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1.
  1. Effects of various reducing reagents including dithionite,whichserve as artificial electron donors for photosystem 2,on therecovery of fluorescence induction in the presence of3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-l,l-dimethylurea(DCMU) during the darkincubation of preilluminated chloroplastswere investigated.
  2. The dark recovery of fluorescence induction was not affectedby the addition of the p-phenylenediamine-ascorbate couple,the hydroquinone-ascorbate couple or manganese. Incubation ofchloroplasts with dithionite caused gradual suppression of thedark recovery.
  3. Preillumination of chloroplasts caused partialinhibition ofthe recovery of fluorescence induction.
  4. At lowintensities of excitation light, the fluorescence yieldincreasedvery slowly and continuously, and never reached asteady state.This continuous increase in fluorescence yieldunder weak lightwas due to photoinhibition of the dark recovery.A techniquewas devised to determine the steady state yieldof fluorescence,without the intervention of photoinhibition,at weak light intensities.The steady state yield of fluorescencein the presence of DCMUwas suppressed at lower excitation intensities.This drop inthe fluorescence yield was not altered by the presenceof addedreducing reagents but was suppressed after long preincubationof chloroplasts with dithionite.
  5. The delayed fluorescencewith a decay time of seconds was affectedby dithionite butnot by other reductants.
  6. Results are discussed in terms ofreoxidation of the reducedprimary electron acceptor, Q, bythe oxidized primary electrondonor for photosystem 2. A modelof the electron transport associatedwith photoreaction 2 isproposed to account for the experimentalresults obtained.
(Received February 27, 1973; )  相似文献   

2.
3.
Inhibition of electron flow from H2O to methylviologen by 3-(34 dichlorophenyl)-1,1 dimethyl urea (DCMU), yields a biphasic curve — an initial high sensitivity phase and a subsequent low sensitivity phase. The two phases of electron flow have a different pH dependence and differ in the light intensity required for saturation.Preincubation of chloroplasts with ferricyanide causes an inhibition of the high sensitivity phase, but has no effect on the low sensitivity phase. The extent of inhibition increases as the redox potential during preincubation becomes more positive. Tris-treatment, contrary to preincubation with ferricyanide, affects, to a much greater extent, the low sensitivity phase.Trypsin digestion of chloroplasts is known to block electron flow between Q A and Q B, allowing electron flow to ferricyanide, in a DCMU insensitive reaction. We have found that in trypsinated chloroplasts, electron flow becomes progressively inhibited by DCMU with increase in pH, and that DCMU acts as a competitive inhibitor with respect to [H+]. The sensitivity to DCMU rises when a more negative redox potential is maintained during trypsin treatment. Under these conditions, only the high sensitivity, but not the low sensitivity phase is inhibited by DCMU.The above results indicate the existence of two types of electron transport chains. One type, in which electron flow is more sensitive to DCMU contains, presumably Fe in a Q A Fe complex and is affected by its oxidation state, i.e., when Fe is reduced, it allows electron flow to Q B in a DCMU sensitive step; and a second type, in which electron transport is less sensitive to DCMU, where Fe is either absent or, if present in its oxidized state, is inaccessible to reducing agents.Abbreviations DCMU 3-(34 dichlorophenyl)-1, 1 Dimethyl urea - MV methyl viologen - PS II Photosystem II - Tris tris (hydroxymethyl)aminomethane  相似文献   

