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1.
Fifteen ancestral genotypes of United States soybean cultivars were screened for differences in photosynthetic electron transport capacity using isolated thylakoid membranes. Plants were grown in controlled environment chambers under high or low irradiance conditions. Thylakoid membranes were isolated from mature leaves. Photosynthetic electron transport was assayed as uncoupled Hill activity using 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol (DCIP). Soybean electron transport activity was dependent on genotype and growth irradiance and ranged from 6 to 91 mmol DCIP reduced [mol chlorophyll]–1 s–1. Soybean plastocyanin pool size ranged from 0.1 to 1.3 mol plastocyanin [mol Photosystem I]–1. In contrast, barley and spinach electron transport activities were 140 and 170 mmol DCIP reduced [mol chlorophyll]–1 s–1, respectively, with plastocyanin pool sizes of 3 to 4 mol plastocyanin [mol Photosystem I]–1. No significant differences in the concentrations of Photosystem II, plastoquinone, cytochrome b6f complexes, or Photosystem I were observed. Thus, genetic differences in electron transport activity were correlated with plastocyanin pool size. The results suggested that plastocyanin pool size can vary significantly and may limit photosynthetic electron transport capacity in certain species such as soybean. Soybean plastocyanin consisted of two isoforms with apparent molecular masses of 14 and 11 kDa, whereas barley and spinach plastocyanins each consisted of single polypeptides of 8 and 12 kDa, respectively.Abbreviations DAP days after planting - DCIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - LiDS lithium dodecyl sulfate - PPFD photosynthetic photon flux density (mol photons m–2 s–1) - PS I Photosystem I - PS II Photosystem II - P700 reaction center of Photosystem I The US Government right to retain a non-exclusive, royalty free licence in and to any copyright is acknowledged.  相似文献   

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

3.
Target theory and the photoinactivation of Photosystem II   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Application of target theory to the photoinactivation of Photosystem II in pea leaf discs (Park et al. 1995, 1996a,b) reveals that there is a critical light dosage below which there is complete photoprotection and above which there is photoinactivation (i.e a light-induced loss of oxygen flash yield). The critical dosage is about 3 mol photons m–2 for medium and high light-grown leaves and 0.36 mol photons m–2 for low light-grown leaves. Photoinactivation is a one-hit process with an effective cross-section of 0.045 m2 mol–1 photons which does not vary with growth irradiance, unlike the cross-section for oxygen evolution which increases with decreasing growth irradiance. The cross-section for oxygen evolution increased by about 20% following exposure to 6.8 mol photons m–2 which may be due to energy transfer from photoinactivated units to functional Photosystem II units. We propose that the photoinactivation of PS II begins when a small group of PS II pigment molecules whose structure is uninfluenced by growth irradiance, becomes uncoupled energetically from the rest of the photosynthetic unit and thus no longer transfers excitions to P680. De-excitation of this group of pigment molecules provides the energy which leads to the damage of Photosystem II. Treatment of pea leaves with dithiothreitol, an inhibitor of the xanthophyll cycle, decreases the critical dosage i.e. decreases photoprotection but has no effect on the PS II photoinactivation cross-section. Treatment with 1 M nigericin increased the photoinactivation cross-section of PS II as did exposure to lincomycin which inhibits D1 protein synthesis and thus the repair of PS II reaction centres.Abbreviations DTT- dithiothreitol - PS II- Photosystem II - Fm- maximum fluorescence - Fv- variable fluorescence - LHCIIb- main light harvesting pigment-protein complex of PS II - D1 protein- psbA gene product - P680- reaction centre chlorophyll of Photosystem II - Qa- first quinone electron acceptor of Photosystem II - (o2)- cross-section for oxygen evolution - (pi)- cross-section for photoinactivation  相似文献   

