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1.
Flash-induced P515 absorbance changes have been studied in dark-adapted chloroplasts isolated from spinach plants grown under two different light intensities. The slow component (reaction 2), normally present in the P515 response of chloroplasts isolated from plants grown at an intensity of 60 W · m–2, was largely reduced in chloroplasts isolated from plants grown at an intensity of 6 W · m–2. This reduction of the slow component in the P515 response appeared to be coincident with an alteration in the lipid composition of the thylakoid membrane. Mainly the ratio monogalactosyldiacylglycerol to digalactosyldiacylglycerol appeared to be altered. In thylakoids from plants grown at 6 W · m–2, the ratio was approximately 35% lower than that of plants grown at 60 W · m–2. The amount of both cytochromeb 563 and cytochromef was largely reduced in chloroplasts isolated from plants grown at low light intensity. These results may indicate a possible correlation between structural organization of the thylakoid membrane and the kinetics of the flash-induced P515 response.  相似文献   

2.
Using DTT-modulated thylakoid membranes we studied tight nucleotide binding and ATP content in bound nucleotides and in the reaction mixture during [14C] ADP photophosphorylation. The increasing light intensity caused an increase in the rate of [14C] ADP incorporation and a decrease in the steady-state level of tightly bound nucleotides. Within the light intensity range from 11 to 710 w m–2, ATP content in bound nucleotides was larger than that in nucleotides of the reaction mixture; the most prominent difference was observed at low degrees of ADP phosphorylation. The increasing light intensity was accompanied by a significant increase of the relative ATP content in tightly bound nucleotides. The ratio between substrates and products formed at the tight nucleotide binding site during photophosphorylation was suggested to depend on the light-induced proton gradient across the thylakoid membrane.Abbreviations AdN adenine nucleotide - Chl chlorophyll - DTT dithiothreitol - FCCP carbonylcianide p-trifluoromethoxyphenilhydrazone - Pi inorganic orthophosphate - PMS phenazine methosulfate - TLC thin-layer chromatography - Tricine N-[tris(hydroxymethyl)methyl] glycine  相似文献   

3.
A correlated influence of cation concentration and excitation energy level on PS II activity is demonstrated.In low light conditions (under 60 Wm–2) Mg++ effect on DCIP reduction rate (DCIPr) saturates at rather low concentrations (2–10 mM). Higher concentrations induce a quenching of the effect, as already observed by several authors. In high light conditions (1000 Wm–2) however, Mg++ is increasingly effective on DCIPr up to concentrations of 200 mM.Na+ induced variations of DCIPr are weak in low light conditions and slightly positive for 100–600 mM in strong light; no quenching occurs.Modifications in variable fluorescence do not follow those of DCIPr in all cases, especially in high light.These results allow us to distinguish three different effects of cations on the photochemistry of PS II: one on the spill-over, another on the turnover rate of the centers and the last on the cation exchange through the thylakoid membrane.
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4.
The effect of a 30 h high light treatment on the amount and the localization of thylakoid proteins was analysed in low light grown photoautotrophic cells of Marchantia polymorpha and Chenopodium rubrum. High light treatment resulted in a net loss of D1 protein which was accompanied by comparable losses of other proteins of the PS II core (reaction center with inner antenna). LHC II proteins were not reduced correspondingly, indicating that these complexes are less affected by prolonged high light. High light influenced the distribution of PS II components between the grana and the stroma region of the thylakoid membrane, probably by translocation of the respective PS II proteins. Additionally, modifications of several thylakoid proteins were detected in high light treated cells of C. rubrum. These effects are discussed in relation to photoinhibitory damage and repair processes.Abbreviations BCA bioinchonic acid - chl chlorophyll - CF1 coupling factor - CYC cycloheximide - GT grana thylakoids - HL high light - LL low light - PAGE polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - PFD photon flux density - PS I Photosystem I - PS II Photosystem II - RC reaction center - SDS sodium dodecylsulfate - ST stroma thylakoids - Thyl unfractionated thylakoids  相似文献   