4.
The luciferin-luciferase method was used to determine ATP extractedfrom darkmaintained and light-exposed samples of the green algaChlorella pyrenoidosa and of the blue-green alga Anacystis nidulans.A few measurements on Synechococcus lividus (a bluegreen thermophile,clone 65?C) are also reported.
  1. The light-minus-dark ATP levels (ATP) from aerobic cells ofChlorella and Anacystis were negative; however, ATP from Synechococcuswas positive. Large positive ATP was obtained in regularly grown(RG: moderate light) Chlorella treated with oligomycin; darklevels were reduced, light levels remained essentially unaffected.In high-light exposed (HLE) Chlorella, oligomycin reduced bothlight and dark ATP levels, but positive ATP was still obtained.However, in Anacystis, which has a different organization ofthylakoid membrane, oligomycin severely reduced both the lightand the dark ATP levels and the ATP remained negative.
  2. Theoligomycin (12 µM) treated Chlorella and the untreatedAnacystis and Synechococcus show the presence of cyclic photophosphorylationunder conditions in which the non-cyclic electron flow fromphotosystem II to photosystem I is blocked by 10 µM 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-l,l-dimethylurea(DCMU), or not allowed to operate by the absence of CO2. Cyclicphotophosphorylation ranged from 10–30% of the maximumATP in RG, to 40–50% in HLE Chlorella. In RG Chlorella,cyclic and non-cyclic (in the absence of DCMU) photophosphorylation(ATP) saturate at about 103 ergs cm–2 sec–1 and104 ergs cm–2 sec–1 and 104 ergs cm–2 sec–1red (>640 nm) light, respectively; a lag was observed inthe light curve.
  3. In Chlorella, the addition of the photosystemI electron acceptormethyl viologen (MV; 1 mM) increased ATPby twofold. Furtheraddition of DCMU (25 µm) reduced thisto the level observedwith DCMU alone. If 1 mM reduced dichlorophenolindophenol orphenazine methosulphate (DCPIPH2 or PMSH2, respectively)wasadded along with DCMU, the ATP level was 30–40% ofthecontrol. Further addition of MV increased the JATP to be70–80%of that of the control. These and other resultsconfirm thepresence of both non-cyclic and cyclic photophosphorylationin vivo, the former predominating in Chlorella, and the latterin Anacystis and Synechococcus.
(Received May 1, 1973; )  相似文献   

5.
  1. The effect of -hydroxy sulfonates and sulfite, inhibitors ofglycolate oxidase, on the photochemical reactions of spinachchloroplasts was studied. The photo reduction of ferricyanideand NADP was not affected by the poisons, whereas the photophosphorylationand 14CO2 fixation were inhibited.
  2. Glyoxylate was photoreducedby the chloroplasts in the presenceof PPNR and glyoxylate reductase,and this reduction was acceleratedby the addition of NADP.ATP formation accompanied with thereduction of glyoxylate bythe illuminated chloroplasts wasobserved. It is supposed thatglyoxylate oxidizes the photoreducedNADPH2 or PPNR and thusthe photophosphorylation is stimulated.
1A part of this paper was presented at the annual meeting ofAgricultural Society of Japan, in August, 1964. 2Present address: Radiation Center of Osaka Prefecture, Sakai,Osaka.  相似文献   

6.
The photochemical activity of chloroplasts and subchloroplastparticles isolated from primary bean leaves between the 4thand 24th hour of illumination of etiolated seedlings is thesubject of this paper. The photosystem I activity (oxygen uptakein the presence of MV, DCIP, ascorbate and DCMU), expressedon a unit chlorophyll basis, decreased approximately 10-foldbetween 4 and 8 h of greening. At the same time the photosystemII activity (DCIP photoreduction in the presence of DPC) wasreduced to a half. The photosystem I activity also decreasedin all hitherto investigated fractions which were isolated fromthe digitonin-treated chloroplasts. However, at the initialphase of greening this decrease was the most significant inthe fraction containing heavy particles. After 24 h of greening DCMU, at concentrations higher than 10–10M, limited the rate of ferricyanide photoreduction by isolatedchloroplasts, whereas after 6 h of greening this effect wasobservable even in the presence of 10–12 M DCMU. The resultsobtained demonstrated that under those conditions both photosystemswere active after 4 h of greening and PS I activity developedmore rapidly than that of PS II. It also follows from the presenteddata that the water splitting reactions were delayed in developmentas compared to the other reactions investigated, and that PSII units may limit the electron flow in chloroplasts at earlierstages of leaf greening.  相似文献   

