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1.
Inhibition of photosystem 2 by the peptide-modification reagent, tetranitromethane, has been investigated with spinach digitonin particles. In the presence of tetranitromethane, (1) the initial fluoresence yield is suppressed with a concomitant elimination of the variable component of fluorescence; (2) the optical absorption transient at 820 nm, attributed to P680+, is greatly attenuated; (3) diphenylcarbazide-supported photoreduction of dichlorophenol indophenol is abolished; and (4) electron spin resonance Signal 2f and Signal 2s are eliminated. These results are consistent with multiple sites of modification in photosystem 2 by tetranitromethane, and suggest further that this reagent can inhibit charge stabilization in the reaction center.Abbreviations D1 electron donor to P680+ in oxygen-inhibited photosystem 2 preparations - DPIP 2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol - esr electron spin resonance - Fi initial chlorophyll a fluorescence yield - Fmax maximum chlorophyll a fluorescence yield - Fv variable chlorophyll a fluorescence yield - FWHM full width at half maximum - Mes 2-(N-morpholino)ethanesulfonic acid - P680 primary electron donor chlorophyll of photosystem 2 - Ph pheophytin - PS 2-photosystem 2 - Qa primary quinone electron acceptor - Qb secondary quinone acceptor - Tricine N-[2-hydroxy-1,1-bis(hydroxymethyl)ethyl]glycine - TNM tetranitromethane  相似文献   

2.
《BBA》1987,890(2):215-223
Recent studies in our laboratory have reexamined the interaction of the unsaturated fatty acid, linolenic acid, with Photosystem II and have documented two principal regions of inhibition: one associated with the donor complex (Signal 2f or D1) to the reaction center, and the other located on the reducing side between pheophytin and Qa (Golbeck, J.H. and Warden, J.T. (1984) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 767, 263–271). A further characterization of fatty acid inhibition of secondary electron transport in Photosystem II at room and cryogenic temperatures is presented in this paper. These studies demonstrate that linolenic acid, and related fatty acid analogs, (1) eliminate the transient absorption increase at 320 nm, attributed to Qa; (2) abolish the production, either chemically or photochemically, of the ESR signal (QFe) associated with the bound quinone acceptor, Qa; and (3) prevent the photooxidation of Signal 21t(D1) at cryogenic temperature. Linolenic-acid-treated samples are characterized by a high initial fluorescence yield (Fi) equivalent to the maximum level of fluorescence (Fmax); however, the spin-polarized triplet, associated with the reactioncenter electron donor, P-680, is observed only in inhibited samples that have been prereduced with sodium dithionite. These results suggest the presence of an additional acceptor intermediate between pheophytin and Qa. The donor-assisted photoaccumulation of pheophytin anion in Photosystem II particles, as monitored by the decline of fluorescence yield, is inhibited by linolenic acid. Redox titrations of the fluorescence yield in control and inhibited preparations demonstrate that the midpoint potential for the primary acceptor for Photosystem II is insensitive to the fatty acid (Em ≈ −583 mV) and thus indicate that primary photochemistry is functional during linolenic-acid inhibition. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that unsaturated fatty acids inhibit secondary electron transport in Photosystem II via displacement of endogenous quinone from quinone-binding peptides.  相似文献   

3.
The discovery of period four oscillations of the fluorescence yield under flashing light demonstrated that not only the redox state of the Photosystem II (PS II) electron acceptor QA, but also the oxygen evolving cycle (described by the S states) modulates the fluorescence yield of chlorophyll (Chl). The positive charges accumulated on the donor side of PS II act on the fluorescence yield (measured in the QA state during a strong flash) through the concentration of the quencher P680 +, the oxidized form of PS II reaction center Chl a. However, the period four oscillations of the fluorescence yield detected 1 s after a strong flash (in the P680QA state) have not yet been fully explained. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

