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1.
The effect of high salt concentration on photosystem II (PS II) electron transport rates and chlorophyll a fluorescence induction kinetics was investigated in coupled and uncoupled spinach thylakoid membranes. With increase in salt concentration, the rates of electron transport mediated by PS II and the F v/F m ratio were affected more in uncoupled thylakoids as compared to coupled thylakoid membranes. The uncoupled thylakoid membranes seemed to behave like coupled thylakoid membranes at high NaCl concentration (∼1 M). On increasing the salt concentration, the uncoupler was found to be less effective and Na+ probably worked as a coupling enhancer or uncoupling suppressor. We suggest that positive charge of Na+ mimics the function of positive charge of H+ in the thylakoid lumen in causing coupled state. The function of NaCl (monovalent cation) could be carried out by even lower concentration of Ca2+ (divalent cation) or Al3+ (trivalent cation). We conclude that this function of NaCl as coupling enhancer is not specific, and in general a positive charge is required for causing coupling in uncoupled thylakoid membranes. Published in Russian in Biokhimiya, 2009, Vol. 74, No. 6, pp. 761–767.  相似文献   

2.
W.S. Chow  J. Barber 《BBA》1980,589(2):346-352
1. When suspended in a low cation-containing medium, chloroplast thylakoid membranes and carboxymethyl-cellulose particles quench the fluorescence from 9-aminoacridine (Searle, G.F.W. and Barber, J. (1978) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 502, 309–320).2. Relief of this quenching is achieved by adding cations to the suspension medium with the order of effectiveness being C3+ > C2+ > C+, indicating that the fluorescence acts as an indicator of the surface electrical potential.3. Using the Gouy-Chapman theory, the differential effect of divalent (methyl viologen) and monovalent (K+) cations has been used to calculate surface charge densities.4. The calculations indicate that the surface charge density on the thylakoids significantly increases when cations are added to the low cation-containing medium. Under the same conditions the surface charge density of glutaralde-hyde-fixed thylakoids and carboxymethyl-cellulose particles remained essentially constant.5. It is argued that the 9-aminoacridine technique is able to probe localized areas on the membrane surface and that the variability of the surface charge density of untreated thylakoids may be due to redistribution of charges associated with membrane stacking as suggested by Barber and Chow (Barber, J. and Chow, W.S. (1979) FEBS Lett. 105, 5–10).  相似文献   

3.
Small particles derived from the digitonin treatment of chloroplast thylakoid membranes in either the stacked (grana-containing) or unstacked condition, as determined by cation concentration, have been used to study the aggregation of thylakoid membranes. At pH values above 5, the small particles from stacked chloroplasts do not aggregate in the presence of Mg2+ or other screening cations at concentrations sufficient to cause the restacking of thylakoids from low-salt chloroplasts. However, the small particles from stacked chloroplasts are aggregated either by lowering the pH to 4.6 or adding the binding cation La3+. In contrast, the small particles obtained on digitonin treatment of unstacked chloroplasts were aggregated by cations at neutral pH. Large particles (mainly grana) derived from digitonin treatment of stacked chloroplasts could not be unstacked by transfer to media of low cation concentration. It is concluded that the nonappressed regions of the chloroplast thylakoid membranes under stacking conditions carry higher than average negative surface charge densities under physiological pH conditions. Transfer of chloroplasts to media of low cation concentration causes a time-dependent lateral redistribution of charge between the appressed and nonappressed regions, but this redistribution is prevented by prior digitonin treatment of stacked chloroplasts.  相似文献   

