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1.
The susceptibility of photosynthesis to photoinhibition and the rate of its recovery were studied in the cyanobacterium Anacystis nidulans grown at a low (10 micromoles per square meter per second) and a high (120 micromoles per square meter per second) photosynthetically active radiation. The rate of light limited photosynthetic O2 evolution was measured to determine levels of photoinhibition and rates of recovery. Studies of photoinhibition and recovery with and without the translation inhibitor streptomycin demonstrated the importance of a recovery process for the susceptibility of photosynthesis to photoinhibition. We concluded that the approximately 3 times lower susceptibility to photoinhibition of high light than of low light grown cells, significantly depended on high light grown cells having an approximately 3 times higher recovery capacity than low light grown cells. It is suggested that these differences in susceptibility to photoinhibition and recovery depends on high light grown cells having a higher turnover rate of photosystem II protein(s) that is(are) the primary site(s) of photodamage, than have low light grown cells. Furthermore, we demonstrated that photoinhibition of A. nidulans may occur under physiological light conditions without visible harm to the growth of the cell culture. The results give support for the hypotheses that the net photoinhibitory damage of photosystem II results from the balance between the photoinhibitory process and the operation of a recovery process; the capacity of the latter determining significant differences in the susceptibility of photosynthesis to photoinhibition of high and low light grown A. nidulans.  相似文献   

2.
3.
The relationships between photoinhibition and photoprotection in high and low-light-grown Ulva were examined by a combination of chlorophyll-fluorescence-monitoring techniques. Tissues were exposed to a computer-controlled sequence of 5-min exposures to red light, followed by 5-min darkness, with stepwise increases in photon flux. Coefficients of chlorophyll fluorescence quenching (1?qP and NPQ) were calculated following a saturating pulse of white light near the end of each 5-min light treatment. Dark-adapted chlorophyll fluorescence parameters (F0 and FV/FM) were calculated from a saturating pulse at the end of each 5-min dark period. Low-light-grown Ulva showed consistently higher 1?qP, i.e. higher reduction status of Q (high primary acceptor of photosystem II), and lower capacity for nonphotochemical quenching (NPQ) at saturating light than did high-light-grown plants. Consequently, low-light plants rapidly displayed photoinhibitory damage (increased F0) at light saturation in seawater. Removal of dissolved inorganic carbon from seawater also led to photoinhibitory damage of high-light-grown Ulva at light saturation, and addition of saturating amounts of dissolved inorganic carbon protected low-light-grown plants against photoinhibitory damage. A large part of NPQ was abolished by treatment with 3 mM dithiothreitol and the processes so inhibited were evidently photoprotective, because dithiothreitol treatment accelerated photoinhibitory damage in both low- and high-light-grown Ulva. The extent of photoinhibitory damage in Ulva was exacerbated by treatment with chloramphenicol (1 mM) without much effect on chlorophyll-quenching parameters, evidently because this inhibitor of chloroplast protein synthesis reduced the rate of repair processes.  相似文献   

4.
Photoinhibition of photosynthesis and its reactivation was studied in the cyanobaterium A. nidulans in the presence of the respiratory inhibitor sodium azide, the uncouplers carbonyl cyanide p -(trifluoromethoxy)-phenylhydrazone (FCCP) and carbonyl cyanide m -chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP) and the photosystem I elicitor phenazine methosulphate (PMS). Inhibition of dark respiration by azide increased the susceptibility of the cyanobacterium to photoinhibition. Both FCCP and CCCP also remarkably affected the process of photoinhibition in A. nidulans. The PMS at lower photoinhibitory light intensity partially protected A. nidulans from photoinhibition. The recovery from photoinhibition in the presence of azide or FCCP was slow and normal photosynthesis could not be resumed even after a longer period of incubation under suitable reactivating condition. Thus dark respiration has a key function in the process of photoinhibition of photosynthesis and its reactivation in the cyanobacterium A. nidulans.  相似文献   

