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1.
Photosystem II reaction center components have been studied in small system II particles prepared with digitonin. Upon illumination the reduction of the primary acceptor was indicated by absorbance changes due to the reduction of a plastoquinone to the semiquinone anion and by a small blue shift of absorption bands near 545 nm (C550) and 685 nm. The semiquinone to chlorophyll ratio was between 1/20 and 1/70 in various preparations. The terminal electron donor in this reaction did not cause large absorbance changes but its oxidized form was revealed by a hitherto unknown electron spin resonance (ESR) signal, which had some properties of the well-known signal II but a linewidth and g-value much nearer to those of signal I. Upon darkening absorbance and ESR changes decayed together in a cyclic or back reaction which was stimulated by 3-(3,4 dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea. The donor could be oxidized by ferricyanide in the dark.

Illumination in the presence of ferricyanide induced absorbance and ESR changes, rapidly reversed upon darkening, which may be ascribed to the oxidation of a chlorophyll a dimer, possibly the primary electron donor of photosystem II. In addition an ESR signal with 15 to 20 gauss linewidth and a slower dark decay was observed, which may have been caused by a secondary donor.  相似文献   


2.
N. K. Boardman 《BBA》1972,283(3):469-482
1. The Photosystem II fraction (D-10) obtained by incubation of spinach chloroplasts with digitonin was further purified by incubation with Triton X-100. The resulting Photosystem II subchloroplast fragment (DT-10) contained 1 mole of cytochrome b-559 per 170 moles of chlorophyll. It lacked cytochrome f and cytochrome b6 and its content of P700 was low.

2. The DT-10 fragment showed only traces of photochemical activity with water as electron donor, but it was active in a Photosystem II reaction with 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol as electron acceptor and diphenyl carbazide as donor. Photoreduction of NADP+ with diphenyl carbazide as donor was negligible. There was some photoreduction of NADP+ with ascorbate plus 2,6 dichlorophenolindophenol as donor but this activity could be accounted for by contamination with Photosystem I. These results are consistent with the Z-scheme of photosynthesis with Photosystems I and II operating in series for the reduction of NADP+ from water. DT-10 subchloroplast fragments showed a light-induced rise in fluorescence yield at 20 °C in the presence of diphenyl carbazide. A light-induced fluorescence increase also was observed at 77 °K.

3. During the preparation of the DT-10 fragment, the high potential form of cytochrome b-559 was largely converted to a form of lower potential and C-550 was converted to the reduced state. A photoreduction of C-550 was observed at liquidnitrogen temperature, provided the C-550 was oxidised with ferricyanide prior to cooling. Some photooxidation of cytochrome b-559 was obtained at 77 °K if the preparation was reduced prior to cooling, but the degree of photooxidation was variable with different preparations. C-550 does not appear to be identical with the primary fluorescence quencher, Q.

4. Photosystem I subchloroplast fragments (D-144) released by the action of digitonin were compared with Photosystem I fragments (DT-144) released from D-10 fragments by Triton X-100. There were no significant differences between D-144 and DT-144 fragments either in chlorophyll a/b ratio or in P700 content.  相似文献   


3.
Hans J. Van Gorkom 《BBA》1974,347(3):439-442
The complete absorption difference spectrum of the primary electron acceptor of Photosystem II has been measured at room temperature in subchloroplast fragments prepared with deoxycholate. The shape and amplitude of the spectrum indicate that the primary reaction involves the reduction of one bound plastoquinone molecule per reaction center to its semiquinone anion. In addition two small absorbance band shifts occur near 545 (C550) and 685 nm, which may be due to an influence of the semiquinone on the absorption spectrum of a reaction center pigment.  相似文献   

4.
Stable light-induced absorbance changes in chloroplasts at −196 °C were measured across the visible spectrum from 370 to 730 nm in an effort to find previously undiscovered absorbance changes that could be related to the primary photochemical activity of Photosystem I or Photosystem II. A Photosystem I mediated absorbance increase of a band at 690 nm and a Photosystem II mediated absorbance increase of a band at 683 nm were found. The 690-nm change accompanied the oxidation of P700 and the 683-nm increase accompanied the reduction of C-550. No Soret band was detected for P700.