4.
A Mg2+-induced decrease of the rate of photosystem I (PS I) electron transport (DCIPH2 → methyl viologen) in thylakoids under saturated light intensities has been reported earlier (S. Bose, J. E. Mullet, G. E. Hoch, and C. J. Arntzen, 1981, Photobiochem. Photobiophys.2, 45–52). A similar effect is observed with Na+, although the concentration required for half-maximal inhibition was higher by about two orders of magnitude. The cation effect was gradually abolished as the thylakoids were aged by incubation at 30 °C for 6 h. The loss of cation effect on PS I electron transport rate during aging was parallel to the corresponding loss of cation effect on thylakoid stacking. The cation concentration required for thylakoid stacking and the degree of inhibition as a function of cation concentration correlated strongly with the degree of thylakoid stacking. These observations indicated that the inhibition of the rate of PS I electron transport by cations is a consequence of cation-induced stacking of thylakoid membranes. The observed inhibition of the rate of PS I electron transport is discussed in terms of two hypotheses: (i) a fraction (20–30%) of the PS I complexes is trapped in the appressed region of grana and becomes unavailable to the electron donor (DCIPH2) and (ii) the membrane structure is altered by the cations in such a manner that the rate constant of electron donation by the donor to the electron transport chain in the thylakoid is decreased.  相似文献   

5.
The interaction of a set of monovalent (Na+, K+) and divalent (Mg2+, Ca2+) metal cations with single-chain polyguluronate (periodic chain based on a dodecameric repeat unit, 21-helical conformation) is investigated using explicit-solvent molecular dynamics simulations (at 300 K and 1 bar). A total of 14 (neutralising) combinations of the different ions are considered (single type of cation or simultaneous presence of two types of cation, either in the presence or absence of chloride anions). The main observations are: (1) the chain conformation and intramolecular hydrogen bonding is insensitive to the counter-ion environment; (2) the binding of the cations is essentially non-specific for all ions considered (counter-ion atmosphere confined within a cylinder of high ionic density, but no well-defined binding sites); (3) the density and tightness of the distributions of the different cations within the counter-ion atmosphere follow the approximate sequence Ca2+>Mg2+>K+~Na+; (4) the solvent-separated binding of the cations to the carboxylate groups of the chain is frequent, and its occurrence follows the approximate sequence K+>Na+>Ca2+>Mg2+ (contact-binding events as well as the binding of a cation to multiple carboxylate groups are very infrequent); and (5) the counter-ion atmosphere typically leads to a complete screening of the chain charge within 1.0–1.2 nm of the chain axis and, for most systems, to a charge reversal at about 1.5 nm (i.e. the effective chain charge becomes positive at this distance and as high in magnitude as one-quarter of the bare chain charge, before slowly decreasing to zero). These findings agree well (in a qualitative sense) with available experimental data and predictions from simple analytical models, and provide further insight concerning the nature of alginate–cation interactions in aqueous solution.  相似文献   

6.
H.Y. Nakatani  J. Barber  J.A. Forrester 《BBA》1978,504(1):215-225
1. Particle microelectrophoresis mobility studies have been conducted with chloroplast thylakoid membranes and with isolated intact chloroplasts.2. The pH dependence of the electrophoretic mobility indicated that at pH values above 4.3 both membrane systems carry a net negative charge.3. Chemical treatment of thylakoids has shown that neither the sugar residues of the galactolipids in the membrane nor the basic groups of the membrane proteins having pK values between 6 and 10 are exposed at the surface.4. However, treatment with 1-ethyl-3(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide, together with glycine methyl ester, neutralized the negative charges on the thylakoid membrane surface indicating the involvement of carboxyl groups which, because of their pH sensitivity, are likely to be the carboxyl groups of aspartic and glutamic acid residues.5. The nature of the protein giving rise to the negative surface charges on the thylakoids is not known but is shown not to involve the coupling factor or the light harvesting chlorophyl achlorophyll bpigment · protein complex.6. No significant effect of light was observed on the electrophoretic mobility of either thylakoids or intact chloroplasts.7. The striking difference in the ability of divalent and monovalent cations to screen the surface charges was demonstrated and explained in terms of the Gouy-Chapman theory.8. Calculations of the ζ-potentials for thylakoid membranes gave values for the charge density at the plane of shear to be in the region of one electronic charge per 1500–2000 Å2.9. The significance of the results is discussed in terms of cation distribution in chloroplasts and the effect of cations on photosynthetic phenomena.  相似文献   