4.
Photosystem II particles were exposed to 800 W m–2 white light at 20 °C under anoxic conditions. The Fo level of fluorescence was considerably enhanced indicating formation of stable-reduced forms of the primary quinone electron acceptor, QA. The Fm level of fluorescence declined only a little. The g=1.9 and g=1.82 EPR forms characteristic of the bicarbonate-bound and bicarbonate-depleted semiquinone-iron complex, QA Fe2+, respectively, exhibited differential sensitivity against photoinhibition. The large g=1.9 signal was rapidly diminished but the small g=1.82 signal decreased more slowly. The S2-state multiline signal, the oxygen evolution and photooxidation of the high potential form of cytochrome b-559 were inhibited approximately with the same kinetics as the g=1.9 signal. The low potential form of oxidized cytochrome b-559 and Signal IIslow arising from TyrD + decreased considerably slower than the g=1.9 semiquinone-iron signal. The high potential form of oxidized cytochrome b-559 was diminished faster than the low potential form. Photoinhibition of the g=1.9 and g=1.82 forms of QA was accompanied with the appearance and gradual saturation of the spin-polarized triplet signal of P 680. The amplitude of the radical signal from photoreducible pheophytin remained constant during the 3 hour illumination period. In the thermoluminescence glow curves of particles the Q band (S2QA charge recombination) was almost completely abolished. To the contrary, the C band (TyrD +QA charge recombination) increased a little upon illumination. The EPR and thermoluminescence observations suggest that the Photosystem II reaction centers can be classified into two groups with different susceptibility against photoinhibition.Abbreviations C band thermoluminescence band associated with Tyr-D+Q a charge recombination - Chl chlorophyll - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - EPR electron paramagnetic resonance - Fo initial fluorescence - Fm maximum fluorescence - Q band thermoluminescence band originating from S2Q a -charge recombination - Q a the primary quinone electron acceptor of PS II - P 680 the primary electron donor chlorophyll of PS II - S2 oxidation state of the water-splitting system - Phe pheophytin - TL thermoluminescence - Tyr d redox active tyrosine-160 of the D2 protein  相似文献   

5.
P. Jursinic 《BBA》1977,461(2):253-267
Parallel measurements of the rise in chlorophyll a fluorescence yield and delayed light emission decay, after a 10 ns saturating excitation flash, have been made in tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane-washed chloroplasts. Various electron donor systems (Mn2+; ascorbate; reduced phenylenediamine and benzidine) were used in conjuction with different preillumination regimes to alter [P+-680], the oxidized form of the Photosystem II reaction center chlorophyll a. Conditions giving rise to high [P+-680] resulted in only a small rise in fluorescence yield, an inhibition of a 6 μs delayed light component, and an enhancement of a 60 μs component of delayed light emission. These results confirm the hypothesis that P+-680 acts as a quencher of fluorescence and that delayed light emission in the microsecond time range is due to the back reaction of P+-680 and Q?. (Q is the first “stable” electron acceptor of Photosystem II.) Two preillumination flashes are required before the full effect of Tris washing is observed in the delayed light emission decay and fluorescence yield rise; this suggests that a capacity to hold two charges exists between the Tris block and P+-680. Tris washing has no direct effect on the movement of electrons from Z (the first electron donor to P+-680) to P+-680. Finally, Mn2+ donates electrons to P+-680 via Z.  相似文献   