5.
The susceptibility of photosynthesis to photoinhibition and the rate of its recovery were studied in cyanobacterium Anacystis nidulans strain R2 and its two psbA gene-inactivated mutants R2S2C3 and R2K1. Changes in the fluorescence kinetics at 77K as well as the rate of O2 evolution were measured when cells were exposed to high photosynthetic photon flux densities in the range of 0 to 2,000 micromoles per square meter per second. The R2S2C3 mutant has an active psbAI gene highly expressed under low and normal light intensities, whereas R2K1 possesses psbAII and psbAIII genes highly expressed under very high light intensities. The level of overall susceptibility of photosynthesis to photoinhibition was more pronounced in the wild type and the mutant R2S2C3 than in the mutant R2K1, especially at higher light intensities. In constrast, all three strains showed an increased but similar sensitivity to photoinhibition after addition of the translational inhibitor streptomycin; mutant R2K1 being slightly less sensitive at lower light intensities. The result is interpreted as demonstrating similar intrinsic susceptibility to photoinhibition of the two different forms of the D1 protein, form I and form II, encoded by the psbAI and psbAII/psbAIII genes, respectively. The increased resistance to photoinhibition of the R2K1 mutant was ascribed to an approximately 3 times higher rate of recovery than the wild type and the mutant R2S2C3. On the basis of our experiments we conclude that the susceptibilities to photoinhibition of the Anacystis nidulans psbA genes mutants studied are regulated mainly by modifying the rate of repair, i.e. the rate of turnover of the D1 protein.  相似文献   

6.
Recovery (at 20° C) of spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) leaf sections from photoinhibition of photosynthesis was monitored by means of the fluorescence parameter FV/FM of intact leaf tissue and of PSII-driven electron-transport activity of isolated thylakoids. Different degrees of photoinactivation of PSII were obtained by preillumination in ambient air (at 4 or 20° C), CO2-free air or at low and high O2 levels (2 or 41 %) in N2. The kinetics of recovery exhibited two distinct phases. The first phase usually was completed within about 20-60 min and was most pronounced after preillumination in low O2. The slow phase proceeded for several hours leading to almost complete reactivation of PSII. Preincubation of the leaves with streptomycin (SM), which inhibits chloroplast-encoded protein synthesis, inhibited the slow recovery phase only, indicating the dependence of this phase on resynthesis of the reaction-centre protein, D1. The fast recovery phase remained largely unaffected by SM. Both phases were strongly but not totally dependent on irradiation of the leaf with low light. When SM was absent, net degradation of the D1 protein could neither be detected upon photoinhibitory irradiation nor during following incubation of the leaf sections in low light or darkness. In the presence of SM, net D1 degradation was seen and tended to increase with O2 concentration during photoinhibition treatment. Based on these data, we suggest that photoinactivation of PSII in vivo occurs in at least two steps. From the first step, reactivation appears possible in low light without D1 turnover (fast recovery phase). Action of oxygen then may lead to a second step, in which the D1 protein is affected and reactivation requires its removal and replacement (slow phase).Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - F0, FM and FV initial, maximum total and maximum variable chlorophyll fluorescence yield, respectively - PFD photon flux density - SM streptomycin We thank Professor P. Böger (Department of Plant Physiology and Biochemistry, University of Konstanz, Germany) for a gift of D1-specific antibodies. The paper contains part of the thesis work of J.L. The study was supported by the Deutsche Forschungs-gemeinschaft (SFB 189).  相似文献   

