecific reaction with membrane components such as carotenoids, chlorophyll or protein. A comparison of the second-order rate constants we obtain for ADRY reagents in their reaction with Z? in Tris-washed chloroplasts with those obtained from the literature for the ADRY- reagent induced deactivation of states S2 and S3 in oxygen-evolving chloroplasts reveals a close similarity between the two processes. From this observation, a general model for the action of ADRY reagents in destabilizing the high-potential oxidizing equivalents generated in Photosystem II is proposed.  相似文献   

5.
Wim F.J. Vermaas 《BBA》1982,680(2):202-209
We investigated the effect of HCO?3 addition to CO2-depleted thylakoids by means of fluorescence techniques. (1) In the presence of diuron (3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea), the net reduction of the primary quinone-type electron acceptor (Q) of Photosystem (PS) II is about 2-times faster in the absence of HCO?3 than in its presence, whether normal, heat-treated or NH2OH-treated samples are used. This effect of HCO?3 is, therefore, not on the O2-evolving apparatus. It is, however, interpreted to be due to an influence of HCO?3 on the kinetics of the reduction of Q, perhaps combined with an effect on the back reaction of Q? with P-680+, the oxidized form of the PS II reaction center chlorophyll a. (2) Fluorescence experiments in the absence of diuron indicate that the absence of HCO?3 results in a complete block at the quinone level; the area over the fluorescence induction curve in the absence of HCO?3 was found to be 2.2-times higher in the absence than in the presence of diuron, pointing to a complete block of BH2 oxidation in the absence of HCO?3. (3) No change in the midpoint potential of Q is observed when HCO?3 is added to CO2-depleted membranes. HCO?3 not only has a large (on/off) effect on the reoxidation of BH2, but also a smaller effect between P-680 and Q. We propose that HCO?3 binding to its specific site in the thylakoid membrane results in a conformational change, allowing normal electron transport between the two photosystems.  相似文献   

6.
We have investigated submillisecond delayed luminescence in spinach chloroplasts under a variety of conditions. In Tris-washed chloroplasts, which are inhibited on the oxidizing side of P-680, the delayed light emission in the 7–200 μs time-range decayed with biphasic behavior. In fully dark-adapted samples illuminated by a single saturating laser pulse, the fast phase of delayed luminescence followed a nearly identical pH-dependent time-course as that observed optically and by ESR for P+-680 reduction, thus verifying the recombination hypothesis for the origin of delayed light. The observed slower phase of delayed luminescence was also pH dependent, but unlike the fast phase, could not be ascribed to specific electron transfer events of PS II. This phase could be rationalized by a heterogeneity in the population of P-680. While kinetic parameters were found to be insensitive to changes in ionic strength, the overall luminescence intensity was quite sensitive to the electrical parameters, thus indicating the role of ionic strength and local charges in delayed luminescence modulation. A similar series of experiments was performed on untreated chloroplasts. The pH-dependent delayed luminescence behavior in both untreated chloroplasts and Tris-washed chloroplasts was similar despite significantly faster kinetics associated with the reduction of P+-680 by the secondary PS II electron donor, Z, in the former preparation (e.g., Van Best, J.A. and Mathis, P. (1978) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 503, 178–188). Thus, it was concluded that, in untreated samples, microsecond delayed luminescence emanates primarily from centers which are not competent in oxygen evolution. The nearly identical delayed luminescence intensity in untreated chloroplasts and in Tris-washed chloroplasts was rationalized by a model which predicts modulations in delayed luminescence yield by the exciton-quenching effect of P+-680. Computer simulations demonstrate the feasibility of this model. The previously documented flash oscillations in microsecond delayed luminescence intensity in untreated chloroplasts (Bowes, J.M. and Crofts, A.R. (1979) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 547, 336–346), which we readily observed, were attributed to alterations in delayed luminescence yield (in nonfunctional centers) by variations in charge density stored at the oxygen-evolving complex of functional centers. Taken together, our results emphasize the dependence of delayed luminescence kinetics upon electron-transfer kinetics and the dependence of delayed luminescence amplitude upon the photochemical parameters, the exciton yield and the emission yield.  相似文献   

