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1.
Anne Joliot 《BBA》1974,357(3):439-448
The fluorescence yield has been measured on spinach chloroplasts at low temperature (−30 to −60°C) for various dark times following a short saturating flash. A decrease in the fluorescence yield linked to the reoxidation of the Photosystem II electron acceptor Q is still observed at −60°C. Two reactions participate in this reoxidation: a back reaction or charge recombination and the transfer of an electron from Q to Pool A. The relative competition between these two reactions at low temperature depends upon the oxidation state of the donor side of the Photosystem II center:

1. (1) In dark-adapted chloroplasts (i.e. in States S0+S1 according to Kok, B., Forbush, B. and McGloin, M. (1970) Photochem. Photobiol. 11, 457–475), Q, reduced by a flash at low temperature, is reoxidized by a secondary acceptor and the positive charge is stabilized on the Photosystem II donor Z. Although this reaction is strongly temperature dependent, it still occurs very slowly at −60°C.

2. (2) When chloroplasts are placed in the S2+S3 states by a two-flash preillumination at room temperature, the reoxidation of Q after a flash at low temperature is mainly due to a temperature-independent back reaction which occurs with non-exponential kinetics.

3. (3) Long continuous illumination of a frozen sample at −30°C causes 6–7 reducing equivalents to be transferred to the pool. Thus, a sufficient number of oxidizing equivalents should have been generated to produce at least one O2 molecule.

4. (4) A study of the back reaction in the presence of 3(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) shows the superposition of two distinct non-exponential reactions one temperature dependent, the other temperature independent.

Abbreviations: DCMU; 3(3; 4-dichlorophenyl)-1; 1-dimethylurea  相似文献   


2.

1. 1. The steady-state fluorescence yield of Chlorella pyrenoidosa is strongly affected by CO2 concentration: the yield is approximately 2-fold higher in the presence than in the absence of CO2. During induction, in the presence of saturating CO2, accelerating oxygen evolution is paralleled by rising fluorescence (M2-P3 transient); in the absence of CO2, fluorescence yield remains at the low M2 level.

2. 2. Both illumination and CO2 content are important in determining the steady-state fluorescence yield: at lower illuminations, lower concentrations of CO2 are required to obtain a maximum fluorescence yield.

3. 3. The slow fluorescence transients are not affected directly by pH but only indirectly through the CO2 concentration.

4. 4. The CO2-dependent fluorescence rise (M2-P3 transient) is most readily observed in cells harvested early in the light period of a synchronous culture, but it can also be elicited in cells harvested during the dark period.

5. 5. Addition of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethylurea (DCMU) to CO2-deprived cells raises the fluorescence yield approximately 4-fold, that is to the same high level as cells supplied with CO2 and DCMU.

6. 6. The effects of CO2 provide a new example of a marked parallelism between photosynthetic electron transport and fluorescence. To explain such parallelism, it seems necessary to postulate large changes in the de-excitation processes within Photosystem II units or in the distribution of excitation between Photosystems I and II.

Abbreviations: DCMU, 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethylurea; FCCP, carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone; PMS, phenazine methosulfate  相似文献   


3.
B.L. Epel  J. Neumann 《BBA》1973,325(3):520-529

1. 1. The mechanism of the photooxidation of ascorbate and of Mn2+ by isolated chloroplasts was reinvestigated.

2. 2. Our results suggest that ascorbate or Mn2+ oxidation is the result of the Photosystem I-mediated production of the radical superoxide, and that neither ascorbate nor Mn2+ compete with water as electron donors to Photosystem II nor affect the rate of electron transport through the two photosystems: The radical superoxide is formed as a result of the autooxidation of the reduced forms of low potential electron acceptors, such as methylviologen, diquat, napthaquinone, or ferredoxin.

3. 3. In the absence of ascorbate or Mn2+ the superoxide formed dismutases either spontaneously or enzymatically producing O2 and H2O2. In the presence of ascorbate or Mn2+, however, the superoxide is reduced to H2O2 with no formation of O2. Consequently, in the absence of reducing compounds, in the reaction H2O to low potential acceptor one O2 (net) is taken up per four electrons transported where as in the presence of ascorbate, Mn2+ or other suitable reductants up to three molecules O2 can be taken up per four electrons transported.