7.
It was found that DCMU had a differential effect at two concentration ranges on variable fluorescence kinetics in isolated chloroplasts. The increase in fluorescence rate at low concentrations of DCMU was abolished by preincubation of chloroplasts with ferricyanide or formate, treatments which were shown to convert Fe in the PS II reaction center (i.e., the FeQA complex) into a non-oxidizable form, but it was not affected by Tris treatment. Increase in fluorescence kinetics (at the initial linear rate) at high concentrations of DCMU was found to be abolished by Tris treatment but it was only marginally affected by ferricyanide or formate treatments. The effect of Tris could be abolished by addition of hydroquinone-ascorbate, which restored electron flow to the pool of secondary acceptors.Contrary to the effect of DCMU, no such differential concentration dependence of the variable fluorescence kinetics was found for atrazine.The increase in fluorescence kinetics (at the initial linear rate) at a low concentration rate of DCMU is presumably restricted to units which contain an oxidizable Fe in the FeQA complex. Increase in fluorescence kinetics (at the initial linear rate) at high DCMU concentration is probably related to the effect of DCMU at the QB site.Abbreviations DCMU 3-(34 dichlorophenyl)-1,1 dimethyl urea - PS II Photosystem II - Tris tris (hydroxymethyl) aminomethane  相似文献   

8.
The filamentous cyanobacterium Oscillatoria chalybea grows phototrophically on a mineral medium in the presence of either nitrate or ammonium ions as nitrogen source at similar growth rates. In the absence of any combined nitrogen source in the medium the cyanobacterium also grows, although at a reduced growth rate. The steady state rate of oxygen evolution by filaments from these three culture conditions is approximately constant if compared on an equal chlorophyll basis. Qualitative differences, however, emerge, if transient phenomena, e.g. the oxygen gush, are investigated. Only nitrate-and nitrogen-free-grown cultures show an oxygen gush, whereas ammonium sulfate-grown cultures do not show this phenomenon. Fluorescence induction in O. chalybea shows a fast monophasic rise, comparable to the fluorescence rise curves of higher plant chloroplasts in the presence of dithionite. The steady state level of fluorescence in ammonium sulfate-grown cells is up to seven times higher than in nitrate-grown cells when compared on an equal chlorophyll basis. In ammonium sulfate-grown cells, DCMU (N,N-3,4-Dichlorophenyl dimethylurea) causes a further increase in fluorescence level. In nitrate-grown cyanobacteria, however, the effect of DCMU consists of a decrease of the steady state level of fluorescence. In context with earlier research on Anabaena cylindrica, another filamentous cyanobacterium, it appears that the type of the nitrogen source used for growth determines the main location of the DCMU-block in this organism. It thus appears that in O. chalybea the site of DCMU inhibition lies on the oxygen-evolving side of photosystem II, if the organism is grown on nitrate. If grown on ammonium sulfate, no substantial difference of the location of the inhibition site when compared to algae or higher plant chloroplasts is found.Thylakoid preparations of O. chalybea perform the usual Hill reactions with ferricyanide, p-benzoquinone or silicomolybdate as electron acceptors. In each case it is seen that with thylakoids of nitrate-grown cells the steady-state level of fluorescence is lowered by DCMU in the presence of these acceptors, which should be the case, if DCMU inhibits electron transfer on the donor side of photosystem II. According to the literature silicomolybdate accepts electrons mainly before the DCMU-block in higher plant chloroplasts. Hence, in higher plants this reaction is mainly DCMU-insensitive. In thylakoids of O. chalybea, however, the Hill reaction with silicomolybdate is DCMU-sensitive which provides further evidence that the DCMU-block is on the oxygen-evolving side of photosystem II in O. chalybea provided the cells have been grown on nitrate.Abbreviations DCMU N-N-3,4-Dichlorophenyl dimethylurea  相似文献   