5.
Plastocyanin levels in barley (Hordeum vulgare cv Boone) were found to be dependent on growth irradiance. An immunochemical assay was developed and used to measure the plastocyanin content of isolated thylakoid membranes. Barley grown under 600 mole photons m–2s–1 contained two- to four-fold greater quantities of plastocyanin per unit chlorophyll compared with plants grown under 60 mole photons m–2s–1. The plastocyanin/Photosystem I ratio was found to be 2 to 3 under high irradiance compared with 0.5 to 1.5 under low irradiance. The reduced plastocyanin pool size in low light plants contributed to a two-fold reduction in photosynthetic electron transport activity. Plastocyanin levels increased upon transfer of low light plants to high irradiance conditions. In contrast, plastocyanin levels were not affected in plants transferred from high to low irradiance, suggesting that plastocyanin is not involved in the acclimation of photosynthesis to shade.Abbreviations: BSA bovine serum albumin - chl chlorophyll - cyt cytochrome - DCIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - PS I Photosystem I - PS II Photosystem II - P700 reaction center of Photosystem I - TBS 20 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.5, 500 mM NaCl - TTBS 20 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.5, 500 mM NaCl, 0.5% (w/v) polyoxyethylenesorbitan monolaurate (Tween-20)  相似文献   

6.
The polar acyl lipid composition was determined for samples of chloroplast thylakoids isolated from Pisum sativum plants grown at light intensities of 50 and 300 E·m-2·s-1 and from Aesculus hippocastanum leaves taken from shade or sun environments. Lighting conditions had no major effect on lipid class composition except for a small increase in the amount of monogalactosyldiacylglycerol relative to other lipids in low compared with high light and shade compared with sun conditions. The thylakoids from low light and shade environments also had, relative to those from high light and sun conditions, a substantial decrease in the level of trans-hexadecenoic acid in phosphatidyglycerol. In parallel with this there were lower lipid to chlorophyll ratios, higher overall fatty acid unsaturation, lower chlorophyll a to b ratios and increased relative levels of light harvesting chlorophyll a/b polypeptides as expected for an increase in the degree of thylakoid appression. With this in mind, our results on lipid class composition and content of trans-hexadecenoic acid are discussed in the context of the lateral distribution of lipids within the plane of membrane.Abbreviations DGDG digalactosyldiacylglycerol - EDTA ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid - HEPES N-2-hydroxyethylpiperazine-N-2-ethanesulfonic acid - LHC light harvesting chlorophyll a/b - MGDG monogalactosyldiacylglycerol - MPL minor phospholipids - PS1 photosystem one - PS2 photosystem two - SDS sodium dodecyl sulphate - SL sulphoquinovosyldiacylglycerol  相似文献   

7.
Analyses of chlorophyll fluorescence induction kinetics from DCMU-poisoned thylakoids were used to examine the contribution of the light-harvesting chlorophyll protein complex (LHCP) to Photosystem II (PS II) heterogeneity. Thylakoids excited with 450 nm radiation exhibited fluorescence induction kinetics characteristic of major contributions from both PS IIα and PS IIβ centres. On excitation at 550 nm the major contribution was from PS IIβ centres, that from PS IIα centres was only minimal. Mg2+ depletion had negligible effect on the induction kinetics of thylakoids excited with 550 nm radiation, however, as expected, with 450 nm excitation a loss of the PS IIα component was observed. Thylakoids from a chlorophyll-b-less barley mutant exhibited similar induction kinetics with 450 and 550 nm excitation, which were characteristic of PS IIβ centres being the major contributors; the PS IIα contribution was minimal. The fluorescence induction kinetics of wheat thylakoids at two different developmental stages, which exhibited different amounts of thylakoid appression but similar chlorophyll ratios and thus similar PS II:LHCP ratios, showed no appreciable differences in the relative contributions of PS IIα and PS IIβ centres. Mg2+ depletion had similar effects on the two thylakoid preparations. These data lead to the conclusion that it is the PS II:LHCP ratio, and probably not thylakoid appression, that is the major determinant of the relative contributions of PS IIα and PS IIβ to the fluorescence induction kinetics. PS IIα characteristics are produced by LHCP association with PS II, whereas PS IIβ characteristic can be generated by either disconnecting LHCP from PS II or by preferentially exciting PS II relative to LHCP.  相似文献   