A specific effort was made to measure the difference spectrum for the photooxidation of P680 under conditions (chloroplasts frozen to −196 °C in the presence of ferricyanide) where a stable, Photosystem II mediated EPR signal, attributed to P680+ has been reported. The difference spectra, however, did not show that P680+ was stable at −196 °C under any conditions tested. Absorbance measurements induced by saturating flashes at −196 °C (in the presence or absence of ferricyanide) indicated that all of the P680+ formed by the flash was reduced in the dark either by a secondary electron donor or by a backreaction with the primary electron acceptor. We conclude that P680+ is not stable in the dark at −196 °C: if the normal secondary donor at −196 °C is oxidized by ferricyanide prior to freezing, P680+ will oxidize other substances.  相似文献   


5.
David B. Knaff  Richard Malkin 《BBA》1974,347(3):395-403
The primary reaction of Photosystem II has been studied over the temperature range from −196 to −20 °C. The photooxidation of the reaction-center chlorophyll (P680) was followed by the free-radical electron paramagnetic resonance signal of P680+, and the photoreduction of the Photosystem II primary electron acceptor was monitored by the C-550 absorbance change.

At temperatures below −100 °C, the primary reaction of Photosystem II is irreversible. However, at temperatures between −100 and −20 °C a back reaction that is insensitive to 3-(3′,4′-dichlorophenyl)-1,1′-dimethylurea (DCMU) occurs between P680+ and the reduced acceptor.

The amount of reduced acceptor and P680+ present under steady-state illumination at temperatures between −100 and −20 °C is small unless high light intensity is used to overcome the competing back reaction. The amount of reduced acceptor present at low light intensity can be increased by adjusting the oxidation-reduction potential so that P680+ is reduced by a secondary electron donor (cytochrome b559) before P680+ can reoxidize the reduced primary acceptor. The photooxidation of cytochrome b559 and the accompanying photoreduction of C-550 are inhibited by DCMU. The inhibition of C-550 photoreduction by DCMU, the dependence of P680 photooxidation and C-550 photoreduction on light intensity, and the effect of the availability of reduced cytochrome b559 on C-550 photoreduction are unique to the temperature range where the Photosystem II primary reaction is reversible and are not observed at lower temperatures.  相似文献   


6.
Photosystem II reaction center components have been studied in small system II particles prepared with digitonin. Upon illumination the reduction of the primary acceptor was indicated by absorbance changes due to the reduction of a plastoquinone to the semiquinone anion and by a small blue shifts of absorption bands near 545 nm (C550) and 685 nm. The semiquinone to chlorophyll ratio was between 1/20 and 1/70 in various preparations. The terminal electron donor in this reaction did not cause large absorbance changes but its oxidized form was revealed by a hitherto unknown electron spin resonance (ESR) signal, which had some properties of the well-known signal II but a linewidth and g-value much nearer to those of signal I. Upon darkening absorbance and ESR changes decayed together in a cyclic or back reaction which was stimulated by 3-(3,4 dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea. The donor could be oxidized by ferricyanide in the dark. Illumination in the presence of ferricyanide induced absorbance and ESR changes, rapidly reversed upon darkening, which may be ascribed to the oxidation of a chlorophyll a dimer, possibly the primary electron donor of photosystem II. In addition an ESR signal with 15 to 20 gauss linewidth and a slower dark decay was observed, which may have been caused by a secondary donor.  相似文献   

7.
In bicarbonate-depleted chloroplasts, the chlorophyll a fluorescence decayed with a halftime of about 150 ms after the third flash, and appreciably faster after the first and second flash of a series of flashes given after a dark period. After the fourth to twentieth flashes, the decay was also slow. After addition of bicarbonate, the decay was fast after all the flashes of the sequence. This indicates that the bicarbonate depletion inhibits the reoxidation of the secondary acceptor R2− by the plastoquinone pool; R is the secondary electron acceptor of pigment system II, as it accepts electrons from the reduced form of the primary electron acceptor (Q). This conclusion is consistent with the measurements of the DCMU (3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea)-induced chlorophyll a fluorescence after a series of flashes in the presence and the absence of bicarbonate, if it is assumed that DCMU not only causes reduction of Q if added in the state QR, but also if added in the state QR2−.  相似文献   