9.
High energy state quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence (qE) is inhibited by low concentrations of the inhibitor antimycin A in intact and osmotically shocked chloroplasts isolated from spinach and pea plants. This inhibition is independent of any effect upon pH (as measured by 9-aminoacridine fluorescence quenching). A dual control of qE formation, by pH and the redox state of an unidentified chloroplast component, is implied. Results are discussed in terms of a role for qE in the dissipation of excess excitation energy within photosystem II.Abbreviations 9-AAmax = Maximum yield of 9-aminoacridine fluorescence - DCMU = 3(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea; Fmax ± Maximum yield of chlorophyll fluorescence - hr = hour - PAR = Photosynthetically Active Radiation - QA = Primary stable electron acceptor within photosystem II - qE = High energy state quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence - qI = quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence related to photoinhibition - qP = Quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence by oxidised plastoquinone - qQ = photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence - qR = (Fmax—maximum level of chlorophyll fluorescence induced by the addition of saturating DCMU) - qT = Quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence attributable to state transitions  相似文献   

10.
Light-induced changes of b-type cytochromes in Euglena chloroplastswere studied spectrophotometrically.
  1. In the dark and at pH 6.5, most of the cytochrome 558 in chloroplastswas in the reduced state, and most of the cytochrome 563, inthe oxidized state. Illumination of chloroplasts at pH 6.5 induceda rapid, but slight oxidation of cytochrome 552 and cytochrome558. The magnitude of photooxidation of cytochrome 558 was greatlyenhanced by the addition of 3-(3',4'-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea(DCMU). The rate of photooxidation in the presence of DCMU wasstimulated by the addition of 0.15 µM Euglena cytochrome552, or 100 µM methyl viologen.
  2. Euglena chloroplasts,incubated at 55°C for 5 min showedno significant absorbancechanges for about 10 min after theonset of illumination. However,greater photooxidation of cytochrome558 was observed afterprolonged illumination, or in the presenceof DCMU or ethylenediaminetetraaceticacid (EDTA). Similar resultswere obtained with chloroplastspre-treated at pH 9.0–10.0for 5 min.
  3. At pH 9.5, andin the dark, both cytochrome 563 and cytochrome558 were inan almost reduced state. On illumination at thispH, both cytochromeswere photooxidized, with a complicatedkinetics, showing aninitial rapid and small absorbance decrease,followed by a stagnantphase of temporary retarded reaction.In the presence of DCMUor EDTA, photooxidation proceeded rapidlywithout a stagnantphase.
  4. At pH 6.5 cytochrome 558, on cessation of illumination,wasquickly reduced to the initial level. At pH 9.5, there wasalsoappreciable re-reduction of cytochrome 558 and 563 whenthelight was turned off at an early stage of illumination.Theamounts of re-reduction of the cytochromes in the subsequentdark period, however, decreased as photooxidation of cytochromesproceeded. This decrease was accelerated by the presence ofDCMU.
  5. At pH 9.5 ascorbate and manganese served as electrondonorsfor die DCMU-sensitive photooxidation of cytochromes558 and563.
  6. Experimental results are discussed with specialreference tothe occurrence of two pools of electron carriers,one at thereducing side and the other at the oxidizing sideof photosystem2. The role of manganese in the latter pool ofelectron carriersis also discussed.
(Received March 11, 1970; )  相似文献   

11.
《BBA》1985,809(3):320-330
Preincubation of isolated chloroplasts with ferricyanide, prior to addition of DCMU, unmasks a high-potential electron acceptor (Q400) in Photosystem II that acts as an additional quencher and prolongs the fluorescence induction curve in the presence of DCMU (Ikegami, I. and Katoh, S. (1973) Plant Cell Physiol. 14, 829–836). This study confirms that Q400 is endogenous to Photosystem II and is not a bound ferricyanide, and several new characteristics of this high potential acceptor are established. (a) It is accessible to ferricyanide even in the presence of DCMU. The rate of oxidation, however, is very slow, consistent with access only via QA. Accessibility may be enhanced by magnesium, reminiscent of the oxidation of QA by ferricyanide. (b) Oxidation of Q400 drastically suppresses the binding of DCMU at neutral and alkaline pH. Below pH 6, however, DCMU binding is essentially normal. The pH dependence of DCMU binding is consistent with the known pH dependence of the redox midpoint potential of Q400. (c) Binding of many other inhibitors of QA-to-QB electron transfer is much less affected or even completely unaffected. These results have implications for current notions of herbicide binding and may also bear on the origin of slow phases of fluorescence induction in the presence of DCMU.  相似文献   