8.
Acclimation to changes in the light environment was investigated in Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. cv. Landsberg erecta. Plants grown under four light regimes showed differences in their development, morphology, photosynthetic performance and in the composition of the photosynthetic apparatus. Plants grown under high light showed higher maximum rates of oxygen evolution and lower levels of light-harvesting complexes than their low light-grown counterparts; plants transferred to low light showed rapid changes in maximum photosynthetic rate and chlorophyll-a/b ratio as they became acclimated to the new environment. In contrast, plants grown under lights of differing spectral quality showed significant differences in the ratio of photosystem II to photosystem I. These changes are consistent with a model in which photosynthetic metabolism provides signals which regulate the composition of the thylakoid membrane.Abbreviations Aac1 gene encoding actin - Chl chlorophyll - F far-red-enriched light (R:FR = 0.72) - FR far-red light - H high light (400 mol · m–2 · s–1) - L low light (100 ml · m–2 · s–1) - LHCII light-harvesting complex of PSII - Lhcb genes encoding the proteins of LHCII - R red light - Rbcs genes encoding the small subunit of Rubisco - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - W white light (R:FR = 1.40) This work was supported by Natural Environment Research Council Grant No. GR3/7571A. We would like to thank H. Smith (Botany Department, University of Leicester) and E. Murchie (University of Sheffield) for helpful discussions.  相似文献   

9.
Previous investigations (Specht, S., Pistorius, E.K. and Schmid, G.H.: Photosynthesis Res. 13, 47–56, 1987) of Photosystem II membranes from tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv. John William's Broadleaf) which contain normally stacked thylakoid membranes and from two chlorophyll deficient tobacco mutants (Su/su and Su/su var. Aurea) which have low stacked or essentially unstacked thylakoids with occasional membrane doublings, have been extended by using monospecific antisera raised against the three extrinsic polypeptides of 33,21 and 16 kDa. The results show that all three peptides are synthesized as well in wild type tobacco as in the two mutants to about the same level and that they are present in thylakoid membranes of all three plants. However, in the mutants the 16 and 21 kDa peptides (but not the 33 kDa peptide) are easily lost during solubilization of Photosystem II membranes. In the absence of the 16 and 21 kDa peptide Photosystem II membranes from the mutants have a higher O2 evolving activity without addition of CaCl2 than the wild type Photosystem II membranes. On the other hand, after removal of the 33 kDa peptide no significant differences in the binding of Mn could be detected among the three plants. The results also show that reaction center complexes from wild type tobacco and the mutant Su/su are almost identical to the Triton-solubilized Photosystem II membranes from the mutant Su/su var. Aurea.Abbreviations PS photosystem - chl chlorophyll - LHCP light harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein complex - WT wild type - OEE1, OEE2 and OEE3 oxygen evolution enhancing complex of 29–36 kDa, 21–24 kDa and 16–18 kDa, respectively  相似文献   

