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1.
Etiolated leaves of three different species, maize, wheat, and pea, as well as a pea mutant (lip1) were used to compare the excitation spectra of protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) in the red region. The species used have different composition of short-wavelength and long-wavelength Pchlide forms. The relation between different forms was furthermore changed through incubating the leaves in 5-aminolevulinic acid (ALA), which caused an accumulation of short-wavelength Pchlide forms, as shown by changes in absorption and fluorescence spectra. This is the first time a comprehensive comparison is made between excitation spectra from different species covering an emission wavelength range of 675–750 nm using fluorescence equipment with electronic compensation for the variations in excitation irradiance. The different forms of Pchlide having excitations peaks at 628, 632, 637, 650, and 672 nm could be best measured at 675, 700, 710, 725, and 750 nm, respectively. Measuring emission at wavelengths between 675– 710 nm gave an exaggeration of the short-wavelength forms and measuring at longer wavelengths gave for the pea leaves an exaggeration of the 672 nm peak. In general, an energy transfer from short-wavelength Pchlide forms to long-wavelength Pchlide forms occurred, but such an energy transfer sometimes seemed to be limited as a result of a discrete location of the Pchlide spectral forms. The excitation spectra resembling the absorption spectrum most were measured at an emission wavelength of 740 nm. Measuring the excitation at 710 nm gave higher intensity of the spectra but the short-wavelength forms were accentuated.  相似文献   

2.
During illumination of dark-grown plants protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) is continuously transformed to chlorophyllide (Chlide). Different dark-grown plants, maize ( Zea mays cv. Sundance), wheat ( Triticum aestivum cv. Kosack), pea ( Pisum sativum cv. Kelwedon wonder), the lip1 mutant of pea, and the aurea mutant of tomato ( Solanum lycopersicum ), have various ratios of spectral Pchlide forms in darkness. When the plants were illuminated and then returned to darkness Pchlide re-accumulated. The proportions of different Pchlide forms within the pool of re-accumulated Pchlide were followed by low temperature fluorescence emission and excitation spectra in green and greening leaves. After 1 h of illumination the spectral characteristics of regenerated Pchlide forms mirrored those of Pchlide in dark-grown plants and were thus species dependent. After a prolonged illumination period (24 h) as well as in fully green leaves energy transfer to chlorophyll (Chl) masked the presence of long-wavelength Pchlide in the fluorescence emission spectra. However, excitation spectra showed Pchlide absorption around 650 nm and its flash-induced disappearance confirmed its nature of phototransformable Pchlide. In fact the excitation spectra showed that the proportions of different Pchlide forms in green leaves highly resembled the proportions of Pchlide forms in dark-grown leaves and were specific for the plant variety. Thus Chl formation in both dark-grown and light-grown leaves can occur in a similar way through the main photoactive long-wavelength form of Pchlide.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of leaf developmental age on the protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) spectral forms and the expression of messenger RNA (mRNA) encoding NADPH‐protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase (POR) were investigated. Four plant species, maize, wheat, pea and the lip1 mutant of pea, known to have different composition of the spectral forms of Pchlide, were used. In very young plants short‐wavelength Pchlide with a fluorescence emission at 631 nm was dominating. Long‐wavelength Pchlide fluorescing mainly around 655 nm increased during development, which led to a relative decrease of the short‐wavelength forms. During ageing of the leaves, the short‐wavelength forms slightly increased again. The different proportions of short‐ and long‐wavelength Pchlide spectral forms were, however, found to vary with the developmental stage in a species specific pattern. The steady‐state level of POR mRNA and the amount of the POR protein were similar in species dominated by short‐wavelength forms and in species dominated with long‐wavelength forms. Even if POR is necessary for the formation of the long‐wavelength Pchlide form it is not the only limiting factor for formation of long‐wavelength Pchlide forms in mature plants.  相似文献   