7.
Effect of quality, quantity and minimum duration of light on the process of recovery was investigated in the photoinhibited cells of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Complete and rapid reactivation of photosynthesis took place in diffuse white light of 25 mol m–2 s–1. The recovery was partial (< 10%) in the dark. Far red (725 nm), red (660 nm) and blue light (480 nm) in the range of 10 to 75 mol m–2 s–1 did not enhance the process of reactivation. Photoinhibited cells incubated in dark for 15 min when exposed for 5 min to diffuse light (25 mol m–2 s–1) showed complete reactivation. Even exposure of 15 min dark incubated photoinhibited cells to photoinhibitory light (2500 mol m–2 s–1) for 5 s fully regained the photosynthesis. The study indicated a very precise and triggering effect of light in the process of reactivation. The dark respiratory inhibitor KCN and uncouplers FCCP and CCCP increased the susceptibility of C. reinhardtii to photoinhibition and also prevented photoinhibited cells to reactivate fully even after longer period of incubation under suitable reactivating conditions. Of the various possibilities envisaged to assign the role of dark respiration in recovery process, supply of ATP by mitochondrial respiration appeared sound and pertinent.Abbreviations CCCP- carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone - D1- 32 kDa protein of PS II reaction center - FCCP- carbonyl cyanide p-(trifluoromethoxy)phenylhydrazone - KCN- potassium cyanide - PBQ- phenyl-p-benzoquinone - PFD- photon flux density - SHAM- salicylhydroxamic acid NBRI Research Publication No. 431.  相似文献   

8.
Havaux M 《Plant physiology》1989,89(1):286-292
The photoacoustic technique was used to monitor thermal deexcitation of the photosynthetic pigments in intact pea leaves (Pisum sativum L.) submitted to photoinhibitory treatments. When the leaves were exposed to photon flux densities above 1000 micromoles per square meter per second, the amplitude of the photothermal component of the in vivo photoacoustic signal strongly increased. This high-light-induced stimulation of nonradiative energy dissipation (heat emission) was accompanied by an inverse change in the O2 evolution activity and in the steady state emission of 685 nanometer chlorophyll fluorescence. The time course of these effects was shown to be very rapid, with a t1/2 of around 15 minutes. When high-light-treated leaves were readapted to the dark, the heat emission changes were reversed, following somewhat slower kinetics. A reversible increase in the rate of light energy dissipation via radiationless transitions could be a photoprotective mechanism eliminating excess excitation energy from the photosynthetic reaction centers. Interestingly, this process does not operate at temperatures below about 12°C.  相似文献   

9.
In different marine red algae (Chondrus crispus, Delesseria sanguinea, Membranoptera alata, Phycodrys rubens, Phyllophora truncata, Polyneura hilliae) photoinhibition of photosynthesis has been investigated by means of both fluorescence and oxygen measurements. Measurements of absolute oxygen production show that photoinhibition causes a decline in the initial slope and in the rate of bending of the fluence rate-response curve (i.e. the photosynthetic efficiency at non-saturating fluence rates), as well as a decline in the photosynthetic capacity (Pm) at saturating fluence rates. Fluorescence data (Fv/Fm) were consistent with the results of oxygen measurements. Under excessive light photoinhibition protects photosynthesis against photo-damage in red algae. However, an increase in the initial fluorescence (Fo) after photoinhibitory treatment indicates that it could not prevent photodamage entirely. Action spectra of photoinhibition demonstrate that the main photoinhibition site in Polyneura hiliae is PS II, because far red light absorbed by PS I was ineffective. The strong increase of Fo in the blue wavelength range and the slight and partial recovery in weak blue light indicate that blue light especially causes photodamage. Recovery of photosynthesis requires dim white light conditions. Experiments with monochromatic light also show a wavelength dependence of recovery. Moreover, the recovery of photosynthesis after a photoinhibitory treatment is strongly temperature dependent, indicating participation of enzymatic processes. The comparison of fluorescence and oxygen measurement of the recovery shows different results in some species. The rate of oxygen production in red control light increased immediately after photoinhibited algae were exposed to weak light conditions. Surprisingly, the ratio of variable to maximum fluorescence (Fv/Fm) of Phyllophora truncata and the maximum fluorescence (Fm) of Polyneura hilliae show first a delay of the recovery under weak light conditions. Thus, in recovery experiments fluorescence and oxygen data are not quite consistent.  相似文献   