10.
Based on the electron-transport properties on the reducing side of the reaction center, photosystem II (PS II) in green plants and algae occurs in two distinct forms. Centers with efficient electron-transport from QA to plastoquinone (QB-reducing) account for 75% of the total PS II in the thylakoid membrane. Centers that are photochemically competent but unable to transfer electrons from QA to QB (QB-nonreducing) account for the remaining 25% of total PS II and do not participate in plastoquinone reduction. In Dunaliella salina, the pool size of QB-nonreducing centers changes transiently when the light regime is perturbed during cell growth. In cells grown under moderate illumination intensity (500 E m-2s-1), dark incubation induces an increase (half-time 45 min) in the QB-nonreducing pool size from 25% to 35% of the total PS II. Subsequent illumination of these cells restores the steady-state concentration of QB-nonreducing centers to 25%. In cells grown under low illumination intensity (30 µE m–2s–1), dark incubation elicits no change in the relative concentration of QB-nonreducing centers. However, a transfer of low-light grown cells to moderate light induces a rapid (half-time 10 min) decrease in the QB-nonreducing pool size and a concomitant increase in the QB-reducing pool size. These and other results are explained in terms of a pool of QB-nonreducing centers existing in a steady-state relationship with QB-reducing centers and with a photochemically silent form of PS II in the thylakoid membrane of D. salina. It is proposed that QB-nonreducing centers are an intermediate stage in the process of damage and repair of PS II. It is further proposed that cells regulate the inflow and outflow of centers from the QB-nonreducing pool to maintain a constant pool size of QB-nonreducing centers in the thylakoid membrane.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - PS photosystem - QA primary quinone electron acceptor of PS II - QB secondary quinone electron acceptor of PS II - LHC light harvesting complex - Fo non-variable fluorescence yield - Fpl intermediate fluorescence yield plateau level - Fmax maximum fluorescence yield - Fi mitial fluorescence yield increase from Fo to Fpl(Fpl-Fo) - Fv total variable fluorescence yield (Fmax-Fo) - DCMU dichlorophenyl-dimethylurea  相似文献   

11.
Three light intensity-dependent Chl b-deficient mutants, two in wheat and one in barley, were analyzed for their xanthophyll cycle carotenoids and Chl fluorescence characteristics under two different growth PFDs (30 versus 600 mol photons·m–2 s–1 incident light). Mutants grown under low light possessed lower levels of total Chls and carotenoids per unit leaf area compared to wild type plants, but the relative proportions of the two did not vary markedly between strains. In contrast, mutants grown under high light had much lower levels of Chl, leading to markedly greater carotenoid to Chl ratios in the mutants when compared to wild type. Under low light conditions the carotenoids of the xanthophyll cycle comprised approximately 15% of the total carotenoids in all strains; under high light the xanthophyll cycle pool increased to over 30% of the total carotenoids in wild type plants and to over 50% of the total carotenoids in the three mutant strains. Whereas the xanthophyll cycle remained fairly epoxidized in all plants grown under low light, plants grown under high light exhibited a considerable degree of conversion of the xanthophyll cycle into antheraxanthin and zeaxanthin during the diurnal cycle, with almost complete conversion (over 90%) occurring only in the mutants. 50 to 95% of the xanthophyll cycle was retained as antheraxanthin and zeaxanthin overnight in these mutants which also exhibited sustained depressions in PS II photochemical efficiency (Fv/Fm), which may have resulted from a sustained high level of photoprotective energy dissipation activity. The relatively larger xanthophyll cycle pool in the Chl b-deficient mutant could result in part from the reported concentration of the xanthophyll cycle in the inner antenna complexes, given that the Chl b-deficient mutants are deficient in the peripheral LHC-II complexes.Abbreviations A antheraxanthin - Chl chlorophyll - Fo and Fm minimal yield (at open PS II reaction centers) and maximal yield (at closed centers) of chlorophyll fluorescence in darkness - F level of fluorescence during illumination with photosynthetically active radiation - Fm maximal yield (at closed centers) of chlorophyll fluorescence during illumination with photosynthetically active radiation - (Fm–F)/Fm actual efficiency of PS II during illumination with photosynthetically active radiation - Fv/Fm+(Fm–Fo)/Fm intrinsic efficiency of PS II in darkness - LHC_II light-harvesting chlorophyll-protein complex of Photosystem II - PFD photon flux density (between 400 and 700 nm) - PS I Photosystem I - PS II Photosystem II - V violaxanthin - Z zeaxanthin  相似文献   