4.
The fluorescence properties and role in energy transfer of protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) forms were studied in dark-grown wheat leaves by conventional and laser excited high resolution methods in the 10 K–100 K temperature range. The three major spectral bands, with emission maxima at 633, 657 (of highest intensity) and 670 nm as Bands I, II, and III were analyzed and interpreted as the contributions of six different structural forms. Band I is the envelope of three (0,0) emission bands with maxima at 628, 632 and 642 nm. Laser excitation studies in the range of Band II at 10 K reveal the presence of a spectrally close donor band besides the acceptor, Band II. The intensity in Band III originates mostly from being the vibronic satellite of Band II, but contains also a small (0,0) band with absorption maximum at 674 nm. Excitation spectra show that besides the Pchlides with absorption around 650 nm within Band II, another significant population of Band I with absorption around 640 nm is also coupled by energy transfer to the acceptor of Band II. The spectral difference between the two donor forms indicate different dipolar environments. Upon increasing the temperature, the intensity of Band II and its satellite, Band III decrease, while Band I remains unaffected. Band II shows also a broadening towards the blue side at higher temperatures. Both the quenching of fluorescence and the spectral change was explained by a thermally activated formation of a non-fluorescent intermediate state in the excited state of Pchlide acceptors.  相似文献   

5.
The fast (1 min) regeneration process of the photoactive Pchlide forms after a light flash was studied in etiolated wheat leaves, and this process was simulated in vitro by incubating etioplast inner membranes of wheat with excess NADPH or NADP+. The 77 K fluorescence spectra were recorded after flash illumination, dark incubation and a subsequent flash illumination of the samples. A non-photoactive Pchlide form with an emission maximum at 650 nm was transiently detected in leaves during regeneration of a photoactive Pchlide form with an emission maximum at 654 nm. Gaussian deconvolution of fluorescence spectra of isolated membranes showed that this 650 nm form appeared in conditions of excess NADP+, as suggested in previous studies. Additionally a Pchlide form emitting at 638.5 nm was detected in the same conditions. The analysis of the spectra of leaves at different times after a flash indicated that these two non-photoactive forms are involved as intermediates in the regeneration of photoactive Pchlide. This regeneration is in correlation with the production of the Chlide form emitting at 676 nm. The results demonstrate that, in vivo, part of the NADPH:protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase is reloading with nonphotoactive Pchlide on a fast time-scale and that the 676 nm Chlide form is the released product of the phototransformation in this process.  相似文献   

6.
7.
When exposed to salt stress, leaves from dark-grown wheat seedlings ( Triticum aestivum , cv. Giza 168) showed reduced accumulation of chlorophyll during irradiation. To elucidate the mechanism behind salt-influenced reduction of chlorophyll biosynthesis, we have investigated the effect of salt stress on the spectral forms of Pchlide, the phototransformation of Pchlide to Chlide, the Shibata shift, the regeneration of Pchlide and the accumulation of Pchlide from 5-aminolevulinic acid (ALA). We found that the phototransformation of Pchlide to Chlide was not affected by salt stress. The blue shift (Shibata shift) of newly formed Chlide was delayed both after flash irradiation and in continuous light. The reformation of Pchlide in darkness after a flash irradiation or after a period of 3-h irradiation was retarded in the salt-treated leaves. However, after a 20-h dark period, Pchlide was reformed even in salt-treated leaves but the formation of short-wavelength Pchlide was suppressed. Compared to controls, salt treatment also reduced the amount of Pchlide accumulated in leaves floated on ALA. The increase in the low temperature fluorescence emission spectrum at 735 nm, which occurred gradually during several hours of irradiation with continuous light in control leaves, was completely suppressed in salt-treated leaves. It is concluded that salt stress inhibits chlorophyll accumulation partly by reducing the rate of porphyrin formation but, as discussed, also by a possible reduction in the formation of chlorophyll-binding proteins.  相似文献   