4. 4. This interpretation is supported by the following observations: (a) in a chloroplast-free model system containing NADPH and ferredoxin-NADP reductase, methylviologen can be reduced to a free radical which is autooxidizable in the presence of O2; the addition of ascorbate or Mn2+ to this system results in a two fold stimulation of O2 uptake, with no stimulation of NADPH oxidation. The stimulation of O2 uptake is inhibited by the enzyme superoxide dismutase; (b) the stimulation of light-dependent O2 uptake in the system H2O → methylviologen in chloroplasts is likewise inhibited by the enzyme superoxide dismutase.

5. 5. In Class II chloroplasts in the system H2O → NADP upon the addition of ascorbate or Mn2+ an apparent inhibition of O2 evolution is observed. This is explained by the interaction of these reductants with the superoxide formed by the autooxidation of ferredoxin, a reaction which proceeds simultaneously with the photoreduction of NADP. Such an effect usually does not occur in Class I chloroplasts in which the enzyme superoxide dismutase is presumably more active than in Class II chloroplasts.

6. 6. It is proposed that since in the Photosystem I-mediated reaction from reduced 2,4-dichlorophenolindophenol to such low potential electron acceptor as methylviologen, superoxide is formed and results in the oxidation of the ascorbate present in the system, the ratio ATP/2e in this system (when the rate of electron flow is based on the rate of O2 uptake) should be revised in the upward direction.

Abbreviations: DCMU, 3-(3′,4′-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea; HEPES, hydroxyethyl-piperazineethanesulfonic acid; MES, (N-morpholino)ethanesulfonic acid; DCIP, 2,4-dichlorophenol-indophenol  相似文献   


4.
G. M. Cheniae  I. F. Martin 《BBA》1970,197(2):219-239
The Mn content of spinach chloroplasts has been decreased by growth deficiency, extraction and by ageing at 35°. We studied the effect of subnormal Mn content upon the chloroplasts capacity to evolve O2 and to photooxidize electron donors other than water via Photosystem II. We observed the following:

1. 1. In fresh chloroplasts ascorbate and other reducing agents, if present in sufficient concentration, fully replace water as the System II oxidant and can sustain maximum rates of 1000–1200 equiv/chlorophyll per h.

2. 2. None of the studied donors proved entirely specific for System II; to a variable extent all could react with the oxidant of System I. We therefore considered only the 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea-(DCMU)-sensitive fraction of the observed rates as pertinent.

3. 3. Normal fresh chloroplasts contained 3 Mn/200 chlorophyllsII and showed flash yields of approx. 1 O2/1600 chlorophylls. This indicates that each System II trapping and O2-evolving center contains three Mn atoms.

4. 4. O2 evolution capacity is abolished when about 2/3 of the total Mn pool is removed by way of Tris or hydroxylamine extraction, i.e. upon removal of two of the three Mn atoms normally present per reaction center. Between the limits of 1 Mn per trap and 3 Mn per trap O2 evolution capacity is linear with Mn content.

5. 5. Mn removal affects the rates of O2 evolution in strong light and in weak light (quantum yield) in the same fashion. This indicates that complete O2 reaction centers are inactivated.

6. 6. With Mn removal the capacity for donor (ascorbate or p-phenylenediamine) photooxidation in strong light declines in a very similar fashion as the O2 evolving capacity. However, after removal of 2/3 of the Mn pool (by Tris or hydroxylamine extraction) 15–20% of the maximum rate remains (100–250 equiv/chlorophyll per h) as previously noticed by other workers. Secondly, the rate in weak light (quantum yield) of these photooxidations remains unaffected by Mn removal. This shows that for donor photooxidation the larger of the two Mn pools is not essential.

7. 7. Complete removal of Mn (< 1 Mn/4000 chlorophylls) led to 90–95% loss of donor photooxidation in strong light.

8. 8. Removal of 2/3 of the Mn left a low fluorescence yield (variable fraction = 0) which could be fully restored by adding DCMU. After complete removal of Mn (< 1 Mn/4000 chlorophylls) DCMU enhanced the yield of the variable fluorescence to only 1/2 the maximum level but the full maximum could be restored by chemical reduction. This indicates that fluorescence quencher of System II, Q, is not affected by Mn removal.

9. 9. Of the three Mn associated with each trapping center, one is linked more closely to the center than the other two. While all three are essential for O2 evolution, artificial donors can enter with various rate constants at several loci on the oxidant side of System II.