6.
We have measured the rate constant for the formation of the oxidized chlorophyll a electron donor (P680+) and the reduced electron acceptor pheophytin a (Pheo a ) following excitation of isolated Photosystem II reaction centers (PS II RC) at 15 K. This PS II RC complex consists of D1, D2, and cytochrome b-559 proteins and was prepared by a procedure which stabilizes the protein complex. Transient absorption difference spectra were measured from 450–840 nm as a function of time with 500fs resolution following 610 nm laser excitation. The formation of P680+-Pheo a is indicated by the appearance of a band due to P680+ at 820 nm and corresponding absorbance changes at 490, 515 and 546 nm due to the formation of Pheo a . The appearance of the 490 nm and 820 nm bands is monoexponenital with =1.4±0.2 ps. Treatment of the PS II RC with sodium dithionite and methyl viologen followed by exposure to laser excitation results in accumulation of Pheo a . Laser excitation of these prereduced RCs at 15 K results in formation of a transient absorption spectrum assigned to 1*P680. We observe wavelength-dependent kinetics for the recovery of the transient bleach of the Qy absorption bands of the pigments in both untreated and pre-reduced PS II RCs at 15K. This result is attributed to an energy transfer process within the PS II RC at low temperature that is not connected with charge separation.Abbreviations PS I Photosystem I - PS II Photosystem II - RC reaction center - P680 primary electron donor in Photosystem II - Chl a chlorophyll a - Pheo a pheophytin a  相似文献   

7.
The light-induced oxidation of the accessory donor tyrosine-D (YD) has been studied by measurements of the EPR Signal IIslow at room temperature in the autotrophically and photoheterotrophically cultivated alga Chlamydobotrys stellata. After illumination and dark adaptation, YD Signal IIslow was observed only in autotrophic algae, i.e. under conditions of a linear photosynthetic electron transfer from water to NADP+. The addition of artificial electron acceptors phenyl-p-benzoquinone (PPQ) or dichloro-p-benzoquinone (DCQ) to the autotrophic cells caused an almost negligible increase of this signal. When photosynthetic electron flow and oxygen evolution were diminished by removal of the carbon source CO2 and addition of acetate (photoheterotrophy), a pronounced YD Signal IIslow was seen only in presence of DCQ or PPQ. Several possibilities are discussed to explain the absence of YD Signal IIslow in photoheterotrophic Chl. stellata such as the existence of a cyclic PS II electron flow very effectively reducing P680 and thereby preventing the possibility of YD oxidation. Artificial electron acceptors withdraw electrons from this cycle thus keeping the primary quinone acceptor, QA, oxidized and thereby diminishing the reduction of P680 + by cyclic PSII. This leads to the appearance of the YD Signal IIslow also in the photoheterotrophically grown algae.Abbreviations A-band- thermoluminescence band associated with S2QA - charge recombination - DCQ- 2,5-dichlorobenzoquinone - D2- structure protein of Photosystem II - EPR- electron paramagnetic resonance - OEC- oxygen evolving complex - PPQ- phenyl-p-benzoquinone - PS II- Photosystem II - P680- reaction center of Photosystem II - Q-band- thermoluminescence band associated with S2QA - charge recombination - Si- oxidation levels of the OEC - YD- tyrosine-D accessory donor to P680 - YZ- tyrosine-Z electron donor to P680 Dedicated to Prof. Dr E. Schnepf/Heidelberg.  相似文献   

8.
Photochemical efficiencies of photosystem I (PSI) and photosystem II (PSII) were studied in dry thalli of the lichen Hypogymnia physodes and during their re-hydration. In dry thalli, PSII reaction centers are photochemically inactive, as evidenced by the absence of variable chlorophyll (Chl) fluorescence, whereas the primary electron donor of PSI, P700, exhibits irreversible oxidation under continuous light. Upon application of multiple- and, particularly, single-turnover pulses in dry lichen, P700 oxidation partially reversed, which indicated recombination between P700+ and the reduced acceptor FX of PSI. Re-wetting of air-dried H. physodes initiated the gradual restoration of reversible light-induced redox reactions in both PSII and PSI, but the recovery was faster in PSI. Two slow components of P700+ reduction occurred after irradiation of partially and completely hydrated thalli with strong white light. In contrast, no slow component was found in the kinetics of re-oxidation of QA, the reduced primary acceptor of PSII, after exposure of such thalli to white light. This finding indicated the inability of PSII in H. physodes to provide the reduction of the plastoquinone pool to significant levels. It is concluded that slow alternative electron transport routes may contribute to the energetics of photosynthesis to a larger extent in H. physodes than in higher plants.Abbreviations A0 and A1 Primary acceptor chlorophyll and secondary electron acceptor phylloquinone - Chl a Chlorophyll a - Fm Maximal level of chlorophyll fluorescence when all PSII centers are closed - Fo Minimal level of fluorescence when all PSII centers are open after dark adaptation - FR Far-red - Fv Variable fluorescence (=FmFo) - FX, FA, and FB Iron–sulfur centers - MT pulse Multiple-turnover pulse - PS Photosystem - P700 Reaction center chlorophyll of PSI - QA Primary quinone acceptor of PSII - QB Secondary quinone acceptor of PSII - ST pulse Single-turnover pulse  相似文献   