7.
G.F.W. Searle  J. Barber 《BBA》1979,545(3):508-518
The amphipathic fluorescence probe, 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulphonate has been used to investigate the surface electrical properties of chloroplast thylakoid membranes. The fluorescence yield of 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulphonate in aqueous solution increases on addition of hypotonically shocked chloroplast, and the emission maximum shifts towards the blue to 440 nm, although the emission spectrum is somewhat distorted by chloroplast pigment absorption.The intensity of 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulphonate fluorescence is further increased on adding salts to the membrane suspension, and changes of >100% are routinely observed. Similar observations have also been made with soya bean phospholipid (azolectin) liposomes. The magnitude of the fluorescence increase is dependent on membrane concentration, being more pronounced at high surface area/suspending volume ratios. The effect of salt addition appears to be that of shielding the fixed negative charges on the membrane surface, thus increasing the fraction of 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulphonate molecules at the surface, where the 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulphonate has a higher fluorescence yield than in free aqueous solution. This concept is supported by the fact that the effectiveness of salts in increasing 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulphonate fluorescence is as predicted by classical electrical double layer theory: governed mainly by the charge carried by the cation with an order of effectiveness C3+ > C2+ > C+, and not by the chemical nature of the cation or by the nature of its co-ion.It has been argued that the chlorophyll fluorescence yield, controlled by the cation composition of the suspending medium follows the total diffusible positive charge density at the thylakoid membrane surface (Barber, J., Mills, J. and Love, A. (1977) Febs. Lett. 74, 174–181). Although the cation induced 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulphonate and chlorophyll fluorescence yield changes show similar characteristics, there are also distinct differences between the two phenomena particularly when cations are added to chloroplasts initially suspended in a virtually cation-free medium. Therefore it is concluded that although both 2-p-toluidinonaphthalene-6-sulphonate and chlorophyll fluorescence yields are governed by the electrical properties of the thylakoid membrane surface, the mechanism controlling their cation sensitivity is not the same.  相似文献   

8.
The role of divalent cations like magnesium (Mg2+) and calcium (Ca2+) was irrvestigated on energy distribution process ofHydrilla verticillata thylakoids. Effect of these cations was tested on relative quantum yield of photosystem (PS) II catalyzed electron transport activity, room and liquid nitrogen temperature fluorescence emission properties and thylakoid light scattering characteristics. The electron transport activity was found to be stimulated in the presence of these cations in a light intensity independent manner. The concentration of cation required for maximum stimulation was nearly 10–12 mM. Comparatively, Ca2+ was more effective than Mg2+. Cation induced stimulation in electron transport activity was not accompanied by increase in chlorophylla fluorescence intensity either at room (25°C) or liquid nitrogen (77°K) temperatures. Furthermore, 540 nm absorption and 90° light scattering properties of thylakoids remained insensitive towards divalent cations. These facts together suggest that divalent cations inHydrilla thylakoids are not effective in supporting the excitation distribution between the interacting photosystem complexes.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract

3H-Nimodipine (3H -NIM) is a high affinity radioligand suitable to study Ca2+ -channels in a variety of tissues. The binding is saturable, reversible, and stereospecific in purified bovine heart and partially purified guinea-pig brain membranes. In the latter a Bmax of 600fmol/mg protein, dissociation constants (KD) of 0.4-0.8nM and a Hill slope of 1.0 are found. At 37C the optimal pH in 50mM TRIS-HCl buffer is 7.1-7.4. The calcium channel is a metalloprotein, and the divalent cation which is essential for the binding of 3 H -NIM can be removed by EDTA (EC50 20μM); the nimodipine binding site of the channel may then be reconstituted by divalent cations with Mn2+ > Ca2+>Mg2+>Sr2+. Ca2+-antagonist drugs can be divided into three main classes based on their interaction with the 3H -NIM binding site: Class I has one site law of mass action-displacement isotherms with 3H -NIM, Class II exhibits complex biphasic inhibition profiles and Class III drugs increase the affinity of 1,4 dihydropyridines for the Ca2+ -channel. Diltiazem is a Class III Ca2+ -antagonist. Our in vitro studies lead us to conclude that the Ca2+ -channel contains multiple regulatory sites at which drugs can act.  相似文献   