4.
Thylakoids isolated from cells of the red alga Porphyridium cruentum exhibit an increased PS I activity on a chlorophyll basis with increasing growth irradiance, even though the stoichiometry of Photosystems I and II in such cells shows little change (Cunningham et al. (1989) Plant Physiol 91: 1179–1187). PS I activity was 26% greater in thylakoids of cells acclimated at 280 mol photons · m–2 · s–1 (VHL) than in cells acclimated at 10 mol photons · m–2 · s–1 (LL), indicating a change in the light absorbance capacity of PS I. Upon isolating PS I holocomplexes from VHL cells it was found that they contained 132±9 Chl/P700 while those obtained from LL cells had 165±4 Chl/P700. Examination of the polypeptide composition of PS I holocomplexes on SDS-PAGE showed a notable decrease of three polypeptides (19.5, 21.0 and 22 kDa) in VHL-complexes relative to LL-complexes. These polypeptides belong to a novel LHC I complex, recently discovered in red algae (Wolfe et al. (1994a) Nature 367: 566–568), that lacks Chl b and includes at least six different polypeptides. We suggest that the decrease in PS I Chl antenna size observed with increasing irradiance is attributable to changes occurring in the LHC I-antenna complex. Evidence for a Chl-binding antenna complex associated with PS II core complexes is lacking at this point. LHC II-type polypeptides were not observed in functionally active PS II preparations (Wolfe et al. (1994b) Biochimica Biophysica Acta 1188: 357–366), nor did we detect polypeptides that showed immunocross-reactivity with LHC II specific antisera (made to Chlamydomonas and Euglena LHC II).Abbreviations Bis-Tris bis(2-hydroxyethyl)imino-tris(hydroxymethyl)methane - DCPIP 2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol - -dm dodecyl--d-maltoside - HL high light of 150 mol photons · m–2 · s–1 - LGB lower green band - LHC I light-harvesting complex of PS I - LHC II light-harvesting complex of PS II - LL low light of 10 mol photons · m–2 · s–1 - ML medium light of 50 mol photons · m–2 · s–1 - MES 2-(N-morpholino) ethanesulfonic acid - P700 reaction center of PS I - PFD photon flux density - Trizma tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane - UGB upper green band - VHL very high light of 280 mol photons · m–2 · s–1  相似文献   

5.
Tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) plants transformed with antisense rbcS to decrease the expression of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase (Rubisco) have been used to investigate the contribution of Rubisco to the control of photosynthesis in plants growing at different irradiances. Tobacco plants were grown in controlled-climate chambers under ambient CO2 at 20°C at 100, 300 and 750 mol·m–2·s–1 irradiance, and at 28°C at 100, 300 and 1000 mol·m–2·s–1 irradiance. (i) Measurement of photosynthesis under ambient conditions showed that the flux control coefficient of Rubisco (C infRubisco supA ) was very low (0.01–0.03) at low growth irradiance, and still fairly low (0.24–0.27) at higher irradiance. (ii) Short-term changes in the irradiance used to measure photosynthesis showed that C infRubisco supA increases as incident irradiance rises, (iii) When low-light (100 mol·m–2·s–1)-grown plants are exposed to high (750–1000 mol·m–2·s–1) irradiance, Rubisco is almost totally limiting for photosynthesis in wild types. However, when high-light-grown leaves (750–1000 mol·m–2·s–1) are suddenly exposed to high and saturating irradiance (1500–2000 mol·m–2·s–1), C infRubisco supA remained relatively low (0.23–0.33), showing that in saturating light Rubisco only exerts partial control over the light-saturated rate of photosynthesis in sun leaves; apparently additional factors are co-limiting photosynthetic performance, (iv) Growth of plants at high irradiance led to a small decrease in the percentage of total protein found in the insoluble (thylakoid fraction), and a decrease of chlorophyll, relative to protein or structural leaf dry weight. As a consequence of this change, high-irradiance-grown leaves illuminated at growth irradiance avoided an inbalance between the light reactions and Rubisco; this was shown by the low value of C infRubisco supA (see above) and by measurements showing that non-photochemical quenching was low, photochemical quenching high, and NADP-malate dehydrogenase activation was low at the growth irradiance. In contrast, when a leaf adapted to low irradiance was illuminated at a higher irradiance, Rubisco exerted more control, non-photochemical quenching was higher, photochemical quenching was lower, and NADP-malate dehydrogenase activation was higher than in a leaf which had grown at that irradiance. We conclude that changes in leaf composition allow the leaf to avoid a one-sided limitation by Rubisco and, hence, overexcitation and overreduction of the thylakoids in high-irradiance growth conditions, (v) Antisense plants with less Rubisco contained a higher content of insoluble (thylakoid) protein and chlorophyll, compared to total protein or structural leaf dry weight. They also showed a higher rate of photosynthesis than the wild type, when measured at an irradiance below that at which the plant had grown. We propose that N-allocation in low light is not optimal in tobacco and that genetic manipulation to decrease Rubisco may, in some circumstances, increase photosynthetic performance in low light.Abbreviations A rate of photosynthesis - C infRubisco supA flux control coefficient of Rubisco for photosynthesis - ci internal CO2 concentration - qE energy-dependent quenching of chlorophyll fluorescense - qQ photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence - NADP-MDH NADP-dependent malate dehydrogenase - Rubisco ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase - RuBP ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (SFB 137).  相似文献   