9.
《BBA》1985,809(3):345-350
Reversible photoreduction of pheophytin (Pheo) accompanied by a decrease of chlorophyll-fluorescence yield is observed in subchloroplast oxygen-evolving preparations of Photosystem II (PS II) under anaerobic conditions. This photoreaction is activated at addition of CCCP, inhibited by 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) and reactivated upon subsequent addition of ascorbate. Benzyl viologen as well as methyl viologen accelerates dark oxidation of reduced pheophytin, indicating that they are able to accept an electron from Pheo. The data on both the photoreduction of pheophytin in the absence of exogenous reductants - when electron donation to reaction centers of PS II occurs only from water - and the inhibition of this photoreaction by DCMU show that the pheophytin photoreduction is sensitized by reaction centers of PS II, and it probably occurs as a result of electron donation from the water-splitting system being in the sate S3 to P-680PheoQ, producing the long-lived state S0 P-680PheoQ and O2. Photoreduction of pheophytin in the presence of ascorbate (and dithionite) evidently occurs as a result of donation of its electrons to P-680PheoQ by means of the S-states of the water-oxidizing system. It is shown that the photoinduced decrease of fluorescence in chloroplasts under anaerobic conditions is due to two processes: photoreduction of pheophytin in Photosystem II and photooxidation of Q by Photosystem I. It is suggested that photoreduction of pheophytin takes also place under aerobic conditions when Q is reduced. It may contribute to the P−S fluorescence decrease during fluorescence induction in leaves.  相似文献   

10.
Effect of preheating of beet spinach leaves on chlorophyll a fluorescence yield was analyzed with the help of additional high intensity illumination pulses using a pulse modulated fluorometer. Preheating at mildly elevated temperature (35–45°C) causes a shift in the redox state of secondary donor of photosystem II, possibly due to uncoupling of phosphorylation because of thermal induced membrane disorganization and associated alkalinization of intra thylakoid space. Also, at these preheating temperatures, a rise in photosystem I catalyzed electron transfer has been shown to occur. These two effects induce rapid quenching of Chi a fluorescence, which drops even in the presence of actinic light, below the level of initial fluorescence (Fo′ monitored by the weak modulated probing light. Preheating of leaf segments induces an increase in fluorescence in the presence of dluron, which blocks electron flow between two photosystems, and thus this increases in fluorescence yield (Fo′ as monitored by weak modulated light, is not solely due to disorganization of light harvesting Chi-protein complex but also due to a shift in the redox equilibrium of the donor at the oxidizing side of photosystem II resulting in rapid reduction of QA the stable primary acceptor of photosystem II. In 50°C preheated DCMU treated samples, the fluorescence yield increases in weak modulated light and it approaches that of maximal steady state (Fmax) level. At preheating temperature of 48°–50°C, the inactivation of enzymes in the reducing side of photosystem I, causes an impairment of the reoxidation of QA and under this condition, a strong illumination causes quenching of Chi a fluorescence. This quenching seems to arise because of accumulation of the P680+, the oxidized physiological donor of photosystem which is a quencher of Chi a fluorescence. This quenching depended on the pulse intensity and duration which saturates P680+ accumulation and is greatly manifested when water oxidation complex is damaged.  相似文献   