12.
The effects of low temperature acclimation and photoinhibitory treatment on Photosystem 2 (PS 2) have been studied by thermoluminescence and chlorophyll fluorescence decay kinetics after a single turnover saturating flash. A comparison of unhardened and hardened leaves showed that, in the hardened case, a decrease in overall and B-band thermoluminescence emissions occurred, indicating the presence of fewer active PS 2 reaction centers. A modification in the form of the B-band emission was also observed and is attributed to a decrease in the apparent activation energy of recombination in the hardened leaves. The acclimated leaves also produced slower QA reoxidation kinetics as judged from the chlorophyll fluorescence decay kinetics. This change was mainly seen in an increased lifetime of the slow reoxidation component with only a small increase in its amplitude. Similar changes in both thermoluminescence and fluorescence decay kinetics were observed when unhardened leaves were given a high light photoinhibitory treatment at 4°C, whereas the hardened leaves were affected to a much lesser extent by a similar treatment. These results suggest that the acclimated plants undergo photoinhibition at 4°C even at low light intensities and that a subsequent high light treatment produces only a small additive photoinhibitory effect. Furthermore, it can be seen that photoinhibition eventually gives rise to PS 2 reaction centers which are no longer functional and which do not produce thermoluminescence or variable chlorophyll fluorescence.Abbreviations D1 The 32 kDa protein of Photosystem 2 reaction center - Fm maximum chlorophyll fluorescence yield - F0 minimal chlorophyll fluorescence yield obtained when all PS 2 centers are open - Fi intermediate fluorescence level corresponding to PS 2 centers which are loosely or not connected to plastoquinone (non-B centers) - Fv maximum variable chlorophyll fluorescence yield (Fv=Fm–F0) - PS 2 Photosystem 2 - QA and QB respectively, primary and secondary quinonic acceptors of PS 2 - S1, S2 and S3 respectively, the one, two and three positively charged states of the oxygen evolving system - Z secondary donor of PS 2  相似文献   

13.
Summary The development of thylakoid protein complexes during light induced greening of a mutant ofChlorella fusca was studied. Separation of chlorophyll-protein complexes and thylakoid polypeptides by LDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis show that cells grown in the dark contain proteins belonging to coupling factor and cytochrome f/b6 complex. Parts of both reaction centers are present also. The antennae complexes are specifically lost in yellow cells. The changes in polypeptide pattern at different stages of development in the light are related to ultrastructural changes. The beginning of membrane appression can be correlated with the appearance of the light-harvesting complex II. While the average diameter of EF-particles increases throughout the greening process, their densitiesapart from the rearrangement due to membrane stacking-remain fairly constant. The kinetics of EFu-particle enlargement are different from those of EFs-particles.PF-faces in thylakoids grown in the dark contain particles of uniform diameter but some of them protrude more from the fracture plane than do their neighbors. During the first hours of greening, their density increases and two classes develop. From the beginning of membrane stacking, the composition of PFu-faces remains constant and PFs-particles increase in number for some time.Results are discussed on the basis of present knowledge of structurefunction relations in thylakoids.Abbreviations CF o intrinsic membrane complex of the coupling factor - EF, EF s ,EF u exoplasmic fracture face, stacked and unstacked region, respectively - LDS lithium dodecyl sulfate - LHCII light-harvesting complex of Photosystem II - PF, PF s ,PF u protoplasmic fracture face, stacked and unstacked region, respectively - PS I andPS II Photosystem I and Photosystem II  相似文献   