8.
We have found that long-wavelength quanta up to 780 nm support oxygen evolution from the leaves of sunflower and bean. The far-red light excitations are supporting the photochemical activity of photosystem II, as is indicated by the increased chlorophyll fluorescence in response to the reduction of the photosystem II primary electron acceptor, Q(A). The results also demonstrate that the far-red photosystem II excitations are susceptible to non-photochemical quenching, although less than the red excitations. Uphill activation energies of 9.8+/-0.5 kJ mol(-1) and 12.5+/-0.7 kJ mol(-1) have been revealed in sunflower leaves for the 716 and 740 nm illumination, respectively, from the temperature dependencies of quantum yields, comparable to the corresponding energy gaps of 8.8 and 14.3 kJ mol(-1) between the 716 and 680 nm, and the 740 and 680 nm light quanta. Similarly, the non-photochemical quenching of far-red excitations is facilitated by temperature confirming thermal activation of the far-red quanta to the photosystem II core. The observations are discussed in terms of as yet undisclosed far-red forms of chlorophyll in the photosystem II antenna, reversed (uphill) spill-over of excitation from photosystem I antenna to the photosystem II antenna, as well as absorption from thermally populated vibrational sub-levels of photosystem II chlorophylls in the ground electronic state. From these three interpretations, our analysis favours the first one, i.e., the presence in intact plant leaves of a small number of far-red chlorophylls of photosystem II. Based on analogy with the well-known far-red spectral forms in photosystem I, it is likely that some kind of strongly coupled chlorophyll dimers/aggregates are involved. The similarity of the result for sunflower and bean proves that both the extreme long-wavelength oxygen evolution and the local quantum yield maximum are general properties of the plants.  相似文献   

9.
High salinity causes ion imbalance and osmotic stress in plants. Leaf sections from 8-d-old dark-grown wheat (Triticum aestivum cv. Giza 168) were exposed to high salt stress (600 mM) and the native arrangements of plastid pigments together with the ultrastructure of the plastids were studied using low-temperature fluorescence spectroscopy and transmission electron microscopy. Although plastids from salt-treated leaves had highly swollen prothylakoids (PTs) the prolamellar bodies (PLBs) were regular. Accordingly, a slight intensity decrease of the short-wavelength protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) form was observed, but no change was found in the long-wavelength Pchlide form emitting at 656 nm. After irradiation, newly formed swollen thylakoids showed traversing stromal strands. The PLB dispersal was partly inhibited and remnants of the PLBs formed an electron-dense structure, which remained after prolonged (8 h) irradiation. The difference in fluorescence emission maximum of the main chlorophyll form in salt-stressed leaves (681 nm) and in control leaves (683 nm) indicated a restrained formation of the photosynthetic apparatus. Overall chlorophyll accumulation during prolonged irradiation was inhibited. Salt-stressed leaves returned to darkness after 3 h of irradiation had, compared with the control, a reduced amount of Pchlide and reduced re-formation of regular net-like PLBs. Instead, the size of the electron-dense structures increased. This study reports, for the first time, the salt-induced swelling of PTs and reveals traversing stromal strands in newly formed thylakoids. Although the PLBs were intact and the Pchlide fluorescence emission spectra appeared normal after salt stress in darkness, plastid development to chloroplasts was highly restricted during irradiation.  相似文献   

10.
We report a photoswitchable monomeric Orange (PSmOrange) protein that is initially orange (excitation, 548 nm; emission, 565 nm) but becomes far-red (excitation, 636 nm; emission, 662 nm) after irradiation with blue-green light. Compared to its parental orange proteins, PSmOrange has greater brightness, faster maturation, higher photoconversion contrast and better photostability. The red-shifted spectra of both forms of PSmOrange enable its simultaneous use with cyan-to-green photoswitchable proteins to study four intracellular populations. Photoconverted PSmOrange has, to our knowledge, the most far-red excitation peak of all GFP-like fluorescent proteins, provides diffraction-limited and super-resolution imaging in the far-red light range, is optimally excited with common red lasers, and can be photoconverted subcutaneously in a mouse. PSmOrange photoswitching occurs via a two-step photo-oxidation process, which causes cleavage of the polypeptide backbone. The far-red fluorescence of photoconverted PSmOrange results from a new chromophore containing N-acylimine with a co-planar carbon-oxygen double bond.  相似文献   