11.
The linear dichroism of Photosystem I particles containing 10 chlorophylls per P700 has been investigated at 10 K. The particles were oriented by uniaxial squeezing of polyacrylamide gels. The oxidation state of P700 was altered either by incubation of the gels with redox mediators or by low temperature illumination. The QY transitions of the primary electron donor P700, of the remaining unoxidized chlorophyll in P700+ and of a chlorophyll molecule absorbing at 686 nm, which presumably corresponds to the primary electron acceptor A0, are all preferentially oriented perpendicular to the gel squeezing direction. The QY transition of the chlorophyll forms absorbing at 670 and 675 nm appear tilted at 40 ± 5° from this orientation axis. This orientation of the various chlorophylls is compared to that previously reported for more native Photosystem I particles.Abbreviations PSI Photosystem I - P700 primary electron donor of PSI - A0 primary electron acceptor of PSI  相似文献   

12.
Electron transfer processes in leaves were investigated by chlorophyll fluorescence decay measurements. A fast chlorophyll fluorescence decay was observed in the intact state, reflecting normal electron transfer in Photosystem II. After treatment with DCMU a slow chlorophyll fluorescence decay was measured due to blocked electron transfer after the primary quinone QA. Additional saturating light pulses, one between each two measuring pulses, were used to completely reduce QA of the intact leaf: the chlorophyll fluorescence decay became similar to that of a DCMU treated leaf. A decreased electron donation rate to the reaction centre P680 was obtained after treatment with hydroxylamine. The intensity of the additional saturating light pulses was not sufficient to reduce all QA under this condition and only a small increase of the average chlorophyll fluorescence decay time occurred. Following our previous paper [Berg et al. (1997) Photosynthetica 34, in press], we investigated the effects of water stress with the additional saturating light pulses. An almost complete reduction of QA was possible after water stress started. A small, but systematic shortening of the slow chlorophyll fluorescence decay followed, up to a relative loss of leaf mass of 80%. At this time a rapid shortening of the chlorophyll fluorescence decay occurred, caused by an electron deficiency at the donor site of PS II. Additional saturating light pulses had no effects on the chlorophyll fluorescence decay any more, revealing a radiationless recombination between the reduced primary quinone Q and the oxidized reaction centre P680+.  相似文献   

13.
Extraction of PS II particles with 50 mM cholate and 1 M NaCl releases several proteins (33-, 23-, 17- and 13 kDa) and lipids from the thylakoid membrane which are essential for O2 evolution, dichlorophenolindophenol (DCIP) reduction and for stable charge separation between P680+ and QA -. This work correlates the results on the loss of steady-state rates for O2 evolution and PS II mediated DCIP photo-reduction with flash absorption changes directly monitoring the reaction center charge separation at 830 nm due to P680+, the chlorophyll a donor. Reconstitution of the extracted lipids to the depleted membrane restores the ability to photo-oxidize P680 reversibly and to reduce DCIP, while stimulating O2 evolution minimally. Addition of the extracted proteins of masses 33-, 23- and 17- kDa produces no further stimulation of DCIP reduction in the presence of an exogenous donor like DPC, but does enhance this rate in the absence of exogenous donors while also stimulating O2 evolution. The proteins alone in the absence of lipids have little influence on charge separation in the reaction center. Thus lipids are essential for stable charge separation within the reaction center, involving formation of P680+ and QA -.Abbreviations A830 Absorption change at 830 nm - Chl Chlorophyll - D1 primary electron donor to P680 - DCIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - DPC 1,5-diphenylcarbazide - MOPS 3-(N-morpholino)propanesulfonic acid - P680 reaction center chlorophyll a molecule of photosystem II - PPBQ Phenyl-p-benzoquinone - PS II Photosystem II - QA, QB first and second quinone acceptors in PS II - V-DCIP rate of DCIP reduction - V-O2 rate of oxygen evolution - Y water-oxidizing enzyme system - CHAPS 3-Cyclohexylamino-propanesulfonic acid  相似文献   