14.
Morphological and physiological measurements on individual leaves of Leucaena leucocephala seedlings were used to study acclimation to neutral shading. The light-saturated photosynthetic rate (Pn max) ranged from 19.6 to 6.5 mol CO2 m–2 s–1 as photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) during growth decreased from 27 to 1.6 mol m–2 s–1. Stomatal density varied from 144 mm–2 in plants grown in high PPFD to 84 mm–2 in plants grown in low PPFD. Average maximal stomatal conductance for H2O was 1.1 in plants grown in high PPFD and 0.3 for plants grown in low PPFD. Plants grown in low PPFD had a greater total chlorophyll content than plants grown in high PPFD (7.2 vs 2.9 mg g–1 on a unit fresh weight basis, and 4.3 vs 3.7 mg dm–2 on a unit leaf area basis). Leaf area was largest when plants were grown under the intermediate PPFDs. Leaf density thickness was largest when plants were grown under the largest PPFDs. It is concluded that L. leucocephala shows extensive ability to acclimate to neutral shade, and could be considered a facultative shade plant.Abbreviations the initial slope of the photosynthesis vs PPFD curve - Pn max the light-saturated photosynthetic rate - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density  相似文献   

15.
Effects of natural shade on soybean thylakoid membrane composition   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The effect of natural shade on chloroplast thylakoid membrane activity and composition was examined for soybean (Glycine Max. cv. Young) grown under field conditions. Plots with high (10 plants m–1 row) or low (1 plant m–1 row) plant density were established. Expanding leaves were tagged at 50, 58 and 65 days after planting (DAP). At 92 DAP, tagged leaves were used as reference points to characterize canopy light environments and isolate thylakoid membranes. Light environments ranged from a photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) of 87% of full sun to a PPFD of 10% of full sun. The decline in PPFD was accompanied by an increase in the far-red/red (735 nm/645 nm) ratio from 0.9 to approximately six. The major effects of shade on chloroplast thylakoid membranes were a reduction in chloroplast coupling factor and a shift in light-harvesting capacity from Photosystem I to Photosystem II. Photosynthetic electron transport capacity was not affected by differences in PPFD, but was 20 to 30% higher in the 1 plant m–1 row treatment. The plant density effect on electron transport was associated with differences in plastocyanin concentration, suggesting that plastocyanin is a limiting factor in soybean. Shade did not have a significant effect on the concentration of Photosystem II, Cyt b6f, or Photosystem I complexes.Abbreviations CF1 chloroplast coupling factor - DAP days after planting - DBMIB 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone - DCIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - FR/R far-red/red - PBS 10 mM sodium phosphate (pH 7.0), 150 mM NaCl - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density - PS I Photosystem I - PS II Photosystem II - P700 reaction center of Photosystem I - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase - TBS 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 500 mM NaCl - TTBS 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 500 mM NaCl, 0.05% (w/v) polyoxyethylenesorbitan monolaurate (Tween-20) The US Government right to retain a non-exclusive, royalty-free licence in and to any copyright is acknowledged.The US Government right to retain a non-exclusive, royalty-free licence in and to any copyright is acknowledged.  相似文献   

16.
The influence of mono- (K+) and divalent (Mg2+) cations and protons (pH) on the temperature sensitivity of thylakoid membranes was investigated in three groups of young bean plants (control, heat-acclimated and non-acclimated). Thylakoid-membrane function was monitored by second and millisecond delayed fluorescence and 9-aminoacridine fluorescence quenching. It was established that metal ions at investigated concentrations decreased the thermostability of the photosynthetic parameters — an increase of MgSO4 concentration from 0.1 to 20 mM decreased the temperature of their half-inactivation (T50) by 13°C. At the same time the pH dependence of the thermal stability of these parameters showed a maximum at pH 5.5–6.5. The half-inactivation temperatures of those photosynthetic parameters connected with the ability of the thylakoid membrane to form light-induced proton gradients increased by 6–7°C in the heat-acclimated plants compared with the control. It was assumed that the temperature inactivation of photosynthetic electron transfer and the energization of the thylakoid membrane was determined both by the thermoinduced dissociation of the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein complex from PSII, leading to destruction of the excitation energy transfer to the reaction centres, and by the thermal denaturation of the membrane-protein components. The rate of these processes was probably controlled by the size of the negative surface charge and the viscosity of the thylakoid membrane.Abbreviations 9-AA 9-aminoacridine - DF delayed fluorescence - LHCP light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein complex - PSI (II) photosystem I (II) - T50 temperature of 50% inhibition of photosynthetic parameter - Tricine N-[2-hydroxy-1, 1-bis(hydroxymethyl)ethyl] glycine  相似文献   