7.
S. Izawa  Donald R. Ort 《BBA》1974,357(1):127-143
NH2OH-treated, non-water oxidizing chloroplasts are shown to be capable of oxidizing ferrocyanide and I? via Photosystem II at appreciable rates (? 200 μequiv/h per mg chlorophyll). Using methylviologen as electron acceptor, ferrocyanide oxidation can be measured as O2 uptake, as ferricyanide formation, or as H+ consumption (2 Fe2+ + 2H+ + O2 → 2 Fe3+ + H2O2). I? oxidation can be measured as methylviologen-mediated O2 uptake, or spectrophotometrically, using ferricyanide as electron acceptor. The oxidation product I2 is re-reduced, as it is formed, by unknown reducing substances in the reaction system.The rate-saturating concentrations of these donors are very high: 30 mM with ferricyanide and 15 mM with I?. Relatively lipophilic Photosystem II donors such as catechol, benzidine and p-aminophenol saturate the photooxidation rate at much lower concentrations (< 0.5 mM). It thus seems that the oxidation of hydrophilic reductants such as ferricyanide and I? is limited by permeability barriers. Very likely the site of Photosystem II oxidation is embedded in the thylakoid membrane or is situated on the inner surface of the membrane.The efficiency of phosphorylation (P/e2) is 0.5 to 0.6 with ferrocyanide and about 0.5 with I?. In contrast the P/e2 ratio is 1.0 to 1.2 when water, catechol, p-aminophenol or benzidine serves as electron donor. These differences imply that only one of two phosphorylation sites operate when ferrocyanide and I? are oxidized. Ferrocyanide and I? are also chemically distinct from other Photosystem II donors in that their oxidation does not involve proton release. It is suggested that the mechanism of energy conservation associated with Photosystem II may be only operative when the removal of electrons from the donor results in release of protons (i.e. with water, hydroquinones, phenylamines, etc.).  相似文献   

8.
J.A. Van Best  L.N.M. Duysens 《BBA》1977,459(2):187-206
The kinetics of the luminescence of chlorophyll a in Chlorella vulgaris were studied in the time range from 0.2 μs to 20 μs after a short saturating flash (t12 = 25 ns) under various pretreatment including anaerobiosis, flashes, continuous illumination and various additions. A 1 μs luminescence component probably originating from System II was found of which the relative amplitude was maximum under anaerobic conditions for reaction centers in the state SPQ? before the flash, about one third for centers in the state S+PQ? or SPQ before the flash, and about one tenth for centers in the state S+PQ before the flash. S is the secondary donor complex with zero charge; S+ is the secondary donor complex with 1 to 3 positive charges; P, the primary donor, is the photoactive chlorophyll a, P-680, of reaction center 2; Q? is the reduced acceptor of System II, Q. Under aerobic conditions, where an endogenous quencher presumably was active, the luminescence was reduced by a factor two.The 1 μs decay of the luminescence is probably caused by the disappearance of P+ formed in the laser flash according to the reaction ZP+ → Z+P in which Z is the molecule which donates an electron to P+ and which is part of S. After addition of hydroxylamine, the 1 μs luminescence component changed with the incubation time exponentially (τ = 27 s) into a 30 μs component; during the same time, the variable fluorescence yield, measured 9 μs after the laser flash, decreased by a factor 2 with the same time constant. Hereafter in a second much slower phase the fluorescence yield decreased as an exponential function of the incubation time to about the dark value; meanwhile the 30 μs luminescence increased about 50% with the same time constant (τ = 7 min). Heat treatment abolished both luminescence components.The 1 μs luminescence component saturated at about the same energy as the System II fluorescence yield 60 μs after the laser flash and as the slower luminescence components. From the observation that the amplitude is maximum if the laser flash is given when the fluorescence yield is high after prolonged anaerobic conditions (state SQ?), we conclude that the 1 μs luminescence is probably caused by the reaction
PWQ?+hv → P1WQ?P+W?Q?P1WQ? → PWQ?+hv
in which W is an acceptor different from Q. The presence of S+ reduced the luminescence amplitude to about one third. Two models are discussed, one with W as an intermediate between P and Q and another, which gives the best interpretation, with W on a side path.  相似文献   

9.
In the presence of Cl?, the severity of ammonia-induced inhibition of photosynthetic oxygen evolution is attenuated in spinach thylakoid membranes (Sandusky, P.O. and Yocum, C.F. (1983) FEBS Lett. 162, 339–343). A further examination of this phenomenon using steady-state kinetic analysis suggests that there are two sites of ammonia attack, only one of which is protected by the presence of Cl?. In the case of Tris-induced inhibition of oxygen evolution only the Cl? protected site is evident. In both cases the mechanism of Cl? protection involves the binding of Cl? in competition with the inhibitory amine. Anions (Br? and NO?3) known to reactive oxygen evolution in Cl?-depleted membranes also protect against Tris-induced inhibition, and reactivation of Cl?-depleted membranes by Cl? is competitively inhibited by ammonia. Inactivation of the oxygen-evolving complex by NH2OH is impeded by Cl?, whereas Cl? does not affect the inhibition induced by so-called ADRY reagents. We propose that Cl? functions in the oxygen-evolving complex as a ligand bridging manganese atoms to mediate electron transfer. This model accounts both for the well known Cl? requirement of oxygen evolution, and for the inhibitory effects of amines on this reaction.  相似文献   