Abbreviations: DCMU, 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea; Q, the quencher of System II fluorescence; F0, the invariant low level of fluorescence observed at onset of illumination; Fmax, maximum level of fluorescence; DCIPH2, 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol, reduced form; DH2, a reductant capable of donating electrons to light-induced oxidants; A pool, the large electron acceptor pool in association with Q of System II; PMS, N-methylphenazonium ion (phenazine methosulfate)  相似文献   


5.

1. 1. The kinetics of light-induced absorbance changes due to oxidation and reduction of cytochromes were measured in a suspension of intact cells of the unicellular red alga Porphyridium aerugineum. Absorbance changes in the region 540–570 nm upon alternating far-red light and darkness indicated the oxidation of cytochrome ƒ and reduction of cytochrome b563 upon illumination. The relative efficiencies of far-red and orange light indicated that both reactions were driven by Photosystem I.

2. 2. Experiments with 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU), with anaerobic cells and in alternating far-red and orange light indicated that cytochrome b563 reacts in a cyclic chain around Photosystem I, and that the reduced cytochrome does not react with oxygen or with another oxidized product of Photosystem II. The quantum requirement for the photoreduction was about 6 quanta/equiv at 700 nm. A low concentration of N-methylphenazonium methosulphate (PMS) enhanced the rate of reoxidation of cytochrome b563 in the dark. In the presence of higher concentrations of PMS a photooxidation, driven by Photosystem I, instead of reduction was observed. These observations suggest that PMS enhances the rate of reactions between reduced cytochrome b563 and oxidized products of Photosystem I.

3. 3. In the presence of carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP) a light-induced decrease of absorption at 560 nm occurred. Spectral evidence suggested the photooxidation of cytochrome b559 under these conditions. Inhibition by DCMU and a relatively efficient action of orange light suggested that this photooxidation is driven by Photosystem II.

Abbreviations: DBMIB, 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone; DCMU, 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea; CCCP, carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone; FCCP, carbonylcyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone; P700, chlorophyllous pigment absorbing at 700 nm, primary electron donor of Photosystem I; PMS, N-methylphenazonium methosulphate  相似文献   


6.
G.H. Krause 《BBA》1973,292(3):715-728
Certain long-term fluorescence phenomena observed in intact leaves of higher plants and in isolated chloroplasts show a reverse relationship to light-induced absorbance changes at 535 nm (“chloroplast shrinkage”).

1. 1. In isolated chloroplasts with intact envelopes strong fluorescence quenching upon prolonged illumination with red light is accompanied by an absorbance increase. Both effects are reversed by uncoupling with cyclohexylammonium chloride.

2. 2. The fluorescence quenching is reversed in the dark with kinetics very similar to those of the dark decay of chloroplast shrinkage.

3. 3. In intact leaves under strong illumination with red light in CO2-free air a low level of variable fluorescence and a strong shrinkage response are observed. Carbon dioxide was found to increase fluorescence and to inhibit shrinkage.

4. 4. Under nitrogen, CO2 caused fluorescence quenching and shrinkage increase at low concentrations. At higher CO2 levels fluorescence was increased and shrinkage decreased.

5. 5. In the presence of CO2, the steady-state yield of fluorescence was lower under nitrogen than under air, whereas chloroplast shrinkage was stimulated in nitrogen and suppressed in air.

6. 6. These results demonstrate that the fluorescence yield does not only depend on the redox state of the quencher Q, but to a large degree also on the high-energy state of the thylakoid system associated with photophosphorylation.

Abbreviations: DCMU, 3-(3′,4′-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea  相似文献   


7.

1. 1. A relaxation spectrophotometer was employed to measure the effects of trypsin treatment on electron transport in both cyclic and non-cyclic chloroplast reactions. The parameters measured were electron flow rate through P700 (flux) and the time constant for dark reduction of P700.

2. 2. In the reduction of methyl viologen by the ascorbate-2,6-dichlorophenol-indophenol (DCIP) donor couple, there was no effect of trypsin on P700 flux or on the time constant for dark reduction of P700. In the phenazine methosulfate (PMS) cyclic system, trypsin had either a slightly stimulatory or slightly inhibitory effect on the P700 flux, depending on the presence or absence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU): either effect being marginal compared to trypsin effects on Photosystem II.With both ferricyanide and methyl viologen reduction from water, trypsin treament gave a first order decline in P700 flux: which matched the trypsin-induced decline in electron transport with the water to DCIP system, measured by dye reduction. This implies that Photosystem II is inhibited. The inhibition of Photosystem II was up to 90% with a 6–10-min trypsin treatment. This result is consistent with the concept of Photosystem I (P700) being in series with Photosystem II in the electron transfer sequence.