14.
Gerald T. Babcock  Kenneth Sauer 《BBA》1975,376(2):329-344
Rapid light-induced transients in EPR Signal IIf (F?+) are observed in 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU)-treated, Tris-washed chloroplasts until the state F P680 Q? is reached. In the absence of exogenous redox mediators several flashes are required to saturate this photoinactive state. However, the Signal IIf transient is observed on only the first flash following DCMU addition if an efficient donor to Signal IIf, phenylenediamine or hydroquinone, is present. Complementary polarographic measurements show that under these conditions oxidized phenylenediamine is produced only on the first flash of a series. The DCMU inhibition of Signal IIf can be completely relieved by oxidative titration of a one-electron reductant with E08.0 = +480 mV. At high reduction potentials the decay time of Signal IIf is constant at about 300 ms, whereas in the absence of DCMU the decay time is longer and increases with increasing reduction potential.A model is proposed in which Q?, the reduced Photosystem II primary acceptor, and D, a one-electron 480 mV donor endogenous to the chloroplast suspension, compete in the reduction of Signal IIf (F?+). At high potentials D is oxidized in the dark, and the (Q? + F?+) back reaction regenerates the photoactive F P680 Q state. The electrochemical and kinetic evidence is consistent with the hypothesis that the Signal IIf species, F, is identical with Z, the physiological donor to P680.  相似文献   

15.
To understand the origins of the different lifetime components of photosystem 2 (PS2) chlorophyll (Chl) fluorescence we have studied their susceptibility to potassium iridic chloride (K2IrCl6) which has been shown to bleach antenna pigments of photosynthetic bacteria (Loach et al. 1963). The addition of K2IrCl6 to PS2 particles gives rise to a preferential quenching of the variable Chl fluorescence (Fv). At concentrations lower than 20 M, this is brought about mainly by a decrease in the yield, but not in the lifetime, of the slowest component when all the PS2 reaction centres are closed (FM). The yield of the middle and fast decays are not significantly altered. This type of quenching is not seen with DNB. The iridate-induced quenching of the initial fluorescence level (F0) is due to a proportional decrease in the yield and lifetime of the three components and correlates with the observed modification in the relative quantum yield of oxygen evolution. In this concentration range a bleaching of Chl a is seen. At higher iridate levels, greater than 20 M, a proportional decrease in the lifetimes and yields of the three kinetic components is seen at FM. These changes are associated with a carotenoid bleaching. In isolated light harvesting Chl a/b complexes of PS2 (LHC2), iridate addition converts a 4 ns decay into a 200 ps emission and both types of bleaching are observed. By also measuring the rate of PS2 trap closure versus iridate concentration, we have discussed the results in terms of excitation energy transfer.Abbreviations DNB m-dinitrobenzene - FM maximum Chl fluorescence - F0 initial fluorescence - Fv variable fluorescence - I pheophytin a primary electron acceptor of PS2 - P680 chlorophyll a of photochemical centre - PS2 photosystem 2 - QA primary stable electron acceptor of PS2 - Chl chlorophyll - LHC2 light harvesting Chl a/b complex of PS2 - MES 2(N-morpholino) ethanesulfonic acid - DCMU 3-(3-4-dichlorophenyl) 1-1 dimethylurea - PPBQ phenyl-p-benzo-quinone - BBY PS2-enriched membranes prepared as in Berthold et al. (1981) - Q400 PS2 electron acceptor with a midpoint potential of 400 mV  相似文献   