10.
P. Jursinic  J. Warden 《BBA》1976,440(2):322-330
In order to determine the major site of bicarbonate action in the electron transport complex of Photosystem II, the following experimental techniques were used: electron spin resonance measurements of Signal IIvf, measurements of chlorophyll a fluorescence yield rise and decay kinetics, and delayed light emission decay. From data obtained using these experimental techniques the following conclusions were made: (1) absence of bicarbonate causes a reversible inactivation of up to 40% of Photosystem II reaction center activity; (2) there is no significant effect of bicarbonate on electron flow from the charge accumulating S state to Z; (3) there is no significant effect of bicarbonate on electron flow from Z to P-680+; (4) electron flow from Q? to the intersystem electron transport pool is inhibited by from 4- to 6-fold under bicarbonate depletion conditions.  相似文献   

11.
The effects of magnesium and chloride ions on photosynthetic electron transport were investigated in membrane fragments of a blue-green alga, Nostoc muscorum (Strain 7119), noted for their stability and high rates of electron transport from water or reduced dichlorophenolindophenol to NADP+. Magnesium ions were required not only for light-induced electron transport from water to NADP+ but also for protection in the dark of the integrity of the water-photooxidizing system (Photosystem II). Membrane fragments suspended in the dark in a medium lacking Mg2+ lost the capacity to photoreduce NADP+ with water on subsequent illumination. Chloride ions could substitute, but less effectively, for each of these two effects of magnesium ions. By contrast, the photoreduction of NADP+ by DCIPH2 was independent of Mg2+ (or Cl?) for the protection of the electron transport system in the dark or during the light reaction proper. Furthermore, high concentrations of MgCl2 produced a strong inhibition of NADP+ photoreduction with DCIPH2 without significantly affecting the rate of NADP+ photoreduction with water. The implications of these findings for the differential involvement of Photosystem I and Photosystem II in the photoreduction of NADP+ with different electron donors are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
《BBA》1985,807(1):1-9
We have studied the kinetics of P-680+ reduction in PS II fractions which were prepared with high rates of oxygen evolution from pea thylakoids. In noninhibited fractions, about two-thirds of the photooxidized P-680 was reduced in less than 2 μs (the minimum time resolution of the instrument), and phases with lifetimes of 5–40 μs may be linked with electron donation in PS II. After inhibition of electron donation to P-680+, rereduction kinetics were biphasic with lifetimes of 90–150 μs and 600–900 μs. We argue that the faster component may represent a back-reaction from the state [D+1 P-680+ ... QB], and that the slower component may represent a back-reaction from the state (D1//P680+QB]. From experiments with low concentrations of water analogues we propose that the complex multi-phasic kinetics of electron donation from D1 to P-680+ could be a reflection of the dynamic properties of the water binding site.  相似文献   

13.
Steven M. Theg  Peter H. Homann 《BBA》1982,679(2):221-234
Studies of the association of Cl? with Photosystem (PS) II in CF1-containing thylakoid membranes revealed that photosynthetically active Cl? is retained in a Cl?-free medium unless it is sufficiently alkaline, uncoupling conditions are established and light is excluded. After treatment under such conditions, electron transport from water became dependent on added Cl? under all conditions. Quantitative measurements of 36Cl? retention in the light revealed that there were about five Cl? anions present in Cl?-sufficient chloroplasts per PS II reaction center, and one-fourth of that in Cl?-deficient samples. Uncouplers representing three different types of uncoupling mechanism were found to be effective mediators of Cl? release from thylakoids. Since the ability to collapse a proton gradient probably is the only property shared by all the tested uncouplers, a proton gradient may be involved in the retention of Cl?. As uncoupler-mediated Cl? release did not depend on preillumination of our samples, a long-lived proton gradient must exist in dark-adapted chloroplasts which may not span the whole thickness of the thylakoid membrane. It is postulated that the Cl? active in PS II reactions resides in a special membrane domain from which protons slowly equilibrate with those in the bulk solutions. Cl? is thought to be released to the bulk phases only when the pH of the membrane domain is raised above a certain threshold by the action of uncouplers. This domain may be identical to the intramembranous compartment which has been postulated to be associated with PS II (Prochaska, L.J. and Dilley, R.A., (1978) Front. Biol. Res. Energ. 1, 265–274).  相似文献   