6.
Winter rye (Secale cereale L. cv Musketeer) grown at 5 °C/250 µmol photons m–2 s–1 exhibited a relative reduction state of PS II comparable to that of rye grown at 20 °C but high light (800 µmol photons m–2 s–1) (1-qP = 0.32) whereas winter rye grown at 20 °C/250 µmol photons m–2 s–1 exhibited values of 1-qP ( 0.15) comparable to plants grown at 5 °C but low light (50 µmol photons m–2 s–1). The apparent size of the electron donor pool to PS I, estimated either in vivo or in vitro in the presence of methylviologen by A820 was positively correlated with the relative reduction state of PS II under the steady-state growth conditions. Immunoblotting of rye thylakoid polypeptides indicated that the relative contents of Lhcb1, Lhcb2, D1, Cyt f, PC, PsaA/PsaB heterodimer and the -subunit of ATPase complex exhibited minimal changes on a Chl basis. In contrast, a 2-fold increase in plastoquinone A content was associated with increasing growth irradiance at growth temperatures of either 5 or 20 °C. We suggest that the increases in the apparent size of the electron donor pool to PS I associated with rye grown at either 5 °C/250 µmol photons m–2 s–1or 20 °C/800 µmol photons m–2 s–1 may be explained by an increased thylakoid plastoquinone A content, coupled with possible enhanced PS I cyclic electron transport and/or increased capacity for electron donation from the stroma to the intersystem electron transport chain. The results are discussed with respect to photosynthetic adjustment to changes in PS II excitation pressure in winter rye.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Physiological conditions necessary for the formation of plastocyanin and the concurrent cessation of cytochrome c-553 formation were studied in cells of copper-deficient Scenedesmus acutus after the addition of copper. Plastocyanin is formed after a lag-phase, leaving constant the content of plastidic cytochrome c-553. Therefore, the concentration of plastocyanin per cell increases and the concentration of cytochrome c-553 decreases during growth. Formation of plastocyanin during the induction period studied is dependent on light intensity. In the dark, there is a 90% inhibition, whereas under light intensities above 50 Wm-2, a ratio of 1.3 molecules plastocyanin per 1,000 molecules chlorophyll is attained.Plastocyanin formations is inhibited by the uncoupler carbonylcyanide-p-trifluoromethoxy phenylhydrazone (FCCP), but not by moderate concentrations of 3-[3,4-dichlorophenyl]-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU), and by keeping the algae under a nitrogen atmosphere without CO2. Concurrently, the cultures treated with FCCP show a decreased endogenous ATP level. The ATP is necessary for plastocyanin formation.Abbreviations FCCP carbonylcyanide-p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone - DCMU 3-[3,4-dichlorophenyl]-1,1-dimethylurea - pcv packed cell volume  相似文献   