3. 3. Cyclic phosphorylation was severely inhibited (85%) by trypsin treatment which had a somewhat stimulatory effect on P700 flux, indicating uncoupling. Non-cyclic phosphorylation was uncoupled as well as electron flow being inhibited since the P/2e ratio decreased more rapidly as a function of trypsin incubation time than inhibition of electron flow. The two effects, uncoupling and non-cyclic electron flow inhibition, are separate actions of trypsin. It is probably that the uncoupling action of trypsin is due to attack on the coupling factor protein, known to be exposed on the outer surface of thylakoids.

4. 4. Trypsin treatment caused an increase in the rate constant, kd, for the dark H+ efflux, resulting in a decreased steady state level of proton accumulation. The increased proton efflux and the inhibition of phosphorylation are consistent with an uncoupling effect on trypsin.

5. 5. Trypsin treatment did not reduce the manganese content of chloroplasts: as reported by others, Tris washing did remove about 30% of the chloroplast manganese.

6. 6. Electron micrographs of both negatively stained and thin-sectioned preparations showed that, under these conditions, trypsin does not cause a general breakdown of chloroplast lamellae. Inhibition by trypsin must therefore result from attacks on a few specific sites.

7. 7. Both System II inhibition and uncoupling occur rapidly when trypsin treatment is carried out in dilute buffer, a condition which leads to thylakoid unstacking, but both are prevented by the presence of 0.3 M sucrose and 0.1 M KCl, a condition that helps maintain stacked thylakoids. Evidently vulnerability to trypsin requires separation of thylakoids.

8. 8. Since trypsin does not appear to disrupt thylakoids nor prevent their normal aggregation in high sucrose-salt medium and since the trypsin molecule is probably impermeable, it is probable that the site(s) of trypsin attack in System II are exposed on the outer thylakoid surface.

Abbreviations: DCIP, 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol; PMS, phenazine methosulfate; Tricine, N-tris(hydroxymethyl)methylglycine; MES, 2-(N-morpholino)ethanesulfonic acid; DCMU, (3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea  相似文献   


8.
G. Dubertret  P. Joliot 《BBA》1974,357(3):399-411
The formation and the organization of Photosystem II photosynthetic units during the greening of a dark-grown Chlorella vulgaris, mutant 5/520, have been investigated by analysing the kinetics of the “activation” of oxygen evolution and of the fluorescence induction.

1. 1. The existence during the early stages of the greening of a stationary photosynthesis demonstrates the presence of active Photosystem II at these initial stages, which are integrated in a functional whole, leading to overall photosynthesis.

2. 2. The rise-time of oxygen evolution has been measured using far-red and green light in order to estimate the relative number of chlorophylls per unit. The amount of chlorophyll a remains relatively constant during the greening, while the progressive addition of chlorophyll b causes the size of the units to increase approx. 2-fold.

3. 3. The induction kinetics of the fluorescence are exponential during the early phases of greening and later become distinctly sigmoidal; this suggests that the first units synthesized on the surface of the membrane are isolated from each other by obstacles preventing electronic excitation transfers and that such obstacles which might correspond to some distance between such units, can disappear at later stages, allowing energy transfers to occur.

These observations suggest that the Photosystem II units represent organized functional entities. They apparently consist of a relatively constant number of chlorophyll a molecules, which during the greening is complemented progressively by the addition of chlorophyll b.  相似文献   


9.
J. Amesz  M.P.J. Pulles  B.R. Velthuys 《BBA》1973,325(3):472-482

1. 1. Spinach chloroplasts were stored in the dark for at least 1 h, rapidly cooled to −40 °C, and illuminated with continuous light or short saturating flashes. In agreement with the measurements of Joliot and Joliot, chloroplasts that had been preilluminated with one or two flashes just before cooling showed a less efficient increase in the yield of chlorophyll a fluorescence upon illumination at −40 °C than dark-adapted chloroplasts. The effect disappeared below −150 °C, but reappeared again upon warming to −40 °C. Little effect was seen at room temperature in the presence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU), added after the preillumination.

2. 2. Light-induced absorbance difference spectra at −40 °C in the region 500–560 nm indicated the participation of two components, the socalled 518-nm change (P518) and C-550. After preillumination with two flashes the absorbance change at 518 nm was smaller, and almost no C-550 was observed. After four flashes, the bands of C-550 were clearly visible again.