14.
Pierre Joliot  Anne Joliot 《BBA》1984,765(2):210-218
The redox changes of cytochrome b-563 (cytochrome b), cytochrome f, plastocyanin and P-700 were measured on dark-adapted chloroplasts after illumination by a series of flashes in oxidizing conditions (0.1 mM ferricyanide). In these conditions, the plastoquinone pool is fully oxidized and the only available plastoquinol are those formed by Photosystem (PS) II reaction. According to the two-electron gate mechanism proposed by Bouges-Bocquet (Bouges-Bocquet, B. (1973) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 314, 250–256), plastoquinol is mainly formed after the second and the fourth flashes. After the second flash, the reoxidation of plastoquinol occurs by a concerted reaction which reduces most of the cytochrome b present and a fraction of PS I donors. Most of these electrons are stored on P-700, which implies a large equilibrium constant between the secondary PS I donors and P-700. One electron is stored on cytochrome b during a time (t12 ≈ 1 s) much longer than the dark interval between flashes. After the fourth flash, a new plastoquinol molecule is formed, which induces the reduction of PS I donors with no corresponding further reduction of cytochrome b. The number of electrons transferred after the fourth flash is larger than that transferred after the second flash although the rate of transfer is lower. To interpret these data, we assume that the plastoquinol formed after the fourth flash is reoxidized by a second concerted reaction: one electron is directly transferred to PS I donors while the other cooperates with the electron stored on cytochrome b to reduce a plastoquinone molecule localized on a site close to the outer face of the membrane. This newly formed plastoquinol crosses the membrane and transfers a second electron to PS I donors. This interpretation resembles a model proposed by Velthuys (Velthuys, B.R. (1979) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 76, 2765?2769) and which belongs to the modified Q-cycle class of models.  相似文献   

15.
The Na+/l-glutamate (l-aspartate) cotransport system present at the level of rat intestinal brush-border membrane vesicles is specifically activated by the ions K+ and Cl?. The presence of 100 mM K+ inside the vesicles drastically enhances the uptake rate and the transient intravesicular accumulation (overshoot) of the two acidic amino acids. It has been demonstrated that the activation of the transport system depended only in the intravesicular K+ concentration and that in the absence of any sodium gradient, an outward K+ gradient was unable to influence the Na+/acidic amino acid transport system. It was also found that Cl? could specifically activate the Na+-dependent l-glutamate (l-aspartate) uptake either in the presence or in the absence of K+. Also the effect of Cl? was observed only in the presence of an inward Na+ gradient and it was noted to be higher when chloride ion was present on both sides of the membrane vesicles. No influence (activation or accumulation) was observed in the absence of the Na+ gradient and in the presence of chloride gradient. l-Glutamate uptake measured in the presence of an imposed diffusion potential and in the presence of K+ or Cl? did not show any translocation of net charge.  相似文献   

16.
The Cl? transport properties of the luminal border of bovine tracheal epithelium have been investigated using a highly purified preparation of apical plasma membrane vesicles. Transport of Cl? into an intravesicular space was demonstrated by (1) a linear inverse correlation between Cl? uptake and medium osmolarity and (2) complete release of accumulated Cl? by treatment with detergent. The rate of Cl? uptake was highly temperature-sensitive and was enhanced by exchange diffusion, providing evidence for a carrier-mediated transport mechanism. Transport of Cl? was not affected by the ‘loop’ diuretic bumetanide or by the stilbene-derivative anion-exchange inhibitors SITS (4-acetamido-4′-isothiocyanostilbene-2,2′-disulfonic acid) and DIDS (4,4′-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2′-disulfonic acid). In the presence of the impermeant cation, tetramethylammonium (TMA+), uptake of Cl? was minimal; transport was stimulated equally by the substitution of either K+ or Na+ for TMA+. Valinomycin in the presence of K+ enhanced further Cl? uptake, while amiloride reduced Na+-stimulated Cl? uptake towards the minimal level observed with TMA+. These results suggest the following conclusions: (1) the tracheal vesicle membrane has a finite permeability to both Na+ and K+; (2) the membrane permeability to the medium counterion determines the rate of Cl? uptake; (3) Cl? transport is not specifically coupled with either Na+ or K+; and, finally (4) Cl? crosses the tracheal luminal membrane via an electrogenic transport mechanism.  相似文献   