17.
The green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is a facultative heterotroph and, when cultured in the presence of acetate, will synthesize chlorophyll (Chl) and photosystem (PS) components in the dark. Analysis of the thylakoid membrane composition and function in dark grown C. reinhardtii revealed that photochemically competent PS II complexes were synthesized and assembled in the thylakoid membrane. These PS II centers were impaired in the electron-transport reaction from the primary-quinone electron acceptor, QA, to the secondary-quinone electron acceptor, QB (QB-nonreducing centers). Both complements of the PS II Chl a–b light harvesting antenna (LHC II-inner and LHC II-peripheral) were synthesized and assembled in the thylakoid membrane of dark grown C. reinhardtii cells. However, the LHC II-peripheral was energetically uncoupled from the PS II reaction center. Thus, PS II units in dark grown cells had a -type Chl antenna size with only 130 Chl (a and b) molecules (by definition, PS II units lack LHC II-peripheral). Illumination of dark grown C. reinhardtii caused pronounced changes in the organization and function of PS II. With a half-time of about 30 min, PS II centers were converted froma QB-nonreducing form in the dark, to a QB-reducing form in the light. Concomitant with this change, PS II units were energetically coupled with the LHC II-peripheral complement in the thylakoid membrane and were converted to a PS II form. The functional antenna of the latter contained more than 250 Chl(a+b) molecules. The results are discussed in terms of a light-dependent activation of the QA-QB electron-transfer reaction which is followed by association of the PS II unit with a LHC II-peripheral antenna and by inclusion of the mature form of PS II (PS II) in the membrane of the grana partition region.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - PS photosystem - QA primary quinone electron acceptor of PS II - QB secondary quinone electron acceptor of PS II - LHC light harvesting complex - F0 non-variable fluorescence yield - Fplf intermediate fluorescence yield plateau leyel - Fmax maximum fluorescence yield - Fi initial fluorescence yield increase from F0 to Fpl (Fpl–F0) - Fv total variable fluorescence yield (Fm–F0) - DCMU dichlorophenyl-dimethylurea  相似文献   

18.
A chlorophyll b-less mutant of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (Pg 27) was isolated after UV irradiation of the wild type cells. This photosynthetically competent mutant totally lacks chlorophyll b and the CP2 chlorophyll-protein complex. However, SDS-PAGE, proteolytic digestions and immunodetections demonstrated that the 24–25 Kd apoproteins of the lacking CP2 complex are still present in thylakoids of the Pg27 mutant. It is concluded that this CP2-less mutant is affected in the biosynthesis pathway of chlorophyll b.This CP2-less mutant was crossed with a CP1-less mutant (Fl5) Fluorescence emission spectra and fluorescence inductions in the presence of DCMU were analysed in the resulting (cp 2 , cp 1 + ), (cp 2 + , cp 1 ), (cp 2 + , cp 1 + ), cp 2 , cp 1 )tetratype. Differences in PS 2 optical cross section and in the relative amplitude or localisation of fluorescence emission peaks fit well with a quadripartite model where PS1 and PS2 would each correspond to a reaction centre core complex (CP1 and CP2 respectively) associated to a light harvesting antenna (LHC1 and LHC2 respectively). The occurrence of energy transfers from PS1 peripheral antenna to PS2 in the Fl 5 mutant shows that, in absence of CP1, at least a part of its associated PS1 light harvesting antenna migrates in the PS2 containing appressed thylakoids.Abbreviations Chl Chlorophyll - LHC Light harvesting chl a/b complex - CP2 Predominant form of LHC or SDS polyacrylamide gels - WT Wild type - DM Double mutant (cp 1 , cp 2 ) - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - DOC-PAGE Deoxycholate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis  相似文献   