10.
Recovery from 60 min of photoinhibitory treatment at photosynthetic photon flux densities of 500, 1400 and 2200 μMmol m?2 s? was followed in cells of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii grown at 125 μMmol m?2 s?1. These light treatments represent photoregulation, moderate photoinhibition and strong photoinhibition, respectively. Treatment in photoregulatory light resulted in an increased maximal rate of oxygen evolution (Pmax) and an increased quantum yield (Φ), but a 15% decrease in Fv/FM. Treatment at moderately photoinhibitory light resulted in a 30% decrease in Fv/FM and an approximately equal decrease in Φ. Recovery in dim light restored Fv/FM within 15 and 45 min after high light treatment at 500 and 1400 μMmol m?2 s?1, respectively. Convexity (Θ), a measure of the extent of co-limitation between PS II turnover and whole-chain electron transport, and Φ approached, but did not reach the control level during recovery after exposure to 1400 μMmol m?2 s?1, whereas Pmax increased above the control. Treatment at 2200 μMmol m?2 s?1 resulted in a strong reduction of the modeled parameters Φ, Θ and Pmax. Subsequent recovery was initially rapid but the rate decreased, and a complete recovery was not reached within 120 min. Based on the results, it is hypothesized that exposure to high light results in two phenomena. The first, expressed at all three light intensities, involves redistribution within the different aspects of PS II heterogeneity rather than a photoinhibitory destruction of PS II reaction centers. The second, most strongly expressed at 2200 μmol m?2 s?1, is a physical damage to PS II shown as an almost total loss of PS IIα and PS II QB-reducing centers. Thus recovery displayed two phase, the first was rapid and the only visible phase in algae exposed to 500 and 1400 μmol m?2 s?1. The second phase was slow and visible only in the later part of recovery in cells exposed to 2200 μmol m?2 s?1.  相似文献   

11.
The interacting effects of the rate of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) regeneration and the rate of RuBP utilization as influenced by the amount and activation of RuBP carboxylase on photosynthesis and RuBP concentrations were resolved in experiments which examined the kinetics of the response of photosynthesis and RuBP concentrations after step changes from a rate-saturating to a rate-limiting light intensity in Xanthium strumarium. Because RuBP carboxylase requires several minutes to deactivate in vivo, it was possible to observe the effect of reducing the rate of RuBP regeneration on the RuBP concentration at constant enzyme activation state by sampling very soon after reducing the light intensity. Samples taken over longer time periods showed the effect of changes in enzyme activation at constant RuBP regeneration rate on RuBP concentration and photosynthetic rate. Within 15 s of lowering the light intensity from 1500 to 600 microEinsteins per square meter per second the RuBP concentration in the leaves dropped below the enzyme active site concentration, indicating that RuBP regeneration rate was limiting for photosynthesis. After longer intervals of time, the RuBP concentration in the leaf increased as the RuBP carboxylase assumed a new steady state activation level. No change in the rate of photosynthesis was observed during the interval that RuBP concentration increased. It is concluded that the rate of photosynthesis at the lower light intensity was limited by the rate of RuBP regeneration and that parallel changes in the activation of RuBP carboxylase occurred such that concentrations of RuBP at steady state were not altered by changes in light intensity.  相似文献   

12.
Stitt M 《Plant physiology》1986,81(4):1115-1122
It has been investigated how far electron transport or carbon metabolism limit the maximal rates of photosynthesis achieved by spinach leaves in saturating light and CO2. Leaf discs were illuminated with high light until a steady state rate of O2 evolution was attained, and then subjected to a 30 second interruption in low light, to generate an increased demand for the products of electron transport. Upon returning to high light there is a temporary enhancement of photosynthesis which lasts 15 to 30 seconds, and can be up to 50% above the steady state rate of O2 evolution. This temporary enhancement is only found when saturating light intensities are used for the steady state illumination, is increased when low light rather than darkness is used during the interruption, and is maximal following a 30 to 60 seconds interruption in low light. Decreasing the temperature over the 10 to 30°C range led to the transient enhancement becoming larger. The temporary enhancement is associated with an increased ATP/ADP ratio, a decreased level of 3-phosphoglycerate, and increased levels of triose phosphate and ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate. Since electron transport can occur at higher rates than in steady state conditions, and generate a higher energy status, it is concluded that leaves have a surplus electron transport capacity in saturating light and CO2. From the alterations of metabolites, it can be calculated that the enhanced O2 evolution must be accompanied by an increased rate of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate regeneration and carboxylation. It is suggested that the capacity for sucrose synthesis ultimately limits the maximal rates of photosynthesis, by restricting the rate at which inorganic phosphate can be recycled to support electron transport and carbon fixation in the chloroplast.  相似文献   