8.
Changes of C-550, cytochrome b559 and fluorescence yield induced in chloroplasts by single saturating flashes were studied at low temperature. A single saturating flash at −196°C was quite ineffective in reducing C-550, oxidizing cytochrome b559 or increasing the fluorescence yield, presumably because most of the charge separation induced by the flash was dissipated by a direct back reaction in the primary electron transfer couple. The back reaction, which competes with the dark reduction of the oxidized primary electron donor by a secondary electron donor, becomes increasingly important as the temperature is lowered because of the temperature coefficient of the reaction with the secondary donor. The effect of the back reaction is to lower the quantum yield for the production of stable photochemical products by steady irradiation. Assuming a quantum yield of unity for the photoreduction of C-550 at room temperature, the quantum yield for the reaction is about 0.40 at −100°C and 0.27 at −196°C.  相似文献   

9.
J. Amesz  B.G. De Grooth 《BBA》1975,376(2):298-307
Absorbance changes in the region 500–565 nm and at 702 nm, brought about by excitation of Photosystems 1 and 2, respectively, were measured in spinach chloroplasts at ?50 °C. Either dark-adapted chloroplasts were used or chloroplasts preilluminated with a number of short saturating flashes just before cooling.Both photosystems were found to cause a light-induced increase of absorbance at 518 nm (due to “P518”). The System 1-induced change was not affected by preillumination. It decayed within 1 s in the dark and showed similar kinetics as P700. Experiments in the presence of external electron acceptors (methylviologen or Fe(CN)63?) suggested that P518 was not affected by the redox state of the primary electron acceptor of System 1. The absorbance increase at 518 nm due to System 2 decayed in the dark with a half-time of several min. The kinetics were similar to those of C-550, the presumed indicator of the primary electron acceptor of System 2. After two flashes preillumination the changes due to P518 and C-550 were reduced by about 40%, and a relatively slow, System 2-induced oxidation of cytochrome b559 occurred which proceeded at a similar rate as the increase in yield of chlorophyll a fluorescence. The results indicate that at ?50°C two different photoreactions of System 2 occur. One consists of a photoreduction of the primary electron acceptor associated with C-550, accompanied by the oxidation of an unknown electron donor; the other is less efficient and results in the photooxidation of cytochrome b559.  相似文献   

10.
Wolfgang Haehnel 《BBA》1973,305(3):618-631
After preillumination with System I light spinach chloroplasts were excited by one flash or a group of saturating flashes. During the following dark period the time courses of the oxidation of plastohydroquinone and of the simultaneous reduction of oxidized cytochrome f and chlorophyll aI (P700) have been measured.

1. 1. From a correlation of these kinetics it can be concluded that at least 85% of the electrons from plastohydroquinone are transferred to chlorophyll aI.

2. 2. After one flash 93% of the oxidized chlorophyll aI is reduced. This suggests a high equilibrium constant between chlorophyll aI and its donor as well as an equilibration between different chlorophyll aI molecules.

3. 3. Cytochrome f is also reduced by plastohydroquinone. A ratio of active cytochrome f to chlorophyll aI of 0.4:1 is observed. The half-life time of the reduction of cytochrome f is 17 ms. The time course indicates that in the dark cytochrome f does not transfer electrons to chlorophyll aI and that no more than 15% of the electron transport passes cytochrome f. Therefore cytochrome f should be situated in a side path of the linear electron transport.

4. 4. The electrons which are released from plastohydroquinone and are not accepted by oxidized cytochrome f and chlorophyll aI have been calculated. From this difference properties of an electron carrier, as yet not identified, between plastoquinone and chlorophyll aI are predicted.

Abbreviations: Tricine; N-tris(hydroxymethyl)methylglycine  相似文献   


11.
Andr Vermeglio  Paul Mathis 《BBA》1973,292(3):763-771
The effect of light on the reaction center of Photosystem II was studied by differential absorption spectroscopy in spinach chloroplasts.

At − 196 °C, continuous illumination results in a parallel reduction of C-550 and oxidation of cytochrome b559 high potential. With flash excitation, C-550 is reduced, but only a small fraction of cytochrome b559 is oxidized. The specific effect of flash illumination is suppressed if the chloroplasts are preilluminated by one flash at 0 °C.

At − 50 °C, continuous illumination results in the reduction of C-550 but little oxidation of cytochrome b559. However, complete oxidation is obtained if the chloroplasts have been preilluminated by one flash at 0 °C. The effect of preillumination is not observed in the presence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea.