12.
The dark reoxidation of the photochemically reduced primaryelectron acceptor of photosystem II, Q., in the presence of3-(3',4'-dichlorophenyl)-l,l-dimethyl urea (DCMU) by the redoxcounterpart (here designated Z) of Q, was studied by monitoringthe dark recovery of the induction of chlorophyll fluorescence. In normal chloroplasts, the dark reoxidation of reduced Q inthe presence of DCMU was not affected by the externally addedhydrophilic reductants; ascorbate, hydroquinone, hydrogen peroxide,manganous chloride, potassium iodide and potassium ferrocyanide.In chloroplasts whose oxidizing side of photosystem II had beeninactivated by heat- or Tris-treatments, reoxidation was inhibitedpartially. This inhibition increased on the addition of hydrophilicreductants, but was relieved by increasing the redox potentialof the suspension medium with the chloroplasts. We concluded that the redox counterpart, Z, of Q, in the presenceof DCMU is located in a hydrophobic environment which can bedenatured by heat- or Tris-treatments to allow the access ofnormally extruded hydrophilic electron donors. (Received January 10, 1981; Accepted March 12, 1981)  相似文献   

13.
The effect of high light on the acceptor side of photosystem II of chloroplasts and core particles of spinach was studied. BothV max and apparentK m for DCIP were altered in photoinhibited photosystem II core particles. The double reciprocal plot analysis as a function of actinic light showed increased slope in chloroplasts photoinhibited in the presence of DCMU. Exposure of chloroplasts to high light in the presence of DCMU did not protect the chloroplast against high light induced decrease in Fm, level. Further the high light stress induced decrease inF m level was not restored by the addition of DCMU. These results suggest that the high light stress induced damage to chloroplast involves alteration in the binding site forQ B on the DI protein on the acceptor side of photosystem II  相似文献   

14.
Robert T. Furbank 《Planta》1988,176(4):433-440
The relationship between the redox state of the primary electron acceptor of photosystem II (QA) and the rate of O2 evolution in isolated mesophyll chloroplasts from Zea mays L. is examined using pulse-modulated chlorophyll a fluorescence techniques. A linear relationship between photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence (qQ) and the rate of O2 evolution is evident under most conditions with either glycerate 3-phosphate or oxaloacetate as substrates. There appears to be no effect of the transthylakoid pH gradient on the rate of electron transfer from photosystem II into QA in these chloroplasts. However, the proportion of electron transport occurring through cyclic-pseudocyclic pathways relative to the non-cyclic pathway appears to be regulated by metabolic demand for ATP. The majority of non-photochemical quenching in these chloroplasts at moderate irradiances appeared to be energy-dependent quenching.Abbreviations and symbols PSII photosystem II - Fm maximum fluorescence obtained on application of a saturating light pulse - Fo basal fluorescence recorded in the absence of actinic light (i.e. all PSII traps are open) - Fv Fm-Fo - qQ photochemical quenching - qNP non-photochemical quenching - qE energy-dependent quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence  相似文献   