13.
Rate of oxygen evolution in photosynthesis was measured as the current from a polarized platinum electrode covered by a thin layer of Chlorella. The arrangement gave a reproducibly measurable rate of photosynthesis proportional to light intensity at the low levels used and gave rapid response to changes in illumination. Two phenomena have been explored. The Emerson effect was observed as an enhancement of photosynthesis in long wavelength red light (700 mµ) when shorter wavelengths were added. Two light beams of wavelengths 653 and 700 mµ when presented together gave a photosynthetic rate about 25 per cent higher than the sum of the rates obtained separately. Large and reproducible transients in rate of oxygen evolution were observed accompanying change in illumination between two wavelengths adjusted in intensity to support equal steady rates of photosynthesis. The transients were found not to be specifically related to long wavelength red light. Both enhancement and the transients have identical action spectra which are interpreted as demonstrating a specific photochemical participation of chlorophyll b.  相似文献   

14.
Damage to primary photosynthetic reactions by drought, excess light and heat in leaves of Macroptilium atropurpureum Dc. cv. Siratro was assessed by measurements of chlorophyll fluorescence emission kinetics at 77 K (-196°C). Paraheliotropic leaf movement protected waterstressed Siratro leaves from damage by excess light (photoinhibition), by heat, and by the interactive effects of excess light and high leaf temperatures. When the leaves were restrained to a horizontal position, photoinhibition occurred and the degree of photoinhibitory damage increased with the time of exposure to high levels of solar radiation. Severe inhibition was followed by leaf death, but leaves gradually recovered from moderate damage. This drought-induced photoinhibitory damage seemed more closely related to low leaf water potential than to low leaf conductance. Exposure to leaf temperatures above 42°C caused damage to the photosynthetic system even in the dark and leaves died at 48°C. Between 42 and 48°C the degree of heat damage increased with the time of exposure, but recovery from moderate heat damage occurred over several days. The threshold temperature for direct heat damage increased with the growth temperature regime, but was unaffected by water-stress history or by current leaf water status. No direct heat damage occurred below 42°C, but in water-stressed plants photoinhibition increased with increasing leaf temperature in the range 31–42°C and with increasing photon flux density up to full sunglight values. Thus, water stress evidently predisposes the photosynthetic system to photoinhibition and high leaf temperature exacerbates this photoinhibitory damage. It seems probable that, under the climatic conditions where Siratro occurs in nature, but in the absence of paraheliotropic leaf movement, photoinhibitory damage would occur more frequently during drought than would direct heat damage.Abbreviations and symbols PFD photon flux area density - PSI, PSII photosyntem I, II - F M, F O, F V maximum, instantaneous, variable fluorescence emission - PLM paraheliotropic leaf movement; all data of parameter of variation are mean ± standard error  相似文献   