10.
Effects of the ionophore A23187 on isolated broken and intact chloroplasts in the pH range of 6.2 to 7.6 have been studied. In both types of chloroplasts, uncoupling of photosynthetic electron transport by A23187 (6–10 μm) was mediated either by Mg2+ or—in the absence of divalent cations (i.e., when EDTA was added to the medium)—by high concentrations of Na+, but not of K+ ions. At increased concentrations of the ionophore (above about 10 μm) and high pH (7.2 to 7.6), uncoupling in broken chloroplasts was also mediated by K+ ions. The inhibition of the energy-dependent slow decline of chlorophyll fluorescence in intact chloroplasts by the ionophore (which denotes uncoupling) is reversed by EDTA in the presence of K+, but not of Na+ ions. In 3-(3′,4′-dichlorophenyl)1,1-dimethylurea-poisoned intact chloroplasts, the yield of variable chlorophyll fluorescence is lowered by A23187 + EDTA and increased again by addition of NaCl or KCl. Chlorophyll fluorescence spectra at 77 °K of intact chloroplasts incubated with A23187 + EDTA indicated that the distribution of excitation energy had changed in favor of photosystem I, as expected from a depletion of Mg2+. This change was reversed by MgCl2+, KCl, or NaCl. From a comparison of low-temperature fluorescence spectra of broken and intact chloroplasts at different levels of Mg2+ in the medium, the concentration of free Mg2+ in the stroma of the intact chloroplasts at pH 7.6 in the dark was estimated at 1 to 4 mm. The results show that in chloroplasts the specificity of A23187 for divalent cations is limited. In the presence of EDTA, the ionophore mediates fast Na+H+ exchange across thylakoid membranes, whereas K+ is transferred much less efficiently. Both Na+ and K+ ions seem to be transported readily across the chloroplast envelope by the action of the ionophore, leading to an exchange of Mg2+ for monovalent cations at the thylakoid membrane surfaces in intact chloroplasts.  相似文献   

11.
The extraction of chlorophyll-protein (CP) complexes from thylakoids by the detergent octyl glucoside is strongly affected by pretreatment of the thylakoids with trypsin or cations. In these experiments, washed thylakoids were incubated in the presence of 0.5 μm to 5 mm Mg2+, pelleted, and extracted with octyl glucoside (30 mm). Increasing amounts of Mg2+ depressed extractability of all CP complexes, but especially the chlorophyll a + b-containing light-harvesting complex (LHC). This cation effect is observed with other cations which promote thylakoid stacking (5 mm Mn2+ or Ca2+, 50 mm Na+). However, the effect is not merely due to stacking, since low concentrations of Mg2+ (0.5 μmto 0.5 mm) have a marked effect on extractability but have no effect on light scattering (OD 550 nm), an indicator of stacking. Furthermore, trypsin treatment of thylakoids stacked with 5 mm Mg2+ caused a significant reversal of stacking, but had little effect on extractability. Trypsin treatment of unstacked membranes resulted in increased extractability of all CP complexes, but especially of the LHC. Cation-treated membranes are also significantly different from those “stacked” at pH 4.5. While the latter do show decreased extractability, there is no change in the chlorophyll ab ratio of the extract, and the membranes cannot be “unstacked” with trypsin. We conclude that octyl glucoside extractability reflects the lateral interaction of CP complexes with each other and with other components in the same plane of the membrane. It is clear that divalent cations have several effects on thylakoid membranes, not all of which are due to their ability to promote stacking.  相似文献   