9.
Summary Selaginella lepidophylla, the resurrection plant, curls dramatically during desiccation and the hypothesis that curling may help limit bright light-induced damage during desiccation and rehydration was tested under laboratory conditions. Restraint of curling during desiccation at 25° C and a constant irradiance of 2000 mol m–2 s]t-1 significantly decreased PSII and whole-chain electron transport and the Fv/Fm fluorescence yield ratio following rehydration relative to unrestrained plants. Normal curling during desiccation at 37.5°C and 200 mol m–2 s–1 irradiance did not fully protect against photoinhibition or chlorophyll photooxidation indicating that some light-induced damage occurred early in the desiccation process before substantial curling. Photosystem I electron transport was less inhibited by high-temperature, high-irradiance desiccation than either PSII or whole-chain electron transport and PSI was not significantly affected by restraint of curling during desiccation at 25°C and high irradiance. Previous curling also helped prevent photoinhibition of PSII electron transport and loss of whole-plant photosynthetic capacity as the plants uncurled during rehydration at high light. These results demonstrate that high-temperature desiccation exacerbated photoinhibition, PSI was less photoinhibited than PSII or whole-chain electron transport, and stem curling ameliorated bright light-induced damage helping to make rapid recovery of photosynthetic competence possible when the plants are next wetted.  相似文献   

10.
The kinetics of the postillumination reduction of P700+ which reflects the rate constant for plastoquinol (PQH2) oxidation was recorded in sunflower leaves at different photon absorption densities (PAD), CO2 and O2 concentrations. The P700 oxidation state was calculated from the leaf transmittance at 830 nm logged at 50 s intervals. The P700+ dark reduction kinetics were fitted with two exponents with time constants of 6.5 and about 45 ms at atmospheric CO2 and O2 concentrations. The time constant of the fast component, which is the major contributor to the linear electron transport rate (ETR), did not change over the range of PADs of 14.5 to 134 nmol cm-2 s-1 in 21% O2, but it increased up to 40 ms under severe limitation of ETR at low O2 and CO2. The acceptor side of Photosystem I (PS I) became reduced in correlation with the downregulation of the PQH2 oxidation rate constant. It is concluded that thylakoid pH-related downregulation of the PQH2 oxidation rate constant (photosynthetic control) is not present under normal atmospheric conditions but appears under severe limitation of the availability of electron acceptors. The measured range of photosynthetic control fits with the maximum variation of ETR under natural stress in C3 plants. Increasing the carboxylase/oxygenase specificity would lead to higher reduction of the PS I acceptor side under stress.Abbreviations Cyt b 6 f cytochrome b 6 f complex - Cw cell-wall CO2 concentration, M - ETR electron transport rate - Fd ferredoxin - FNR ferredoxin-NADP reductase - FRL far-red light - PC plastocyanin - PAD photon absorption density nmol cm-2 s-1 - PFD photon flux density nmol cm-2 s-1 - PS I Photosystem I complex - PQ plastoquinon - PQH2 plastoquinol - PS II Photosystem II complex - P700 Photosystem I donor pigment, reduced - S830 830 nm signal (D830, difference of S830 from the dark level) - WL white light - Yl maximum quantum yield of PS I electron transport, rel. un  相似文献   

11.
Summary The requirement for Na+ and Cl in the bathing media to obtain a maximal HCO 3 secretory flux ( ) across isolated short-circuitedAmphiuma duodenum was investigated using titration techniques and ion substitution. Upon substitution of media Na+ with choline, HCO 3 secretion was markedly reduced. Replacement of media Cl produced a smaller reduction of . The presence of Cl enhanced HCO 3 secretion only if Na+ was also in the media. Elevation of media Na+ or Cl in the presence of the other ion produced a saturable increase of . In the presence of Na+, Cl stimulated when added to the mucosal but not the serosal medium. In the presence of Cl, Na+ elevated when added to the serosal but not the mucosal medium. The ability of mucosal Cl to stimulate was not apparently dependent on mucosal Na+. Simultaneous addition of 10mm Cl to the Na+-free mucosal medium and 10mm Na+ to the Cl-free serosal medium stimulated above levels produced by serosal Na+ alone. In conclusion, intestinal HCO 3 secretion required mucosal Cl and serosal Na+ and did not involve mucosal NaCl cotransport. The results are consistent with a mucosal Cl absorptive mechanism in series with parallel basolateral Na+–H+ and Cl–HCO 3 exchange mechanisms.  相似文献   