11.
Biogenesis of the pigment apparatus was studied in coleoptiles of postetiolated barley seedlings (Hordeum vulgare L.) and triticale (Triticale), differing in chlorophyll content, during growing in a “ light-darkness” regime with a 16-h photoperiod. Photoactive protochlorophyllide with a fluorescence maximum at 655 nm (Pchlide655), which accumulates in coleoptiles of etiolated seedlings, was converted in the light into a chlorophyll pigment with a fluorescence maximum at 690 nm (excitation at 440 nm, temperature ?196°C). The spectral transition 690 nm → 675 nm forms was completed in darkness for 15 min illumination. There was almost no resynthesis of new portions of Pchlide655 in coleoptiles under darkness conditions, even after a 5–6-h darkness period after brief illumination of seedlings with flashes of white light. Chlorophyllide (Chlide) formed from Pchlide655 was not esterified and was destroyed both in the light (4 h, 1.0–1.5 klx) and darkness. In coleoptiles of greening etiolated seedlings, chlorophyll formation started only by 24 h of illumination. The instability of the chlorophyll pigment formed after etiolation indicates that plastids of coleoptiles do not contain the system of chlorophyll biosynthesis centers typical of leaves, which are bound to membranes and protect pigment from destruction.  相似文献   

12.
Low temperature fluorescence spectra (FS) and fluorescence excitation spectra (FES) of protoporphyrin IX (Proto), Mg-protoporphyrin IX and its monomethyl ester (MgProto-ME) and protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) in etiolated barley leaves treated with 5-aminolevulinic acid and/or 2,2'-dipyridyl were studied. The spectra of Proto and MgProto-ME showed a little dependence on temperature of registration and exhibited similarity to low temperature spectra in diluted organic and buffer solutions. However, a red wavelength shift for Soret bands of Proto and MgProto-ME was observed due to porphyrin interaction with bovine serum albumin in 0.05 M, Na2HPO4 solution at room temperature. Disaggregating treatments had no effect on Proto and MgProto-ME spectra in plants. These results suggested that in etiolated leaves Proto and MgProto-ME molecules were in a monomer state. The spectral properties of these molecules were determined by interaction of porphyrins with proteins and other plastid membrane components. The spectral analyses indicated an efficient energy migration from Proto and MgProto-ME molecules to active form of Pchlide which emitted at 656nm, and no energy transfer from carotenoids to porphyrins in vivo. These findings suggested that Proto and MgProto-ME from carotenoids, and close location of these porphyrins and photoactive Pchlide in etioplast membranes. The latter conclusion was strongly supported by an observation that in etiolated leaves, S-adenosyl-L-methionin:Mg-protoporphyrin IX methyltransferase, which converts MgProto into MgProtoME, were located not only in prothylakoids but also in prolamellar bodies containing photoactive Pchlide.  相似文献   

13.
The molecular background of Hg (2+)-induced inhibition of protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) photoreduction was investigated in homogenates of dark-grown wheat leaves. Our earlier work showed that 15 min incubation with 10 (-2) M Hg (2+) completely inhibits the activity of NADPH : Pchlide oxidoreductase ( ). Detailed analysis of spectra recorded at 10 K indicated the appearance of emission bands at 638 and 650 nm, which are characteristic for NADP (+)-Pchlide complexes. Fluorescence emission spectra recorded with different excitation wavelengths, fluorescence lifetime measurements and the analysis of acetone extractions revealed that Hg (2+) can also react directly with Pchlide, resulting in protopheophorbide formation. At 10 (-3) M Hg (2+), the phototransformation was complete but the blue shift of the chlorophyllide emission band speeded up remarkably. This indicates oxidation of the NADPH molecules that have a structural role in keeping together the etioplast inner membrane components. We suggest a complex model for the Hg (2+) effect: depending on concentration it can react with any components of the NADPH : Pchlide oxidoreductase macrodomains.  相似文献   