3. 3. The fluorescence increase and the absorbance change at 518 nm showed the same type of flash pattern with a minimum after the second and a maximum at the fourth flash. In the presence of 100 μM hydroxylamine, the fluorescence response was low after the fourth and high again after the sixth flash, which confirmed the hypothesis that the flash effect was related to the so-called S-state of the electron transport pathway from water to Photosystem 2.

4. 4. The kinetics of the light-induced absorbance changes were the same at each wavelength, and, apart from the size of the deflection, they were independent of preillumination. Flash experiments indicated that the absorbance changes were a one-quantum reaction. This was also true for the fluorescence increase in dark-adapted chloroplasts, but with preilluminated chloroplasts several flashes were needed to approximately saturate the fluorescence yield.

5. 5. The results are discussed in terms of a mechanism involving two electron donors and two electron acceptors for System 2 of photosynthesis.

Abbreviations: DCMU, 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethylurea  相似文献   


10.
Kenneth L. Zankel 《BBA》1971,245(2):373-385
Delayed luminescence from saturating flashes given to isolated chloroplasts was measured in the time range of 65–800 μsec with the following results:

1. 1. Three distinct components having decay half times of approx. 10, 35 and 200 μsec could be detected.

2. 2. The yields of both the 35- and 200-μsec delayed luminescence components oscillate with a period of four, in phase with oscillations of O2 yield; no large oscillations of fluorescence paralleling those of luminescence or O2 were observed.

3. 3. 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) abolished the 10- and 200-μsec components and the oscillatory behavior of the 35-μsec component.

4. 4. The 35- and 200-μsec components are not directly influenced by System I.

The DCMU isolated 35-μsec component showed the following properties:

1. 1. The decay is first order and the emission spectrum is essentially identical to that of chloroplast fluorescence;

2. 2. The yield saturates with a total emission of about 10-4 quanta/trap.

3. 3. The temperature dependence indicates an activation energy of about 250 mV for the yield and 200 mV for the decay.

4. 4. Maximal emission was obtained when Q, the acceptor of System II, was oxidized prior to the flash.

The results are discussed in terms of possible mechanisms concerning the production and behavior of the luminescence.  相似文献   


11.
G. Renger  B. Bouges-Bocquet  R. Delosme 《BBA》1973,292(3):796-807
The effect of 2-(3-chloro-4-trifluoromethyl)anilino-3,5-dinitrothiophene (ANT 2p) on the oxygen evolution, fluorescence and delayed light emission of spinach chloroplasts has been investigated. It was found that;

1. 1. ANT 2p strongly accelerates the deactivation of states S2 and S3 of the water-splitting enzyme system Y.

2. 2. In DCMU-poisoned chloroplasts ANT 2p prevents the back reaction of the electrons located at the primary acceptor, Q, with the holes (positive charges) stored in the water-splitting enzyme system Y.

3. 3. In chloroplast suspensions without artificial electron acceptors, the fluorescence rise in weak actinic light vanishes in the presence of ANT 2p. The fluorescence yield in DCMU-inhibited chloroplasts is not significantly changed by ANT 2p.

4. 4. The intensity of the delayed light emitted after excitation with one short flash is remarkably decreased by ANT 2p.

5. 5. In weak actinic light the reduction rate of the artificial electron acceptor methyl viologen is suppressed in the presence of ANT 2p.

From these experimental results it is concluded that ANT 2p induces a cycle within the electron transport chain, leading to a dissipative recombination of the holes stored in the water-splitting enzyme Y with the electrons of an as yet unknown donor.

Two possibilities for the mode of action of this cycle are discussed.  相似文献   


12.
G. Renger 《BBA》1973,314(3):390-402
The mechanism of the 2-(3,4,5-trichloro)anilino-3,5 dinitrothiophene (ANT 2S)-induced cyclic electron flow leading to the discharge of the higher-trapped-hole accumulation states S2 and S3 in the photosynthetic water-splitting enzyme system Y of chloroplasts has been investigated. It was found:

1. 1. Under normal conditions the ANT 2s-catalyzed cycle includes both light reactions.

2. 2. By selective kinetical inhibition of the electron flow through P700—either by histone treatment or by 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-1,4-benzoquinone blockage—the ANT 2s-induced deactivation of S2 and S3 is not significantly changed. Hence, System I activity is not a functional prerequisite for the ANT 2s-catalyzed discharge of S2 and S3.