A model is discussed for the reaction center, with two electron donors, cytochrome b559 and Z, acting in competition. Their respective efficiency is dependent on temperature and on their states of oxidation. The specific effect of flash excitation is attributed to a two-photon reaction, possibly based on energy-trapping properties of the oxidized trap chlorophyll.  相似文献   


12.
P. Joliot  A. Joliot 《BBA》1977,462(3):559-574
1. The amplitudes of the fast (0–20 μs) and slow (20 μs–2 ms) fluorescence rise induced by a 2 μs flash have been measured as a function of the energy of the flash in chloroplasts inhibited by 3(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea. The saturation curve for the slow rise shows a characteristic lag which is not observed for the fast fluorescence rise. This lag indicates that Photosystem II centers undergo a double hit process which implies that (a), each photocenter includes two acceptors Q1 and Q2; (b), after the first hit, oxidized chlorophyll Chl+ is reduced by a secondary acceptor Y in a time short compared to the duration of the flash; (c), after the second hit, Chl+ is reduced by another secondary donor, D.

2. According to Den Haan et al. ((1974) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 368, 409–421), hydroxylamine destroys the secondary donor responsible for the fast reduction of Chl+. In the presence of 3 mM hydroxylamine, only the secondary donor D is functional and a flash induces mainly a single hit process.

3. The saturation curves for the fast and the slow rises have been studied in the presence of 3(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea for a second actinic flash given 2.5 s after a first saturating one. The large decrease in the half-saturating energy indicates the existence of efficient energy transfer occuring between photosynthetic units.

4. Two alternate hypotheses are discussed (a) in which D is an auxiliary donor and (b) in which D is included in the main electron transfer chain.  相似文献   


13.
W. J. Vredenberg  L. Slooten 《BBA》1967,143(3):583-594
1. Comparative studies were made on the fluorescence characteristics of chlorophyll a at 20° and −193°, and quantum efficiencies for P 700 oxidation and NADP+ reduction were measured in chloroplasts and chloroplast fragments obtained after incubation with 0.5% digitonin.

2. Differences in the flurescence yield of chlorophyll a in flowing and stationary suspensions of untreated chloroplasts and of the large fragments are indicative of light-induced photoreduction of the quencher Q of chlorophyll a, associated with pigment System 2 (chlorophyll a2). The relatively low constant fluorescence yield of chlorophyll a in the small fragments indicates the absence of fluorescent chlorophyll a2 from these fragments and suggests that the low fluorescence is due to chlorophyll a, associated with pigmen System 1 (chlorophyll a1). The ratio of the fluorescence yields of chlorophyll a1 and chlorophyll a2 is 0.45:1. In the large particles the concentration ratio of pigment System 1 and System 2 is 1:3.

3. The efficiencies of quanta absorbed at 673, 683 and 705 nm for NADP+ reduction and P 700 oxidation in untreated chloroplasts and chloroplast fragments indicate that digitonin treatment results in a separation of System 2 from System 1 in the small fragments. Sonication does not cause such a separation. Under the conditions used P 700 oxidation and NADP+ reduction in the small fragments separated after digitonin treatment, occurred with maximal efficiency of 0.7 to 1.0 and 0.7, respectively.

4. The constancy of the fluorescence yield of chlorophyll a1 in the small fragments, under conditions at which P 700 is oxidized and NADP+ is reduced, is interpreted as evidence either for the hypothesis that the fluorescence of chlorophyll a1 is controlled by the redox state of the primary photoreductant XH, or alternatively for the hypothesis that energy transfer from fluorescent chlorophyll a1 to P 700 goes via an intrinsically weak fluorescent, still unknown, chlorophyll-like pigment.