16.
We report here the first measurements on chlorophyll (Chl) a fluorescence characteristics of photoautotrophic soybean cells (cell lines SB-P and SBI-P). The cell fluorescence is free from severe distortion problems encountered in higher plant leaves. Chl a fluorescence spectra at 77 K show, after correction for the spectral sensitivity of the photomultiplier and the emission monochromator, peaks at 688, 696 and 745 nm, representing antenna systems of photosystem II-CP43 and CP47, and photosystem I, respectively. Calculations, based on the complementary area over the Chl a fluorescence induction curve, indicated a ratio of 6 of the mobile plastoquinone (including QB) to the primary stable electron acceptor, the bound plastoquinone QA. A ratio of one between the secondary stable electron acceptor, bound plastoquinone QB, and its reduced form QB - was obtained by using a double flash technique. Owing to this ratio, the flash number dependence of the Chl a fluorescence showed a distinct period of four, implying a close relationship to the S state of the oxygen evolution mechanism. Analysis of the QA - reoxidation kinetics showed (1) the halftime of each of the major decay components ( 300 s fast and 30 ms slow) increases with the increase of diuron and atrazine concentrations; and (2) the amplitudes of the fast and the slow components change in a complementary fashion, the fast component disappearing at high concentrations of the inhibitors. This implies that the inhibitors used are able to totally displace QB. In intact soybean cells, the relative amplitude of the 30 ms to 300 s component is higher (40:60) than that in spinach chloroplasts (30:70), implying a larger contribution of the centers with unbound QB. SB-P and SBI-P soybean cells display a slightly different sensitivity of QA - decay to inhibitors.Abbreviations CA complementary area over fluorescence induction curve - Chl chlorophyll, diuron - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - F m maximum chlorophyll a fluorescence - F 0 minimum chlorophyll a fluorescence - F v = F t-F0 - where F v = variable chlorophyll a fluorescence - and Ft = chlorophyll a fluorescence at time t - PS II photosystem II - Q a primary (plastoquinone) electron acceptor of PS II - Q b secondary (plastoquinone) electron acceptor of PS II - t50 the time at which the concentration of reduced Q a is 50% of that at its maximum value  相似文献   

17.
P. Jursinic  J. Warden 《BBA》1976,440(2):322-330
In order to determine the major site of bicarbonate action in the electron transport complex of Photosystem II, the following experimental techniques were used: electron spin resonance measurements of Signal IIvf, measurements of chlorophyll a fluorescence yield rise and decay kinetics, and delayed light emission decay. From data obtained using these experimental techniques the following conclusions were made: (1) absence of bicarbonate causes a reversible inactivation of up to 40% of Photosystem II reaction center activity; (2) there is no significant effect of bicarbonate on electron flow from the charge accumulating S state to Z; (3) there is no significant effect of bicarbonate on electron flow from Z to P-680+; (4) electron flow from Q? to the intersystem electron transport pool is inhibited by from 4- to 6-fold under bicarbonate depletion conditions.  相似文献   

18.
Krisztián Cser 《BBA》2007,1767(3):233-243
The mechanism of charge recombination was studied in Photosystem II by using flash induced chlorophyll fluorescence and thermoluminescence measurements. The experiments were performed in intact cells of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis 6803 in which the redox properties of the primary pheophytin electron acceptor, Phe, the primary electron donor, P680, and the first quinone electron acceptor, QA, were modified. In the D1Gln130Glu or D1His198Ala mutants, which shift the free energy of the primary radical pair to more positive values, charge recombination from the S2QA and S2QB states was accelerated relative to the wild type as shown by the faster decay of chlorophyll fluorescence yield, and the downshifted peak temperature of the thermoluminescence Q and B bands. The opposite effect, i.e. strong stabilization of charge recombination from both the S2QA and S2QB states was observed in the D1Gln130Leu or D1His198Lys mutants, which shift the free energy level of the primary radical pair to more negative values, as shown by the retarded decay of flash induced chlorophyll fluorescence and upshifted thermoluminescence peak temperatures. Importantly, these mutations caused a drastic change in the intensity of thermoluminescence, manifested by 8- and 22-fold increase in the D1Gln130Leu and D1His198Lys mutants, respectively, as well as by a 4- and 2.5-fold decrease in the D1Gln130Glu and D1His198Ala mutants, relative to the wild type, respectively. In the presence of the electron transport inhibitor bromoxynil, which decreases the redox potential of QA/QA relative to that observed in the presence of DCMU, charge recombination from the S2QA state was accelerated in the wild type and all mutant strains. Our data confirm that in PSII the dominant pathway of charge recombination goes through the P680+Phe radical pair. This indirect recombination is branched into radiative and non-radiative pathways, which proceed via repopulation of P680* from 1[P680+Ph] and direct recombination of the 3[P680+Ph] and 1[P680+Ph] radical states, respectively. An additional non-radiative pathway involves direct recombination of P680+QA. The yield of these charge recombination pathways is affected by the free energy gaps between the Photosystem II electron transfer components in a complex way: Increase of ΔG(P680* ↔ P680+Phe) decreases the yield of the indirect radiative pathway (in the 22-0.2% range). On the other hand, increase of ΔG(P680+Phe ↔ P680+QA) increases the yield of the direct pathway (in the 2-50% range) and decreases the yield of the indirect non-radiative pathway (in the 97-37% range).  相似文献   