3. 3. The reciprocal half time of the ANT 2s-induced decay of the relative average oxygen yield per flash, as a function of the time td between the flashes representing the degree of the Acceleration of the Deactivation Reactions of the water-splitting enzyme system (ADRY) effect, is nearly linearly related to the ANT 2s concentration within the range of 10−7–10−6 M.

4. 4. In respect to the mode of action of ANT 2s two different types of mechanism have been discussed: fixed-place mechanism and mobile-catalyst mechanism.

5. 5. Based on the experimental data the conclusion has been drawn that the ADRY agent ANT 2s probably acts as a mobile catalyst.

Abbreviations: ADRY, Acceleration of the Deactivation Reactions of the water-splitting enzyme stystem Y; ANT 2s, 2-(3,4,5-trichloro)anilino-3,5-dinitrothiophene; DCMU, 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea; DBMIB, 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-1,4-benzoquinone  相似文献   


13.
Shigeru Itoh  Mitsuo Nishimura 《BBA》1977,460(3):381-392
Changes in the rates of dark oxidation and reduction of the primary electron acceptor of System II by added oxidant and reductant were investigated by measuring the induction of chlorophyll fluorescence under moderate actinic light in 3-(3′,4′-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea-inhibited chloroplasts at pH values between 3.6 and 9.5. It was found that:

1. (1) The rate of dark oxidation of photoreduced primary acceptor was very slow at all the pH values tested without added electron acceptor.

2. (2) The rate was accelerated by the addition of ferricyanide in the whole pH range. It was dependent approximately on the 0.8th power of the ferricyanide concentration.

3. (3) The rate constant for the oxidation of the primary acceptor by ferricyanide was pH-dependent and became high at low pH. The value at pH 3.6 was more than 100 times that at pH 7.8.

4. (4) The pH-dependent change in the rate constant was almost reversible when the chloroplasts were suspended at the original pH after a large pH change (acid treatment).

5. (5) An addition of carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone or heavy metal chelators had little effect on the rate of dark oxidation of the primary acceptor by ferricyanide.

6. (6) The dark reduction of the primary acceptor by sodium dithionite also became faster at low pH.

From these results it is concluded that at low pH the primary acceptor of System II becomes accessible to the added hydrophilic reagents even in the presence of 3-(3′,4′-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea.  相似文献   


14.
Raymond P. Cox 《BBA》1975,387(3):588-598

1. 1. Chloroplasts can be suspended in aqueous/organic mixtures which are liquid at sub-zero temperatures with a good retention of the ability to reduce artificial electron acceptors. The reduction of ferricyanide and 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol at temperatures above 0δC is about 50% inhibited by 50% (v/v) ethylene glycol. Higher concentrations cause more extensive inhibition.

2. 2. Different solvents were compared on the basis of their ability to cause a given depression of the freezing point of an aqueous solution. Ethylene glycol caused less inhibition of electron transport than glycerol, which in its turn was found to be superior to methanol.

3. 3. The reduction of oxidised 2,3,5,6-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine could be measured at −25δC in 40% (v/v) ethylene glycol. Using an acceptor with a high extinction coefficient, methyl purple (a derivative of 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol) it was possible to observe electron flow at temperatures as low as −40δC in 50% (v/v) ethylene glycol.

4. 4. From studies of the effects of the inhibitors 3(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea and 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone it is suggested that electron flow from the donor side of Photosystem II to the acceptor side of Photosystem I can occur at temperatures at least as low as −25δC. The ultimate electron donor is presumably water but it was not possible to demonstrate this directly.

Abbreviations: DCIP, 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol; DAD, 2,3,5,6-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine; DCMU, 3(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea; DBMIB, 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone; DMSO, dimethylsulphoxide  相似文献   


15.

1. 1. The aim of the present study is to assess the relationship between rapidity of oxygen uptake (VO2 and cardiac output (Q) kinetics at the transient phase of the onset and offset of exercise.

2. 2. Five healthy male subjects performed multiple rest-exercise-recovery transitions on an electrically braked ergometer, work rate was 50, 75, or 100 W for 6 min, respectively.

3. 3. VO2 was obtained by a breath-by-breath method, and Q was measured by an impedance method during normal breath, using an ensemble averaged method.