12.
The light utilization efficiency and relative photon requirement of photosynthesis in pulsed and continuous light from light emitting diodes (LEDs) has been measured. First, we chacterized the photon requirement of photosynthesis from light of LEDs that differ in spectral quality. A photon requirement of 10.3±0.4 was measured using light from a 658 nm peak wavelength (22 nm half band width) LED over the range of 0–50 mol photons m–2 s–1 in 2 kPa O2 in leaves of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill., cv. VF36). Because the conversion of electrical power to photons increased with wavelength, LED lamps with peak photon output of 668 nm were most efficient for converting electricity to photosynthetically fixed carbon. The effect of pulsed irradiation on photosynthesis was then measured. When all of the light to make the equivalent of 50 mol photons m–2 s–1 was provided during 1.5 s pulses of 5000 mol photons m–2 s–1 followed by 148.5 s dark periods, photosynthesis was the same as in continuous 50 mol photons m–2 s–1. When the pulse light and dark periods were lengthened to 200 s and 19.8 ms, respectively, photosynthesis was reduced, although the averaged photon flux density was unchanged. Under these conditions, the light pulses delivered 1017 photons m–2, which we calculate to be equivalent to the capacitance of PS I or PS II. Data support the theory that photons in pulses of 100 s or shorter are absorbed and stored in the reaction centers to be used in electron transport during the dark period. When light/dark pulses were lengthened to 2 ms light and 198 ms dark, net photosynthesis was reduced to half of that measured in continuous light. Pigments of the xanthophyll cycle were not affected by any of these pulsed light treatments even though zeaxanthin formation occurred when leaves were forced to dissipate an equal amount of continuous light.Abbreviations CWF cool white fluorescent - EPS xanthophyll epoxidation state - LED light emitting diode - LUE light utilization efficiency - PFD photon flux density - PR photon requirement (for CO2 fixation) - PS II primary donor in Photosystem II - RPR relative photon requirement  相似文献   

13.
P-700, plastocyanin and cytochrome f redox kinetics were measured after one flash, using dark-adapted Chlorella in the presence of hydroxylamine and 3(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea. Plastocyanin becomes increasingly oxidized with a half-time of 70 μs, then undergoes reduction with a half-time of 7 ms. Cytochrome f oxidation has a sigmoidal time-course and a half-time of 100 μs. Its reduction exhibits a half-time of 4 ms. These results are interpreted in a linear scheme:
An equilibrium constant of 2 between cytochrome f and plastocyanin (PC), which contrasts with the large equilibrium constant between PC and P-700 is computed.The presence of cytochrome b6 in a cyclic path around Photosystem I is confirmed under these conditions.  相似文献   