17.
Bicarbonate depletion of chloroplast thylakoids reduces the affinity of the herbicide, ioxynil, to its binding site in Photosystem (PS) II. This herbicide is found to be a relatively more efficient inhibitor of the Hill reaction when HCO?3 is added to CO2-depleted thylakoids in subsaturating rather than in saturating concentrations. The reason for this dependence of the inhibitor efficiency on the HCO?3 concentration is that the inactive HCO?3-deficient PS II reaction chains bind less ioxynil than the active PS II electron-transport chains that have bound HCO?3, and, thus, after addition of a certain amount of ioxynil the concentration of the free herbicide increases when the HCO?3 concentration decreases. Therefore, the inhibition of electron transport by ioxynil increases at decreasing HCO?3 levels. Measurements on the effects of modification of lysine and arginine residues on the rate of electron transport are also presented: the rate of modification is faster in the presence than in the absence of HCO?3. Therefore, we suggest that surface-exposed lysine or arginine residues are not involved in binding of HCO?3 (or CO2 or CO2?3) to its binding protein, but that HCO?3 influences the conformation of its binding environment such that the affinity for certain herbicides and the accessibility for amino acid modifiers are changed.  相似文献   

18.
The ratio of Photosystem (PS) II to PS I electron-transport capacity in spinach chloroplasts was compared from reaction-center and steady-state rate measurements. The reaction-center electron-transport capacity was based upon both the relative concentrations of the PS IIα, PS IIβ and PS I centers, and the number of chlorophyll molecules associated with each type of center. The reaction-center ratio of total PS II to PS I electron-transport capacity was about 1.8:1. Steady-state electron-transport capacity data were obtained from the rate of light-induced absorbance-change measurements in the presence of ferredoxin-NADP+, potassium ferricyanide and 2,5-dimethylbenzoquinone (DMQ). A new method was developed for determining the partition of reduced DMQ between the thylakoid membrane and the surrounding aqueous phase. The ratio of membrane-bound to aqueous DMQH2 was experimentally determined to be 1.3:1. When used at low concentrations (200 μM), potassium ferricyanide is shown to be strictly a PS I electron acceptor. At concentrations higher than 200 μM, ferricyanide intercepted electrons from the reducing side of PS II as well. The experimental rates of electron flow through PS II and PS I defined a PS II/PS I electron-transport capacity ratio of 1.6:1.  相似文献   

19.
Joseph T. Warden 《BBA》1976,440(1):89-97
A 300 μs decay component of ESR Signal I (P-700+) in chloroplasts is observed following a 10 μs actinic xenon flash. This transient is inhibited by treatments which block electron transfer from Photosystem II to Photosystem I (e.g. 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethylurea (DCMU), 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone (DBMIB), KCN and HgCl2). The fast transient reduction of P-700+ can be restored in the case of DCMU or DBMIB inhibition by addition of an electron donor couple (2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol (Cl2Ind)/ascorbate) which supplies electrons to cytochrome f. However, this donor couple is inefficient in restoring electron transport in chloroplasts which have been inhibited with the plastocyanin inactivators, KCN and HgCl2. Oxidation-reduction measurements reveal that the fast P-700+ reduction component reflects electron transfer from a component with Em = 375±10 mV (pH = 7.5). These data suggest the assignment of the 300-μs decay kinetics to electron transfer from cytochrome f (Fe2+) to P-700+, thus confirming the recent observations of Haehnel et al. (Z. Naturforsch. 26b, 1171–1174 (1971)).  相似文献   

20.
The room-temperature EPR characteristics of Photosystem II reaction center preparations from spinach, pokeweed and Chlamydomonas reinhardii have been investigated. In all preparations a light-induced increase in EPR Signal II, which arises from the oxidized form of a donor to P-680+, is observed. Spin quantitation, with potassium nitrosodisulfonate as a spin standard, demonstrates that the Signal II species, Z?, is present in approx. 60% of the reaction centers. In response to a flash, the increase in Signal II spin concentration is complete within the 98 μs response time of our instrument. The decay of Z? is dependent on the composition of the particle suspension medium and is accelerated by addition of either reducing agents or lipophilic anions in a process which is first order in these reagents. Comparison of these results with optical data reported previously (Diner, B.A. and Bowes, J.M. (1981) in Proceedings of the 5th International Congress on Photosynthesis (Akoyunoglou, G., ed.), Vol. 3, pp. 875–883, Balaban, Philadelphia), supports the identification of Z with the P-680+ donor, D1. From the polypeptide composition of the particles used in this study, we conclude that Z is an integral component of the reaction center and use this conclusion to construct a model for the organization of Photosystem II.  相似文献   

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