14.
A newly developed laboratory fluorescence imaging system was used to obtain fluorescence images (FImage) of freshly excised cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.) leaves in spectral bands centered in the blue (F450), green (F550), red (F680), and far-red (F730) spectral regions that resulted from a broad-band (300-400 nm) excitation source centered at 360 nm. Means of relative fluorescence intensities (RFI) from these spectral fluorescence images were compared with spectral fluorescence emission data obtained from excitation wavelengths at 280 nm (280EX, 300-550 nm) and 380 nm (380EX, 400-800 nm) of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) extracts from these leaves. All three fluorescence data types (FImage, 280EX, 380EX) were used to assess ultraviolet-B (UV-B, 280-320 nm) induced physiological changes and the possible use of N-[2-(2-oxo-1-imidazolidinyl) ethyl]-N′-phenylurea (EDU or ethylenediurea) as a chemical protectant against UV-B damage. Plants exhibited well known foliar growth and pigment responses to UV-B exposure (e.g., increased UV-B absorbing compounds and decreased leaf area, chlorophyll a content; and and lower chlorophyll a/b and chlorophyll/carotenoid pigment ratios). Since EDU alone had no effect on foliar variables, there was no evidence that EDU afforded protection against UV-B. Instead, EDU augmented some UV-B effects when provided in conjunction with UV-B irradiation (e.g., reductions in the chlorophyll/carotenoid ratio, total photosynthetic pigments, and chlorophyll b content).Relative fluorescence intensities (RFI) in the longer visible wavelengths (green, red, and far-red) were uncorrelated for comparisons between the FImage and 380EX data sets. However, blue and green RFI were significantly correlated (0.8r0.6; P ≤0.002) for comparisons between FImage and 280EX data sets. UV-B treatment caused an increase in blue RFI (e.g., F450) in both images and 280EX measurements. One explanation is that the UV-B excitation of both 280EX and FImage stimulates processes that produce excess blue fluorescence. The molecules that produce the excess blue fluorescence in both the 280EX and the Fimage data are different electron transfer agents that operate in parallel. For FImage, the UV excitation penetrates leaf surface layers to stimulate fluorescence from compounds in mesophyll and epidermal tissues (as occurs for the extracts of leaf discs), whereas emissions captured at longer, less energetic wavelengths, were primarily from the epidermal layer. UV-B irradiated leaves showed much greater heteorgeneity of RFI in both the green (F550FImag) and the red (F680FImag) bands than unirradiated leaves; this was true irrespective of EDU treatment.Although qualitative responses in individual bands differed between FImage and 380EX data, similar results were obtained in the detection of UV-B induced effects when the red/green and blue/far-red fluorescence ratios of these data were compared. The red/green ratio (either F680/F550FImage or F675/F525380EX) was lower for UV-B exposed plants in both images and 380EX data. UV-B exposure also significantly enhanced the blue/far-red ratio of images (F450/F740FImage) and the comparable 380EX ratio (F450/F730380EX) for the combined UV-B/EDU group. The far-red/red ratios were not useful in separating treatment effects in images or 380EX. Although comparable ratios were not available in 280EX data, the UV/blue ratio (F315/F420280EX) was substantially reduced by UV-B exposure and was inversely related to total photosynthetic pigment content. These findings suggest that the red/green ratio (FImage, 380EX) and the UV/blue ratio (280EX) may be as useful as the blue/far-red ratio (380EX) reported previously in detection of UV-B stress. Furthermore, the results support the validity of the imaging technique as a non-destructive diagnostic tool for assessing UV-B stress damage in plants.  相似文献   