19.
Mechanistic aspects of the Photosystem II (PS II) damage and repair cycle in Dunaliella salina were investigated. The work addressed the role of chloroplast-encoded protein biosynthesis on the rate of the D1 protein (chloroplast psbA gene product) degradation, following photoinhibition of PS II under in vivo conditions. Cells were grown under different light-intensities and the rate of D1 photodamage and degradation was measured via pulse-chase measurements with (35S)sulfate. It is shown that no detectable difference exists in the rate of D1 degradation in D. salina, measured in the presence or absence of lincomycin, a chloroplast protein biosynthesis inhibitor. The results suggest that de novo D1 biosynthesis does not play a role in the regulation of D1 degradation. In low-light (100 mol photons m–2 s–1) grown cells, the rate of photodamage to D1 did not exceed the rate of its degradation and replacement. In high-light (2200 mol photons m–1 s–1) grown cells, the rate of D1 photodamage was faster than the rate of its degradation, resulting in a significant accumulation of photoinactivated PS II centers in the chloroplast thylakoids (chronic photoinhibition). The latter was coincident with the appearance of a 160 kD complex that contained photodamaged D1. Electron micrographs of D. salina thylakoids revealed extensive grana stacks in the thylakoid membrane of low-light grown cells. Only rudimentary appressions consisting of simple membrane pairings were found in the high-light grown cells. The results are discussed in terms of the regulation of D1 degradation in chloroplasts under in vivo conditions.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - D1 the 32 kD reaction center protein of PS II, encoded by the chloroplast psbA gene - D2 the 34 kD reaction center protein of PS II, encoded by the chloroplast psbD gene - HL high light - LL low light - Linc lincomycin  相似文献   

20.
Phosphorylation of thylakoid membrane proteins results in a partial inhibition (approximately 15–20%) of the light-saturated rate of oxygen evolution. The site of inhibition is thought to be located on the acceptor side of photosystem 2 (PS2) between the primary, QA, and secondary, QB, plastoquinone acceptors (Hodges et al. 1985, 1987). In this paper we report that thylakoid membrane phosphorylation increases the damping of the quaternary oscillation in the flash oxygen yield and increases the extent of the fast component in the deactivation of the S2 oxidation state. These results support the proposal that thylakoid membrane protein phosphorylation decreases the equilibrium constant for the exchange of an electron between QA and QB. An analysis of the oxygen release patterns using the recurrence matrix model of Lavorel (1976) indicates that thylakoid membrane phosphorylation increases the probability that PS2 miss a S-state transition by 20%. This is equivalent, however, to an insignificant inhibition (approximately 2.4%) of the light-saturated oxygen evolution rate. If a double miss in the S-state transitions is included when the PS2 centres are in S2 the fit between the experimental and theoretical oxygen yield sequences is better, and sufficient to account for the 15–20% inhibition in the steady-state oxygen yield. A double miss in the S-state transition is a consequence of an increased population of PS2 centres retaining QA : not only will these PS2 centres fail to catalyse photochemical charge transfer until QA is reoxidized, but the re-oxidation reaction will also result in the deactivation of S2 to S1.Abbreviations Chl Chlorophyll - PS2 Photosystem 2 - Si The oxidation states of PS2 (where i can be from 0 to 4) - QA and QB the anionic semiquinone forms of the primary and secondary plastoquione acceptors of PS2  相似文献   

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