15.
Abstract The leaves of olive are long lived and likely to experience both chilling and high temperature stress during their life. Changes in photosynthetic CO2 assimilation resulting from chilling and high temperature stress, in both dim and high light, are investigated. The quantum yield (φ) of photosynthesis at limiting light levels was reduced following chilling (at 5°C for 12 h), in dim light by approximately 10%, and in high light by 75%; the difference being attributed to photoinhibition. Similar reductions were observed in the light-saturated rate of CO2 uptake (Amax). Decrease in Amax correlated with a halving of the leaf internal CO2 concentration (ci), suggesting an increased limitation by stomata following photoinhibition. Leaves were apparently more susceptible to photoinhibitory damage if the whole plant, rather than the leaf alone, was chilled. On return to 26 °C, I he photosynthetic capacity recovered to pre-stress levels within a few hours if leaves had been chilled in high light for 8 h or less, but did not fully recover from longer periods of chilling when loss of chlorophyll occurred. Leaves which were recovering from chilling in high light showed far more damage on being chilled a second time in high light. Three hours in high light at 38 °C reduced φ by 80%, but φ recovered within 4h of return to 26 °C. Although leaves of Olive are apparently less susceptible to photoinhibitory damage during chilling stress than the short-lived leaves of chilling-sensitive annual? crops, the results nevertheless show that photoinhibition during temperature stress is potentially a major factor influencing the photosynthetic productivity of Olive in the field.  相似文献   

16.
Photosystem II (PSII)-enriched membrane particles were isolated from peas (Pisum sativum L.) and treated in several different ways to inhibit the water oxidation reactions, but not reaction center function itself, as judged by the light-induced rate of reduction of 2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol with and without the artificial electron donor, diphenyl carbazide. It was shown that such treatments increased the susceptibility of the PSII-enriched membranes to photoinhibition. This trend was further observed if 2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol was present during the illumination with photoinhibitory light. On the other hand, protection against the enhanced photoinhibition was found when the water-splitting activity was reconstituted or when the artificial electron donor diphenyl carbazide was present during the preillumination. The results indicate that irreversible photodamage occurred within the PSII reaction center as a consequence of illumination with strong light and that the rate of this damage was enhanced under conditions that are expected to give rise to a photoaccumulation of oxidizing species such as P680+ on the donor side of PSII. This mechanism of photoinhibitory damage occurred under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions.  相似文献   

17.
Comparative studies of chlorophyll a fluorescence, measured with a pulse amplitude modulated fluorometer, and of the pigment composition of leaves, suggest a specific role of zeaxanthin, a carotenoid formed in the xanthophyll cycle, in protecting the photosynthetic apparatus against the adverse effects of excessive light. This conclusion is based on the following findings: (a) exposure of leaves of Populus balsamifera, Hedera helix, and Monstera deliciosa to excess excitation energy (high light, air; weak light, 2% O2, 0% CO2) led to massive formation of zeaxanthin and a decrease in violaxanthin. Over a wide range of conditions, there was a linear relationship between either variable, Fv, or maximum fluorescence, Fm, and the zeaxanthin content of leaves. (b) When exposed to photoinhibitory light levels in air, shade leaves of H. helix had a higher capacity for zeaxanthin formation, at the expense of β-carotene, than shade leaves of M. deliciosa. Changes in fluorescence characteristics suggested that, in H. helix, the predominant response to high light was an increase in the rate of nonradiative energy dissipation, whereas, in M. deliciosa, photoinhibitory damage to photosystem II reaction centers was the prevailing effect. (c) Exposure of a sun leaf of P. balsamifera to increasing photon flux densities in 2% O2 and 0% CO2 resulted initially in increasing levels of zeaxanthin (matched by decreases in violaxanthin) and was accompanied by fluorescence changes indicative of increased nonradiative energy dissipation. Above the light level at which no further increase in zeaxanthin content was observed, fluorescence characteristics indicated photoinhibitory damage. (d) A linear relationship was obtained between the ratio of variable to maximum fluorescence, Fv/Fm, determined with the modulated fluorescence technique at room temperature, and the photon yield of O2 evolution, similar to previous findings (O Björkman, B Demmig 1987 Planta 170: 489-504) on chlorophyll fluorescence characteristics at 77 K and the photon yield of photosynthesis.  相似文献   