15.
Hugo Pettai  Arvi Freiberg  Agu Laisk 《BBA》2005,1708(3):311-321
We have found that long-wavelength quanta up to 780 nm support oxygen evolution from the leaves of sunflower and bean. The far-red light excitations are supporting the photochemical activity of photosystem II, as is indicated by the increased chlorophyll fluorescence in response to the reduction of the photosystem II primary electron acceptor, QA. The results also demonstrate that the far-red photosystem II excitations are susceptible to non-photochemical quenching, although less than the red excitations. Uphill activation energies of 9.8 ± 0.5 kJ mol−1 and 12.5 ± 0.7 kJ mol−1 have been revealed in sunflower leaves for the 716 and 740 nm illumination, respectively, from the temperature dependencies of quantum yields, comparable to the corresponding energy gaps of 8.8 and 14.3 kJ mol−1 between the 716 and 680 nm, and the 740 and 680 nm light quanta. Similarly, the non-photochemical quenching of far-red excitations is facilitated by temperature confirming thermal activation of the far-red quanta to the photosystem II core. The observations are discussed in terms of as yet undisclosed far-red forms of chlorophyll in the photosystem II antenna, reversed (uphill) spill-over of excitation from photosystem I antenna to the photosystem II antenna, as well as absorption from thermally populated vibrational sub-levels of photosystem II chlorophylls in the ground electronic state. From these three interpretations, our analysis favours the first one, i.e., the presence in intact plant leaves of a small number of far-red chlorophylls of photosystem II. Based on analogy with the well-known far-red spectral forms in photosystem I, it is likely that some kind of strongly coupled chlorophyll dimers/aggregates are involved. The similarity of the result for sunflower and bean proves that both the extreme long-wavelength oxygen evolution and the local quantum yield maximum are general properties of the plants.  相似文献   

16.
To study if etiolation symptoms exist in plants grown under natural illumination conditions, under‐soil epicotyl segments of light‐grown pea (Pisum sativum) plants were examined and compared to those of hydroponically dark‐grown plants. Light‐, fluorescence‐ and electron microscopy, 77 K fluorescence spectroscopy, pigment extraction and pigment content determination methods were used. Etioplasts with prolamellar bodies and/or prothylakoids, protochlorophyll (Pchl) and protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) forms (including the flash‐photoactive 655 nm emitting form) were found in the (pro)chlorenchyma of epicotyl segments under 3 cm soil depth; their spectral properties were similar to those of hydroponically grown seedlings. However, differences were found in etioplast sizes and Pchlide:Pchl molar ratios, which indicate differences in the developmental rates of the under‐soil and of hydroponically developed cells. Tissue regions closer to the soil surface showed gradual accumulation of chlorophyll, and in parallel, decrease of Pchl and Pchlide. These results proved that etioplasts and Pchlide exist in soil‐covered parts of seedlings even if they have a 3–4‐cm long photosynthetically active shoot above the soil surface. This underlines that etiolation symptoms do develop under natural growing conditions, so they are not merely artificial, laboratory phenomena. Consequently, dark‐grown laboratory plants are good models to study the early stages of etioplast differentiation and the Pchlide–chlorophyllide phototransformation.  相似文献   

17.
Localization of protochlorophyll(ide) (Pchlide) forms and chlorophyllide (Chlide) transformation process were studied by using comparative analyses of de-convoluted 77 K fluorescence spectra of barley etioplast stroma and different membrane fractions obtained by sucrose gradient centrifugation. Non-photoactive 633 nm Pchlide form was mainly located in the envelope-prothylakoid membrane mixture while the photoactive 657 nm Pchlide was dominant pigment in the prolamellar body membrane and in the soluble etioplast fraction (stroma). When these fractions were exposed to a saturating flash, conversion of photoactive Pchlide into 697 nm Chlide was preferential in the prolamellar body and in the stroma, while the 676 nm Chlide was dominant pigment form in the envelope-prothylakoid fraction. These spectral characteristics are considered to reflect molecular composition and organization of the pigment-protein complexes specific for each etioplast compartment.  相似文献   