4. 4. On transition from rest to exercise, VO2 rapidly increased as phase I with a time constant of 7.0–7.8 s. Q also showed a similar rapid increment with a time constant of 6.3–6.8 s in phase I.

5. 5. In this phase I, VO2 increased approx. 42–68% of steady state value and Q increased 71–84%. Thereafter, VO2 and Q increased monoexponentially up to steady state with a time constant of 26.7–32.3 and 23.7–34.4 s, respectively.

6. 6. During recovery, VO2 (with a time constant of 35.7–38.1 s and time delay (TD) of −1 to −2 s), while Q remained to sustain the value of steady state exercise with a couple of time delay (TD = 2–7 s), and thereafter decreased monoexponentially (with a time constant of 18.9–31.6 s).

7. 7. The stroke volume showed the similar behavior to the Q kinetics after exercise, while heart rate rapidly decreased (time constant = 10.6–21.2 s).

8. 8. It is suggested that the delayed Q kinetics after exercise might be attributable to the sustained level of venous return and that Q kinetics is not linked with VO2 kinetics after exercise.

Author Keywords: VO2 kinetics; Q kinetics; exercise  相似文献   


16.
B. Bouges-Bocquet 《BBA》1973,292(3):772-785

1. 1. By varying the redox potential of a chloroplast suspension, we obtained new evidence for an equilibrium between states S0 and S1 in the model of Kok, B., Forbush, B. and McGloin, N. (1970, Photochem. Photobiol. 11, 457–475). The mid-point potential of the S0 to S1 couple is close to that for the pool of the electron acceptor of System II, A to A.

2. 2. The limiting steps between two consecutive photoreactions of System II in Chlorella and spinach chloroplasts, have been studied.

2.1. (a) The limiting step from S1 to S2 (noted γ1t)) is not exponential. Its temperature coefficient becomes greater as the reaction proceeds. The shape of the kinetics is an intrinsic property of each center. Chloroplasts fixed with 2% glutaraldehyde, show simple first order kinetics.

2.2. (b) The limiting step from S0 to S10t)) exhibits the same characteristics as γ1t)).

2.3. (c) The limiting step from S2 to S32t)) shows sigmoidal kinetics; two reactions are involved. One of the reactions exhibits the same properties as γ0t) and γ1t).

2.4. (d) The limiting step from S3 to S03t)) is a first order reaction, two times slower than the other transitions. This reaction is interpretated in terms of oxygen release.

3. 3. We also studied the limiting steps in the presence of low concentrations (50 μM) of hydroxylamine. The results favor the binding of two molecules of hydroxylamine to every photochemical center.

Abbreviations: DCIP, dichlorophenolindophenol  相似文献   


17.
Bernd Schmidt   《BBA》1976,449(3):516-524
In 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) poisoned chloroplasts, the restoration of the fluorescence induction is presumed to be due to a back reaction of the reduced primary acceptor (Q) and the oxidized primary donor (Z+) of Photosystem II. Carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP) is known to inhibit this back reaction. The influence of reduced N-methylphenazonium methosulfate (PMS) in the absence of CCCP and of oxidized PMS in the presence of CCCP on the back reaction was investigated and the following results were obtained:

1. (1) Reduced PMS at the concentration of 1 μM inhibits the back reaction as effectively as hydroxylamine, suggesting an electron donating function of reduced PMS for System II.

2. (2) The inhibition of the back reaction by CCCP is regenerated to a high degree by oxidized PMS which led to assume a cyclic System II electron flow catalysed by PMS.

3. (3) At concentrations of reduced PMS higher than 1 μM it is shown that both the fast initial emission and more significantly the variable emission are quenched.

Abbreviations: PMS, N-methylphenazonium methosulfate; CCCP, carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone; FCCP, carbonylcyanide p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone; TMPD, N,N,N′,N′-tetramethyl-p-phenylendiamine; DCMU, 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea  相似文献   


18.
Wolfgang Haehnel   《BBA》1976,440(3):506-521
The flash-induced oxidation kinetics of the primary acceptor of light Reaction II (X-320) and the reduction kinetics of chlorophyll a1 (P-700) after far-red preilluination have been studied with high time resolution in spinach chloroplasts.

1. 1. The kinetics of chlorophyll a1 exhibits a pronounced lag phase of 2–3 ms at the onset of reduction as would be expected for the final product of consecutive reactions. Because the oxidation of the plastoquinone pool is the rate-limiting step for the electron transport between the two light reactions, the lag indicates the maximal electron transfer time over all preceding reactions after light Reaction II.