18.
Budde RJ  Randall DD 《Plant physiology》1988,88(4):1026-1030
The requirements for reactivation (dephosphorylation) of the pea (Pisum sativum L.) leaf mitochondrial pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDC) were studied in terms of magnesium and ATP effects with intact and permeabilized mitochondria. The requirement for high concentrations of magnesium for reactivation previously reported with partially purified PDC is shown to affect inactivation rather than reactivation. The observed rate of inactivation catalyzed by pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) kinase is always greater than the reactivation rate catalyzed by PDH-P phosphatase. Thus, reactivation would only occur if ATP becomes limiting. However, pyruvate which is a potent inhibitor of inactivation in the presence of thiamine pyrophosphate, results in increased PDC activity. Analysis of the dynamics of the phosphorylation-dephosphorylation cycle indicated that the covalent modification was under steady state control. The steady state activity of PDC was increased by addition of pyruvate. PDH kinase activity increased threefold during storage of mitochondria suggesting that there may be an unknown level of regulation exerted on the enzyme complex.  相似文献   

19.
Leaf discs from spinach were exposed to a photon flux density of 1250 μmol m−2s−1 at 5°C for 2 or 3 h in ambient air. Photoinhibition of photosystem II (PS II) was measured by means of chlorophyll fluorescence. Recovery of photosystem II was followed at 6°C and 20°C in low light or darkness for periods up to 12 h.
The experimental setup allowed kinetic resolution of different phases of recovery. The experiments revealed a temperature dependent dark recovery phase and two distinct light- and temperature dependent phases: (1) A relatively fast, light dependent recovery phase occurred in parallel with partial recovery of basic fluorescence at 6°C and 20°C. A population of PS II centers with very slow fluorescence induction kinetics, which had accumulated during photoinhibition treatment, disappeared during this phase. This fast recovery phase is proposed to represent reactivation of photoinhibited PS II, without dissassembly or incorporation of new D1-protein. (2) A relatively slow light-dependent recovery phase took place at 20°C, but not at 6°C. In the presence of the chloroplast translation inhibitor streptomycin, part of the 2nd phase was inhibited. This phase is proposed to involve assembly of new Photosystem II centers, which is partly dependent on de novo synthesis of D1-reaction center protein, but presumably is also using a preexisting pool of D1-protein. Cold acclimation of the leaves resulted in a decreased sensitivity for photoinhibition of photosystem II. Recovery of photoinhibited photosystem II at 6°C of the cold-acclimated leaves was faster than in non-acclimated leaves, but this effect can be ascribed to diminished photoinhibitory damage.  相似文献   

20.
Irradiation of Spinach oleracea intact leaf tissue and of mesophyll protoplasts of Valerianella locusta at 20° C with strong light resulted in severe (40–80%) inhibition of photosynthesis, measured as photosystem II electron transport activity in isolated thylakoids or as fluorescence parameter FV/FM on intact leaf disks. No net degradation of the D1 protein of photosystem II was seen under these conditions. However, in the presence of streptomycin, an inhibitor of chloroplast protein synthesis, net D1 degradation (up to about 80%) did occur with a half-time of 4–6h, and photoinhibition was enhanced. Thylakoid ultrastructure remained stable during photoinhibition, even when substantial degradation of D1 took place in the presence of streptomycin. When leaf disks were irradiated at 2°C, streptomycin did not influence the degree of photoinhibition, and net Dl degradation did not occur. These results suggest that in excess (photoinhibitory) light at 20°C, turnover (coordinated degradation and synthesis) of D1 diminished the degree of photoinhibition. The observed photoinhibition is thought to be due to the accumulation of inactive photosystem II reaction centres still containing D1. In the presence of streptomycin, the Dl protein was degraded (probably in the previously inactivated centres), but restoration of active centres via D1 synthesis was blocked, leading to more severe photoinhibition. Low temperature (2°C), by restricting both degradation and resynthesis of D1, favoured the accumulation of inactive centres. Streptomycin and chloramphenicol (another inhibitor of chloroplast protein synthesis) were tested for side-effects on photosynthesis. Strong inhibitory effects of chloramphenicol, but much less severe effects of streptomycin were observed.  相似文献   

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