15.
  1. The intensity dependence and spectral variations during thefast transient of chlorophyll a (Chl a) fluorescence have beenanalyzed in the blue-green alga Anacystis nidulans. (Unlikethe case of eukaryotic unicellular green or red algae, the fastfluorescence induction characteristics of the prokaryotic blue-greenalgae had not been documented before.)
  2. Dark adapted cellsof Anacystis exhibit two types of fluctuationsin the fluorescenceyield when excited with bright orange light(absorbed mainlyin phycocyanin). The first kinetic patterncalled the fast (sec)fluorescence transient exhibits a characteristicoriginal levelO, intermediary hump I, a pronounced dip D, peakP and a transitorysmall decline to a quasi steady state S.After attaining S,fluorescence yield slowly rises to a maximumlevel M. From M,the decline in fluorescence yield to a terminalT level is extremelyslow as shown earlier by Papageorgiou andGovindjee (8). Ascompared with green and red algae, blue-greenalgae seem tohave a small PS decline and a very characteristicslow SM rise,with a M level much higher than the peak P.
  3. A prolonged darkadaptation and relatively high intensity ofexciting illuminationare required to evoke DPS type yield fluctuationsin Anacystis.At low to moderate intensities of exciting light,the time forthe development of P depends on light doses, butfor M, thisremains constant at these intensities.
  4. Fluorescence emissionwas heterogeneous during the inductionperiod in Anacystis;the P and the M levels were relativelyenriched in short-wavelengthsystem II Chi a emission as comparedto D and S levels.
  5. Thefast DPS transient was found to be affected by electrontransportcofactor (methyl viologen), and inhibitors (e.g.,DCMU, NH2OH)in a manner suggesting that these changes are mostlyrelatedto the oxido-reduction level of intermediates betweenthe twophotosystems. On the other hand, the slow SM changesin fluorescenceyield, as reported earlier (5, 15), paralleloxygen evolution.These changes were found to be resistant toa variety of electrontransport inhibitors (O-phenanthroline,HOQNO, salicylaldoxime,DCMU, NH2OH and Antimycin a). It issuggested that, in Anacystis,even in the presence of so-calledinhibitors of cyclic electronflow, a "high energy state" isstill produced.
  6. Measurementsof Chlorophyll a fluorescence and delayed lightemission inthe presence of both DCMU and NH2OH indicate thatthe slow SMchanges are not due to the recovery of the reactioncenter IIin darkness preceeding illumination.
  7. Our results, thus, suggestthat in Anacystis a net electrontransport supported oxidation-reductionstate of the quencherQ regulates only partially the developmentof the DPS transient,but the development of the slow fluorescenceyield changes seemsnot to be regulated by these reactions.It appears, from datapresented elsewhere, that the slow risein the yield resultsdue to a structural modification of thethylakoid membrane.
1We are grateful to the National Science Foundation for financialsupport. (Received November 21, 1972; )  相似文献   

16.
  1. The addition of salts to the suspending medium induces a decreasein the yield of chlorophyll a fluorescence in normal and DCMU-poisonedintact algal cells of Chlorella pyrenoidosa. Potassium and sodiumacetate cause a pronounced lowering of the fluorescence at relativelylow concentrations (0.01–0.1 M). MgCl2 and KCl cause asimilar lowering of fluorescence but at much higher concentrations(0.1–0.4 M). In contrast to sodium acetate, ammonium acetatedoes not cause any significant change in the fluorescence transient.
  2. Unlike the case in isolated chloroplasts, MgCl2 decreasestheratio of short wavelength (mainly system 2) to long wavelength(mainly system 1) emission bands in both DCMU poisoned and normalcells. Since these salt-induced changes do not appear to berelated to the redox reactions of photosynthesis, the saltsmight have caused a decrease in the mutual distance betweenthe two photosystems by changing the microstructure of the chloroplastsin vivo thereby facilitating the spillover of excitation energyfrom strongly fluorescent system 2 to weakly fluorescent system1.
  3. The light induced turbidity changes in intact algal cells,asmeasured by the increase in optical density at 540 nm, isreducedin the presence of these salts. However, MgCl2 producesthegreatest reduction while Na acetate the least, even thoughbothof these salts (at the concentrations used) cause largesuppressionof the fluorescence transient. Moreover, the lightinduced turbiditychanges were, essentially irreversible.
  4. Ashigh concentrations of salts increase the osmotic potentialof the bathing medium, it seems that the osmotic changes aswell as the ionic changes in the intact algal cells are responsiblefor the fluorescence quenching and changes in the mode of excitationtransfer observed in this study. In the case of low concentrationsof salts (e.g., 0.1 M Na or K acetate) the effects are predominantlyionic, and in the case of very high concentrations of MgCl2(0.4 M), the osmotic effects play a much larger role.
(Received July 30, 1973; )  相似文献   