12.
H.Y. Nakatani  J. Barber  M.J. Minski 《BBA》1979,545(1):24-35
Thylakoid membranes isolated from peas have been subjected to ionic analyses using the technique of neutron activation. This has allowed the analyses of K+, Na+, Mg2+, Ca2+ and Cl? to be measured simultaneously on the same sample. By varying the ionic composition of the suspending medium it has been shown that these chloroplast membranes have no obvious chemical specificity for the inorganic cations studied and that the major controlling factor is the electrostatic neutralization of the surface negative charges. In agreement with the Gouy-Chapman theory and for the conditions used, divalent cations were preferentially attracted to the membrane surface. This finding, together with the ionic analysis of the unwashed thylakoids and of isolated intact chloroplasts, indicated that the major physiological surface cation is Mg2+ and that K+ is probably the main inorganic cation of the stroma. This conclusion is discussed in terms of counterion movement in response to light induced proton pumping at the thylakoid membrane.  相似文献   

13.
Pretreatment of chloroplast with 0.75 mM of EDTA inhibits markedly electron flow at pH above 8.5. This inhibition can be reversed by adding donors to PS II or by addition of salts to the reaction medium.Restoration of electron flow in EDTA-treated chloroplasts by salts depends clearly on the valency of the cation used. The efficiency observed is: C3+>C2+>C+, which is indicative of screening of negative charges on the membrane. However, maximal restoration of electron flow depends also on the presence of a relatively low concentration of Cl- which is known to be required at the oxygen evolution site. Charge density in the region of Q was measured in control and EDTA-treated chloroplasts. The calculated charge densities were: -1.1 C/cm2 and -2.0 C/cm2 for control and EDTA-treated chloroplasts respectively.It is concluded that EDTA-treatment, by dissipating ° pH and by chelating Mg2+, causes an increase in the negative charge density on the thylakoid membrane which includes a site (or sites) closely related to water donation.Abbreviations EDTA Ethylendiaminetetracetic Acid, disodium salt - MV Methylviologen - TEC Tris (Ethylendiamine) cobalt (III) Chloride - DCMU 3(34 dichlorophenyl)-1,1 Dimethylurea - HQ Hydroquinone - Asc Ascorbate - PS II Photosystem II - SOD Superoxide Dismutase  相似文献   

14.
The rhizotoxicities of Al3+ and of La3+ to wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) were similarly ameliorated by cations in the following order of effectiveness: H+ ≈ C3+ > C2+ > C1+. Among tested cations of a given charge, ameliorative effectiveness was similar except that Ca2+ was slightly more effective than other divalent cations and H+ was much more effective than other monovalent cations. H+ rhizotoxicity was also ameliorated by cations in the order C3+ > C2+ > C1+. These results suggest a role for cell-surface electrical potential in the rhizotoxicity of Al3+, La3+, H+, and other toxic cations: negatively charged cell surfaces of the root accumulate the toxic cations, and amelioration is effected by treatments that reduce the negativity of the cell-surface electrical potential by charge screening or cation binding. Membrane-surface activities of free Al3+ or La3+ computed according to a Gouy-Chapman-Stern model correlated well with growth inhibition, which correlated only poorly with Al3+ or La3+ activities in the external medium. The similar responses of Al-intoxicated and La-intoxicated roots to ameliorative treatments provide evidence that Al3+, rather than AlOH2+ or Al(OH)2+, is the principal toxic species of mononuclear Al. Comparisons of the responses of Al-sensitive and Al-tolerant wheats to Al3+ and to La3+ did not support the hypothesis that varietal sensitivity to Al3+ is based upon differences in cell-surface electrical potential.  相似文献   