14.
Photosynthetic characteristics of the red macroalgae Phyllophora antarctica and Phymatolithon foecundum collected from under sea ice at Cape Evans, McMurdo Sound (Ross Sea) were determined using in situ fluorometric and lab-based oxygen exchange techniques. Only 0.16% of incident irradiance penetrated the 2.5 m thick ice cover and photosynthetic parameters for both taxa were characteristic of highly shade-adapted plants. Saturation onset parameter (E k) did not exceed 13 mol photons m-2 s-1 in either taxon. For Phyllophora antarctica the light saturated photosynthetic rate at –1°C was 10 mol O2 g-1 FW h-1 and respiration averaged 3.3 mol O2 g-1 FW h-1 between sampled depths of 10 and 25 m. A light meter deployed at 15 m depth for a year recorded a marked increase in underwater irradiance on the last day of January 2002 coinciding with ice-breakout, and a maximum value for irradiance of 120 mol photons m-2 s-1 on 9 February 2002. The 2-month ice-free period was the only time when irradiance consistently exceeded compensation (photosynthesis=respiration) and enabled Phyllophora antarctica to accumulate sufficient carbon to result in a measurable increase in thallus area equivalent to a biomass increment of 1.87 mg (DW) per frond. Near the southern global limit for marine macroalgae, conditions that dictate the availability of underwater irradiance are extremely variable from year to year. Low respiration rates enhance longevity of the Phyllophora antarctica thallus, enabling it to not only survive the winter darkness, but also to retain photosynthetic capacity and thus take advantage of windows of higher irradiance.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L. var. DP 61) was grown at different temperatures during 12-h light periods, with either 1800–2000 mol photons m–2 s–1 (high photon flux density, PFD) or 1000–1100 mol m–2 s–1 (medium PFD) incident on the plants. Night temperature was 25°C in all experiments. Growth was less when leaf temperatures were below 30°C during illumination, the effect being greater in plants grown with high PFD (Winter and Königer 1991). Leaf pigment composition and the photon-use efficiency of photosynthesis were analysed to assess whether plants grown with high PFD and suboptimal temperatures experienced a higher degree of high irradiance stress during development than those grown with medium PFD. The chlorophyll content per unit area was 3–4 times less, and the content of total carotenoids about 2 times less, with the proportion of the three xanthophylls zeaxanthin + antheraxanthin + violaxanthin being greater in leaves grown at 20–21°C than in leaves grown at 33–34°C. In leaves from plants grown at 21°C and 1800–2000 mol photons m–2 s–1, zeaxanthin accounted for as much as 34% of total carotenoids in the middle of the photoperiod, the highest level recorded in this study. This finding is consistent with a protective role of zeaxanthin under conditions of excess light. At the lower temperatures, the photochemical efficiency of photosystem II, measured as the ratio of variable to maximum fluorescence yield (F V/F M) after 12-h dark adaptation, was 0.76 in medium PFD plants and 0.75 in high PFD plants compared with 0.83 and 0.79, respectively, at the higher temperatures. The photon-use efficiency of O2 evolution () based on absorbed light between 630 and 700nm, decreased with decrease in temperature from 0.102 to 0.07 under conditions of high PFD, but remained above 0.1 at medium PFD. Owing to compensatory reactions in these long-term growth experiments, sustained differences inF V/F M and were much less pronounced than the differences in chlorophyll content and dry matter, particularly in plants which had developed at high PFD and low temperature. In fact, in these plants, which exhibited pronounced photobleaching, a largely functional photosynthetic apparatus was still maintained in cells adjacent to the lower leaf surfaces. This was indicated by measurements of photon use efficiencies of photosynthetic O2 evolution with leaves illuminated first at the upper, and then at the lower surface.Abbreviations F O yield of dark level fluorescence - F M maximum yield of fluorescence, induced in a pulse of saturating light - F V yield of variable fluorescence (=F M-F o) - PFD photon flux density - iw photon use efficiency of O2 evolution based on white (400–700 nm) incident light - ir photon use efficiency based on red (630–700 nm) incident light - aw photon use efficiency based on white absorbed light - ar photon use efficiency based on red absorbed light  相似文献   