18.
Buschmann  C.  Langsdorf  G.  Lichtenthaler  H.K. 《Photosynthetica》2000,38(4):483-491
An overview is given on the fluorescence imaging of plants. Emphasis is laid upon multispectral fluorescence imaging in the maxima of the fluorescence emission bands of leaves, i.e., in the blue (440 nm), green (520 nm), red (690 nm), and far-red (740 nm) spectral regions. Details on the origin of these four fluorescence bands are presented including emitting substances and emitting sites within a leaf tissue. Blue-green fluorescence derives from ferulic acids covalently bound to cell walls, and the red and far-red fluorescence comes from chlorophyll (Chl) a in the chloroplasts of green mesophyll cells. The fluorescence intensities are influenced (1) by changes in the concentration of the emitting substances, (2) by the internal optics of leaves determining the penetration of excitation radiation and partial re-absorption of the emitted fluorescence, and (3) by the energy distribution between photosynthesis, heat production, and emission of Chl fluorescence. The set-up of the Karlsruhe multispectral fluorescence imaging system (FIS) is described from excitation with UV-pulses to the detection with an intensified CCD-camera. The possibilities of image processing (e.g., formation of fluorescence ratio images) are presented, and the ways of extraction of physiological and stress information from the ratio images are outlined. Examples for the interpretation of fluorescence images are given by demonstrating the information available for the detection of different developmental stages of plant material, of strain and stress of plants, and of herbicide treatment. This novel technique can be applied for near-distance screening or remote sensing.  相似文献   

19.
Surface enhanced resonance Raman scattering (SERRS) spectra have been obtained from the active, far-red light absorbing (Pfr) and biologically inactive (Pr) forms of phytochrome adsorbed on silver colloids. Substantial differences between the SERRS spectra of the two forms in the low and high wavenumber regions are observed using 406.7 nm wavelength excitation. These differences reinforce those seen with 413.1 nm wavelength excitation in the high wavenumber region. Simultaneously, extensive differences are observed in the SERRS obtained from the same form in the low wavenumber region using 406.7 nm, as compared with 413.1 nm wavelength excitation. The relative intensity differences observed for the two forms, and those obtained using two slightly different excitation wavelengths to illuminate the same form, suggest that some type of subtle, protein-controlled structural variation is responsible for the spectroscopic differences. AZ----E isomerization during the Pr----Pfr phototransformation is consistent with the SERRS data, although the overall chromophore conformations are most likely conserved for the native Pr- and Pfr-phytochrome species. Slight out-of-plane ring twisting, accompanying the Pr----Pfr photoisomerization, may be responsible for the large difference in the spectroscopic properties of the native Pr and Pfr chromophores.  相似文献   

20.
Low-temperature fluorescence emission spectra of 6.5-day-old dark-grown epicotyls of pea ( Pisum sativum ) revealed the presence of protochlorophyll(ide). The upper part of the epicotyl contained 30% of the protochlorophyll(ide) content per fresh weight found in pea leaves, whereas the lower part contained 3%. Three discrete spectral forms of protochlorophyll(ide) were clearly distinguished after Gaussian deconvolution of fluorescence excitation and emission spectra. Adding the satellite bands of the Qy(0-0) transitions (the emission vibrational (Emv) bands with correlated amplitudes, gave the following delineation: Ex439–Em629–Emv684, Ex447–Em636–Emv700 and Ex456–Em650–Emv728. Sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) followed by immunodetection of whole tissue extracts of the epicotyl indicated the presence of NADPH-protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase (EC 1.3.1.33). Electron micrographs showed prolamellar bodies in at most 11 % of the plastid profiles of the epicotyl cells. These prolamellar bodies were smaller, and many of them showed less regular structure than those of the leaves. Taken together, the results indicate that the protochlorophyll(ide) in epicotyls is arranged in a different way than in leaves.  相似文献   

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