15.
Cohen WS  Baxter DR 《Plant physiology》1990,93(3):1005-1010
Monofunctional maleimides have been used to covalently modify the coupling factor protein of monocot thylakoid membranes. As with dicot thylakoids, incubation of the monocot thylakoids with maleimides in the light but not in the dark results in inhibition of both ATP synthesis and hydrolysis. In the dark, sites on the γ and ε subunits of maize Zea mays coupling factor 1 are modified after incubation of maize mesophyll thylakoids with the fluorescent maleimide N-(anilinonaphthyl-4) maleimide. A light accessible site localized solely to the γ subunit has also been demonstrated. In contrast to the case with dicot thylakoids (spinach [Spinacia oleracea] and pea [Pisum sativum]) treatment of monocot thylakoids (maize, barley [Hordeum vulgare], crabgrass [Digitaria sanguinalis]) with bifunctional maleimides or thiol oxidants in the light does not result in functional uncoupling, i.e the bifunctional reagents act more like energy transfer inhibitors. The lack of functional uncoupling could be due either to a failure of the reagents to cross-link key sulfhydryl residues in the γ subunit or to the continued ability of the γ subunit to gate proton movements through the chloroplast coupling factor complex even though its conformation has been altered by sulfhydryl reagents.  相似文献   

16.
Polycation binding to the negatively charged surface of chloroplast thylakoid membranes is known to cause an inhibition of photosystem I activity. It also interferes with the cation-dependent rearrangement of chlorophyll proteins in the thylakoid membrane. It was shown that added anions prevented or reversed the inhibition of photosystem I by polylysine without decreasing its binding to the membranes. Anions also caused a change in the interaction of the chlorophyll proteins in polylysine-treated thylakoids as indicated by an increase in the relative fluorescence intensity from photosystem II. In both cases, the relative effectiveness of the anions tested depended on their valence; for example, the tetravalent species Fe(CN)64t- was effective at a concentration at least 2 orders of magnitude lower than the divalent species SO42?. These results suggest that anions act by screening the positive charge of the polylysine-coated membrane surface. Measurements of the response of the anionic fluorescent probe 1-anilinonapthalene-8-sulfonate to an addition of anions to polylysine-treated thylakoids supported this contention. It was concluded that the action of polylysine on photosystem I and on the chlorophyll proteins is mediated by changes of the electrical properties of the thylakoid membrane and may not involve a direct binding of the polycation to the affected membrane proteins.  相似文献   

17.
Chiang GG  Dilley RA 《Plant physiology》1989,90(4):1513-1523
Intact chloroplasts were compared to isolated thylakoids as to whether storage of the organelle in high KCl medium caused the energy coupling reactions to show a delocalized or a localized proton gradient energy coupling response. With isolated thylakoids, the occurrence of one or the other energy coupling mode can be reversibly controlled by the concentration of mono- and divalent cations used for the thylakoid storage media. Calcium was shown to be the key ion and previous evidence suggested a Ca2+-controlled gating of H+ fluxes in the thylakoid membrane system (G Chiang, RA Dilley [1987] Biochemistry 26: 4911-4916). Isolated, intact chloroplasts, which retained the outer envelope membranes during the 30 min or longer storage treatments in various concentrations of KCl and CaCl2 (with sorbitol to maintain iso-osmotic conditions), were osmotically burst in a reaction cuvette and within 3 minutes were assayed for either a localized or a delocalized proton gradient energy coupling (ATP formation) mode. The intact chloroplast system was analogous to isolated thylakoids, with regard to the effects of KCl and CaCl2 on the energy coupling mode. For example, adding 100 millimolar KCl to the intact organelle storage medium resulted in the subsequent ATP formation assay showing delocalized proton gradient coupling just as with isolated thylakoids. Adding 5 millimolar CaCl2 to the 100 millimolar KCl storage medium resulted in a localized proton gradient coupling mode. Suspending thylakoids in stromal material previously isolated from intact chloroplast preparations and testing the energy coupling response showed that the stromal milieu has enough Ca2+ to cause the localized coupling response even though there was about 80 millimolar K+ in the intact chloroplasts used in this study (determined by atomic absorption spectrophotometry). Extrapolating the intact chloroplast data to the whole leaf level, we suggest that proton gradient energy coupling is normally of the localized mode, but under certain conditions it could be either localized or delocalized, depending on factors that affect the putative Ca2+-regulated proton flux gating function.  相似文献   