16.
We compared denitrification rates obtained using an adaptation of the acetylene block technique to rates estimated from benthic flux nutrient stoichiometry in the subtidal sediments of Tomales Bay, California (USA). By amending whole cores with acetylene and saturating nitrate concentrations, we obtained potential denitrification rates, which ranged between 4 and 30 mmol N m–2 d–1. We determined the apparent Michaelis constant (Kapp) and the maximum potential rate (Vmp) of the denitrifying community and used these constants in a rectangular hyperbola to estimatein situ denitrification rates. Both the Kapp and Vmp of the denitrifying community exhibited significant variation over both depth in the sediment column and time of sampling.Estimates ofin situ denitrification obtained using our kinetic-fix adaptation of the acetylene block ranged between 1.8 (March) and 9 (Sept.) mmol N m–1 d–1. Denitrification rates obtained using benthic flux stoichiometry ranged between 0.7 and 4.1 mmol N m–2 d–1. Average denitrification rates obtained using the kinetic-fix acetylene block approach exceeded those obtained from net benthic flux stoichiometry; however, these differences were not significant. We conclude that our kinetic-fix adaptation of the acetylene block technique provides realistic estimates of denitrification in sediments, even when pore water nitrate concentrations are low and nitrification and denitrification are closely coupled.  相似文献   

17.
Three light intensity-dependent Chl b-deficient mutants, two in wheat and one in barley, were analyzed for their xanthophyll cycle carotenoids and Chl fluorescence characteristics under two different growth PFDs (30 versus 600 mol photons·m–2 s–1 incident light). Mutants grown under low light possessed lower levels of total Chls and carotenoids per unit leaf area compared to wild type plants, but the relative proportions of the two did not vary markedly between strains. In contrast, mutants grown under high light had much lower levels of Chl, leading to markedly greater carotenoid to Chl ratios in the mutants when compared to wild type. Under low light conditions the carotenoids of the xanthophyll cycle comprised approximately 15% of the total carotenoids in all strains; under high light the xanthophyll cycle pool increased to over 30% of the total carotenoids in wild type plants and to over 50% of the total carotenoids in the three mutant strains. Whereas the xanthophyll cycle remained fairly epoxidized in all plants grown under low light, plants grown under high light exhibited a considerable degree of conversion of the xanthophyll cycle into antheraxanthin and zeaxanthin during the diurnal cycle, with almost complete conversion (over 90%) occurring only in the mutants. 50 to 95% of the xanthophyll cycle was retained as antheraxanthin and zeaxanthin overnight in these mutants which also exhibited sustained depressions in PS II photochemical efficiency (Fv/Fm), which may have resulted from a sustained high level of photoprotective energy dissipation activity. The relatively larger xanthophyll cycle pool in the Chl b-deficient mutant could result in part from the reported concentration of the xanthophyll cycle in the inner antenna complexes, given that the Chl b-deficient mutants are deficient in the peripheral LHC-II complexes.Abbreviations A antheraxanthin - Chl chlorophyll - Fo and Fm minimal yield (at open PS II reaction centers) and maximal yield (at closed centers) of chlorophyll fluorescence in darkness - F level of fluorescence during illumination with photosynthetically active radiation - Fm maximal yield (at closed centers) of chlorophyll fluorescence during illumination with photosynthetically active radiation - (Fm–F)/Fm actual efficiency of PS II during illumination with photosynthetically active radiation - Fv/Fm+(Fm–Fo)/Fm intrinsic efficiency of PS II in darkness - LHC_II light-harvesting chlorophyll-protein complex of Photosystem II - PFD photon flux density (between 400 and 700 nm) - PS I Photosystem I - PS II Photosystem II - V violaxanthin - Z zeaxanthin  相似文献   

18.
Three Bromeliaceae species of the medium Orinoco basin, Venezuela, were compared in their light-use characteristics. The bromeliads studied were two species of pineapple, i.e. the wild species Ananas ananassoides originating from the floor of covered moist forest, and the primitive cultivar Panare of Ananas comosus mostly cultivated in semi-shaded palm swamps, and Pitcairnia pruinosa, a species abundant in highly sun exposed sites on rock outcrops. Ananas species are Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) plants, P. pruinosa is C3 plant. Plants were grown at low daily irradiance (LL = 1.3 mol m–2 d–1 corresponding to an incident irradiance of 30 mol m–2 s–1) and at high irradiance (HL = 14.7 mol m–2 d–1 or 340 mol m–2 s–1), and CO2 and H2O-vapour gas exchange and photochemical (qP) and non-photochemical quenching (qNP) of chlorophyll a fluorescence of photosystem 2 (PS2) were measured after transfer to LL, medium irradiance (ML = 4.1 mol m–2 d–1 or 95 mol m–2 s–1) and HL. All plants showed flexible light-use, and qP was kept high under all conditions. LL-grown plants of Ananas showed particularly high rates of CAM-photosynthesis when transferred to HL and were not photoinhibited.  相似文献   