2. 2. The observation that the lag phase decreases with decreasing pH is evidence of an electron transfer step coupled to a proton uptake reaction.

3. 3. Protonation of X-320 after reduction in the flash is excluded because a slight increase of the decay time is found at decreasing pH values.

4. 4. The time course of plastohydroquinone formation is deduced from the first derivative of the reduction kinetics of chlorophyll a1. This approach covers those plastohydroquinone molecules being available to the electron carriers of System I via the rate-limiting step. Direct measurements of absorbance changes would not allow to discriminate between these and functionally different plastohydroquinone molecules.

5. 5. The derived time course of plastohydroquinone at different pH gives evidence for an additional electron transfer step with a half time of about 1 ms following the proton uptake and preceding the rate-limiting step. It is tentatively attributed to the diffusion of neutral plastohydroquinone across the hydrophobic core of the thylakoid membrane.

6. 6. The lower limit of the rate constant for proton uptake by an electron carrier, consistent with the lag of chlorophyll a1 reduction, is estimated as > 1011 M−1 · s−1. The value is higher than that of the fastest diffusion controlled protonations of organic molecules in solution.

Possible mechanisms of linear electron transport between light Reaction II and the rate-limiting oxidation of neutral plastohydroquinone are thoroughly discussed.  相似文献   


19.
Lactoperoxidase-catalyzed iodination of chloroplast membranes has been employed to characterize the vectorial distribution of lamellar proteins. The enzymatic reaction is highly specific for only the outermost membrane components (Phillips, D. R. and Morrison, M. (1971) Biochemistry 10, 1766–1771); we have determined the distribution of 125I label and changes in photochemical activities after iodination in an effort to identify these components. Three major conclusions are evident:

1. 1. The coupling factor for photophosphorylation is highly exposed and is selectively and rapidly inhibited by the iodination reaction.

2. 2. A loss of Photosystem I activity (NADP reduction) resulted from iodination. Partial reactions indicated the effect was on electron-transport components on the reducing side of Photosystem I. There was also a limited inhibition of methyl viologen reduction.

3. 3. Iodination of intact membranes caused a reduction in rates of Photosystem II-dependent Hill reaction activity. This inhibition could not be explained solely on the basis of iodination effects on electron-transport components involved in the oxidation of water. The implications of these data with respect to previous chloroplast-membrane models are discussed.

Abbreviations: DABS, p-(diazonium)-benzene sulfonic acid; DCMU, 3-(3-4-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethylurea; DCIP, 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol; DPC, diphenyl carbazide; PMS, phenazine methosulfate; Tricine, N-Tris-(hydroxymethyl)-methylglycine  相似文献   


20.

1. 1. Small particles prepared from spinach chloroplasts after treatment with digitonin, exhibited Photosystem I reactions, including phosphorylation, at rates as high as those in chloroplasts, whereas electron flow from water to NADP+ or ferricyanide through Photosystem II was completely lost. Mediators of cyclic electron flow, such as pyocyanine, or N-methylphenazonium methosulfate in red light, had to be reduced to support photophosphorylation.Diaminodurene at high concentrations catalyzed cyclic phosphorylation under anaerobic conditions without addition of a reductant. In fact, addition of ascorbate gave rise to a marked inhibition which was released by addition of a suitable electron acceptor such as methylviologen.

2. 2. Under aerobic conditions a low O2 uptake, observed in the presence of diaminodurene, was stimulated several-fold upon addition of methylviologen and was stimulated again several-fold on further addition of ascorbate. The rate of phosphorylation, however, remained the same. The low P/2e ratio obtained under these conditions was not decreased at lower light intensities.

3. 3. These findings suggest a phosphorylation site associated with cyclic electron flow through Photosystem I without participation of the electron carriers of Photosystem II. A non-cyclic electron flow to O2 can be induced in this system by addition of methylviologen which effectively competes with the electron acceptors of cyclic flow. This non-cyclic electron flow still involves the same phosphorylation site. A scheme for electron transport and for the location of phosphorylation sites in chloroplasts is proposed.

Abbreviations: PMS, N-methylphenazonium methosulfate; DCIP, dichlorophenolindophenol; DCMU, dichlorophenyl-1,1-dimethylurea; Tricine, tris(hydroxymethyl)methylglycine  相似文献   


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