17.
  1. The growth rate of cultured free-cells and their contents ofchlorophyll, Mg, K and N reached peaks on media containing Mn+= 60 and 80 meq per liter, or in which salts=2.7 and 3.6 atm.These concentration levels in the media were considerably higherthan those (Salts=1.5–2.0 atm) which produced good growthof intact plants. This discrepancy in media concentrations maybe due to differences in the culture conditions and in the morphologyof the materials.
  2. Very low Ca2+/(Mn+–Ca2+) equivalentratios of 0.1 to 0.01in a medium were sufficient for good growthof free cells, whilegenerally about unity of the ratio is requiredin a medium forgood growth of intact plants. The differencein the medium compositionmay also be due to morphological differencesin the materials.
  3. Addition of Cl to the medium furtherpromoted the growthrate and friability of cell clumps.
  4. Alow concentration of 0.01 mM BO33– in the medium alsopromoted the friability of cell clumps.
(Received August 15, 1972; )  相似文献   

18.
Chloroplast from greening potato tuber showed good photosynthetic capacity. The evolution of O2 was dependent upon the intensity of light. A light intensity of 30 lux gave maximum O2 evolution. At higher intensities inhibition was observed. The presence of bicarbonate in the reaction mixture was essential for O2 evolution. NADP was found to be a potent inhibitor of O2 evolution in this system. NADP and 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethyl urea (DCMU) inhibited the O2 evolution completely at a 3 μm concentration level, which was reversed by oxidized 2,6-dichlorophenol-indophenol (DCIP). Cyanide (CN)-treated chloroplasts showed full O2 evolution capacity, when a lipophilic electron acceptor like N-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine (TMPD) or DCIP was used along with ferricyanide. Ferricyanide alone showed only 20% reduction. NADP or DCMU could inhibit O2 evolution only when TMPD was the acceptor but not with DCIP. Photosystem II (PS II) isolated from these chloroplasts also showed inhibition by NADP or DCMU and its reversal by DCIP. Here also the evolution of O2 with only TMPD as acceptor was sensitive to NADP or DCMU. In the presence of added silicotungstate in PS II NADP or DCMU did not affect ferricyanide reduction or oxygen evolution. The chloroplasts were able to bind exogenously added NADP to the extent of 120 nmol/mg chlorophyll. It is concluded that the site of inhibition of NADP is the same as in DCMU, and it is between the DCIP and TMPD acceptor site in the electron transport from the quencher (Q) to plastoquinone (PQ).  相似文献   

19.
The photoreduction of silicomolybdate and other heteropoly ions by chloroplasts is insensitive to 3-(3, 4-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethylurea (DCMU). Both water and diphenylcarbazide can be used as electron source for the reduction. Three different assays for silicomolybdate reduction are described including oxygen evolution, formation of a reduced heteropoly blue silicomolybdate, or an indirect assay for reduced silicomolybdate by redox indicators, such as ferricyanide or cytochrome c. The effects of detergents and tris washing are consistent with silicomolybdate reduction through photosystem II before the DCMU site. The effects of orthophenanthroline and bathophenanthroline indicate chelator-sensitive sites in photosystem II before the site of DCMU action.  相似文献   

20.
Effects of Cl and other anions on the rate of HILL reactionin Euglena chloroplasts were investigated. Cl acceleratedthe reaction rate with ferricyanide as HILL oxidant; Br,F and I were also effective; NO3, PO42–and SO42– were less effective. Divalent cations, Ca2+and Mg2+, were also highly effective. The promoting effectsof these ions were highly dependent on pH and the nature andconcentration of the HILL oxidant used. Accelerating effectsof the ion increased with decreasing concentrations of ferricyanide.Generally, the stimulating effect of Cl was much moremarked at pH 7–7.5, with little effect at pH 5. Thus,the pH-activity relationship in the HILL reaction is more orless markedly modified by addition of ions. Cl, and other anions, accelerated the reaction by affectingonly the dark rate-limiting portion of the HILL reaction; thelight reaction constant remained uninfluenced. We inferred thatsome reaction step, at which ferricyanide receives electronfrom photosystem 2, is accelerated by Cl and other ions.Cl effects were rather small, or undetectable, with DPIPor p-benzoquinone as oxidants. (Received January 8, 1970; )  相似文献   

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