18.
The Na+ and K+ permeability properties of rat brain mitochondria were determined to explain the influences of these cations upon respiration. A new procedure for isolating exceptionally intact mitochondria with minimal contamination by synaptosomes was developed for this purpose.Respiration was uncoupled by Na+ and less so by K+. Uncoupling was maximal in the presence of EDTA plus Pi and was decreased by Mg2+. Maximal uncoupler-stimulated respiration rates were inhibited by Na+ but largely unaffected by K+. The inhibition by Na+ was relatively insensitive to Mg2+. Membrane Na+ and K+ conductances as well as neutral exchanges (Na+/H+ and K+/H+ antiport activities) were determined by swelling measurements and correlated with metabolic effects of the cations.Cation conductance, i.e. electrophoretic Na+ or K+ permeation, was increased by EDTA (Na+ > K+) and decreased by Mg2+. Magnesium preferentially suppressed Na+ conductance so as to reverse the cation selectivity (K+ > Na+). Neutral cation/H+ exchange rates (Na+ > K+) were not influenced by chelator or Mg2+.The extent of cation-dependent uncoupling of respiration correlated best with the inner membrane conductance of the ion according to an empirical relationship derived with the model K+ conductor valinomycin. The metabolic influences of Na+ and K+ can be explained in terms of coupled flow of these ions with protons and their effect upon the H+ electrochemical gradient although alternative possibilities are discussed. These in vitro studies are compared to previous observations in situ to assess their physiological significance.  相似文献   

19.
Experiments comparing the photosynthetic responses of a chilling-resistant species (Pisum sativum L. cv Alaska) and a chilling-sensitive species (Cucumis sativus L. cv Ashley) have shown that cucumber photosynthesis is adversely affected by chilling temperatures in the light, while pea photosynthesis is not inhibited by chilling in the light. To further investigate the site of the differential response of these two species to chilling stress, thylakoid membranes were isolated under various conditions and rates of photosynthetic electron transfer were determined. Preliminary experiments revealed that the integrity of cucumber thylakoids from 25°C-grown plants was affected by the isolation temperature; cucumber thylakoids isolated at 5°C in 400 millimolar NaCl were uncoupled, while thylakoids isolated at room temperature in 400 millimolar NaCl were coupled, as determined by addition of gramicidin. The concentration of NaCl in the homogenization buffer was found to be a critical factor in the uncoupling of cucumber thylakoids at 5°C. In contrast, pea thylakoid membranes were not influenced by isolation temperatures or NaCl concentrations. In a second set of experiments, thylakoid membranes were isolated from pea and cucumber plants at successive intervals during a whole-plant light period chilling stress (5°C). During wholeplant chilling, thylakoids isolated from cucumber plants chilled in the light were uncoupled even when the membranes were isolated at warm temperatures. Pea thylakoids were not uncoupled by the whole-plant chilling treatment. The difference in integrity of thylakoid membrane coupling following chilling in the light demonstrates a fundamental difference in photosynthetic function between these two species that may have some bearing on why pea is a chilling-resistant plant and cucumber is a chilling-sensitive plant.  相似文献   

20.
Factors that may influence the extent of thylakoid membrane appression have been examined using lettuce (Lactuca sativa cv. Celtuce) grown under different irradiances. Electron microscopy and salt-induced chlorophyll fluorescence suggest that the percentage of membrane appression is increased in plants grown in low light (20 Wm–2) compared with those grown in high light (150 Wm–2). In high light plants surface charge, as measured by 9-aminoacridine, was found to be twice that measured in low light plants. There was a similar difference in ATPase activity of CF1 and in light saturated photophosphorylation. The chlorophyll content of LHC-2 as a proportion of the total chlorophyll was greatest in thylakoids of low light plants. Measurement of non-cyclic photophosphorylation rates suggested that membrane appression has a stimulatory role in the photophosphorylation process. The importance of these inter-related factors for the mechanism of thylakoid appression is discussed.Abbreviations PS photosystem - chl chlorophyll - LHC-2 light harvesting chlorophyll-protein complex serving PS 2 - CF1 coupling factor 1 - NADP nicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide phosphate  相似文献   

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