19.
Leaves of the C3 plant Brassica oleracea were illuminated with red and/or far-red light of different photon flux densities, with or without additional short pulses of high intensity red light, in air or in an atmosphere containing reduced levels of CO2 and/or oxygen. In the absence of CO2, far-red light increased light scattering, an indicator of the transthylakoid proton gradient, more than red light, although the red and far-red beams were balanced so as to excite Photosystem II to a comparable extent. On red background light, far-red supported a transthylakoid electrical field as indicated by the electrochromic P515 signal. Reducing the oxygen content of the gas phase increased far-red induced light scattering and caused a secondary decrease in the small light scattering signal induced by red light. CO2 inhibited the light-induced scattering responses irrespective of the mode of excitation. Short pulses of high intensity red light given to a background to red and/or far-red light induced appreciable additional light scattering after the flashes only, when CO2 levels were decreased to or below the CO2 compensation point, and when far-red background light was present. While pulse-induced light scattering increased, non-photochemical fluorescence quenching increased and F0 fluorescence decreased indicating increased radiationless dissipation of excitation energy even when the quinone acceptor QA in the reaction center of Photosystem II was largely oxidized. The observations indicate that in the presence of proper redox poising of the chloroplast electron transport chain cyclic electron transport supports a transthylakoid proton gradient which is capable of controlling Photosystem II activity. The data are discussed in relation to protection of the photosynthetic apparatus against photoinactivation.Abbreviations F, FM, F'M, F"M, F0, F'0 chlorophyll fluorescence levels - exc quantum efficiency of excitation energy capture by open Photosystem II - PS II quantum efficiency of electron flow through Photosystem II - P515 field indicating rapid absorbance change peaking at 522 nm - P700 primary donor of Photosystem I - QA primary quinone acceptor in Photosystem II - QN non-photochemical fluorescence quenching - Qq photochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence  相似文献   

20.
Lichens and phototolerant poikilohydric mosses differ from spinach leaves, fern fronds or photosensitive mosses in that they show strongly decreased Fo chlorophyll fluorescence after drying. This desiccation-induced fluorescence loss is rapidly reversible under rehydration. Fluorescence emission from Photosystem II at 685 nm was decreased more strongly by dehydration than 720 nm emission. Reaction centers of Photosystem II lose activity on dehydration and regain it on hydration. Heating of desiccated lichens increased Fo chlorophyll fluorescence. The activation energy for the reversible part of the temperature-dependent fluorescence increase was 0.045 eV, which corresponds to the energy difference between the 680 and 697 nm absorption bands. In desiccated chlorolichens such as Parmelia sulcata, heating induces the appearance of positive variable fluorescence related to the reversible reduction of QA due to overcoming the energy barrier. This is interpreted to provide information on the mechanism of photoprotection: energy is dissipated by changing Chl680 or P680 into a chlorophyll form, which absorbs at 700 nm and emits light at 720 nm (Chl-720 or P680(700)) with a low quantum yield. Dissipation of light energy in this trap is activated by desiccation.  相似文献   

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