19.
A Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7002 psaAB::cat mutant has been constructed by deletional interposon mutagenesis of the psaA and psaB genes through selection and segregation under low-light conditions. This strain can grow photoheterotrophically with glycerol as carbon source with a doubling time of 25 h at low light intensity (10 E m–2 s–1). No Photosystem I (PS I)-associated chlorophyll fluorescence emission peak was detected in the psaAB::cat mutant. The chlorophyll content of the psaAB::cat mutant was approximately 20% that of the wild-type strain on a per cell basis. In the absence of the PsaA and PsaB proteins, several other PS I proteins do not accumulate to normal levels. Assembly of the peripheral PS I proteins PsaC,PsaD, PsaE, and PsaL is dependent on the presence of the PsaA and PsaB heterodimer core. The precursor form of PsaF may be inserted into the thylakoid membrane but is not processed to its mature form in the absence of PsaA and PsaB. The absence of PS I reaction centers has no apparent effect on Photosystem II (PS II) assembly and activity. Although the mutant exhibited somewhat greater fluorescence emission from phycocyanin, most of the light energy absorbed by phycobilisomes was efficiently transferred to the PS II reaction centers in the absence of the PS I. No light state transition could be detected in the psaAB::cat strain; in the absence of PS I, cells remain in state 1. Development of this relatively light-tolerant strain lacking PS I provides an important new tool for the genetic manipulation of PS I and further demonstrates the utility of Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 for structural and functional analyses of the PS I reaction center.Abbreviations ATCC American type culture collection - Chl chlorophyll - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - DBMIB 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone - HEPES N-[2-hydroxyethyl]piperazine-N-[2-ethanesulfonic acid] - PCC Pasteur culture collection - PS I Photosystem I - PS II Photosystem II - SDS sodium dodecyl sulfate  相似文献   

20.
With the new method of anion exchange perfusion chromatography we have devised an extremely rapid technique to subfractionate spinach Photosystem I into its chlorophyll a containing core complex and various components of the Photosystem I light-harvesting antenna (LHC I). The isolation time for the LHC I subcomplexes following solubilisation of native Photosystem I was reduced from 50 h using traditional density centrifugation procedures down to only 10–25 min by perfusion chromatography. Within this very short period of isolation, LHC I has been obtained as subfractions highly enriched in Lhca2+3 (LHC I-680) and Lhca1+4 (LHC I-730). Moreover, other highly enriched subfractions of LHC I such as Lhca2, Lhca3 and Lhca1+2+4 were obtained where the later two populations have not previously been obtained in a soluble form and without the use of SDS. These various subfractions of the LHC I antenna have been characterised by absorption spectroscopy, 77 K fluorescence-spectroscopy and SDS-PAGE demonstrating their identities, functional intactness and purity. Furthermore, the analyses located a chlorophyll b pool to preferentially transfer its excitation energy to the low energy F735 chromophore, and located specifically the origin of the 730 nm fluorescence to the Lhca4 component. It was also revealed that Lhca2 and Lhca3 have identical light-harvesting properties. The isolated Photosystem I core complex showed high electron transport capacity (1535 moles O2 mg Chl–1 h–1) and low fluorescence yield (0.4%) demonstrating its high functional integrity. The very rapid isolation procedure based upon perfusion chromatography should in a significant way facilitate the subfractionation of Photosystem I proteins and thereby allow more accurate functional and structural studies of individual components.Abbreviations a.u. arbitrary units - DCIP 2.6-dichlorophenol indophenol - LHC light harvesting complex  相似文献   

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