5. The low-temperature emission band around 730 nm is argued not to be due to excitation by System 1 only; the relatively large half width of the band, as compared to the emission bands at 683 and 696 nm, suggests that it is possibly due to overlapping emission bands of different pigments.  相似文献   


14.
After solubilization of photosynthetic membranes by digitonin, three main protein pigment complexes were isolated by electrophoresis with deoxycholate as detergent.The band with the slowest mobility, fraction 1, had PS 1 activity and was devoid of PS 2 activity. This fraction was four times enriched in P700 when compared with chloroplasts. Fraction 1 had little chl b, a long wavelength absorption maximum in the red, a maximum of low temperature emission fluorescence at 730nm, and a circular dichroism spectrum characteristic of PS 1 enriched fraction.Fraction 2 exhibited a PS 2 activity and no PS 1 activity. It was enriched five times in PS 2 reaction centre and had little chl b and carotenoids. The absorption maximum was at 674 nm and the low temperature fluorescence emission maximum was at 700 nm. Fraction 2 might be useful PS 2 enriched particle because of the great stability of this fraction with regard to photochemical activity and also rapidity and simplicity of its preparation.Fraction 3, which had the fastest migration, was devoid of photochemical activities; It was rich in chl b and had the fluorescence and the circular dichroism spectrum characteristic of an antenna complex.Abbreviations PS 1 (2) photosystem 1 (2) - chl chlorophyll - car carotenoid - Q primary plastoquinone electron acceptor - P700 primary electron donor of PS 1 - P680 primary electron donor of PS 2 - K3Fe(CN)6 potassium ferricyanide - DCMU dichlorophenyldimethylurea - DCPIP dichlorophenolindophenol - DPC diphenyl-carbazide  相似文献   

15.
Site-directed mutations were constructed in photosystem II of Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 in which the axial ligand, D1-His198, of special pair chlorophyll PD1 was replaced with Gln and where D1-Thr179, which overlies monomeric chlorophyll ChlD1, was replaced with His. The D1-His198Gln mutation produces a 3nm displacement to the blue of the bleaching minimum in the Soret and in the Qy region of the (P+QA--PQA) absorbance difference spectrum. To a first approximation, the bleaching can be assigned to the low-energy exciton transition of the special pair chlorophylls PD1/PD2. The D1-Thr179His mutation produces a 2nm displacement to the red of the bleaching minimum in the Qy region of the (3P-1P) absorbance difference spectrum. Analysis of the flash-induced (P+QA--PQA) and (3P-1P) absorbance difference spectra of both mutants compared with wild-type at 80K indicate that the cation of the oxidized donor P+ is predominantly localized on the chlorophyll PD1 of the special pair and that the reaction centre triplet state, produced upon charge recombination from 3[P+Pheo-], when the primary quinone electron acceptor QA is doubly reduced, is primarily localized on ChlD1.  相似文献   

16.
J. B. Thomas  F. Bretschneider 《BBA》1970,205(3):390-400
1. The absorption spectrum of chlorophyll b in vivo at 77°K is presented as the difference spectrum between preparations of spinach and chlorophyll b-free Vischeria stellata chloroplasts.

2. A shoulder on this spectrum around 662 nm is due to a component different from chlorophyll b. This component may well be identical with the chlorophyll a form, chlorophyll a (665).

3. The 77°K chlorophyll b absorption spectra in the nonfractionated photosyn-thetic pigment apparatus and in fractions mainly representing Photosystems 1 or 2 are not significantly different.

4. The aerobic irreversible photobleaching of chlorophyll b was studied in the intact pigment complex as well as in fractions mainly consisting of Photosystem 1 or 2. A two-step photobleaching was observed in all cases. The time-course of this bleaching was not significantly different for chlorophyll b in both fractions.

5. These results do not indicate that more than a single chlorophyll b complex occurs in vivo.  相似文献   


17.
Herman Kramer  Paul Mathis   《BBA》1980,593(2):319-329
The formation of the triplet state of carotenoids (detected by an absorption peak at 515 nm) and the photo-oxidation of the primary donor of Photosystem II, P-680 (detected by an absorption increase at 820 nm) have been measured by flash absorption spectroscopy in chloroplasts in which the oxygen evolution was inhibited by treatment with Tris. The amount of each transient form has been followed versus excitation flash intensity (at 590 or 694 nm). At low excitation energy the quantum yield of triplet formation (with the Photosystem II reaction center in the state Q) is about 30% that of P-680 photo-oxidation. The yield of carotenoid triplet formation is higher in the state Q than in the state Q, in nearly the same proportion as chlorophyll a fluorescence. It is concluded that, for excited chlorophyll a, the relative rates of intersystem crossing to the triplet state and of fluorescence emission are the same in vivo as in organic solvent. At high flash intensity the signal of P-680+ completely saturates, whereas that of carotenoid triplet continues to increase.

The rate of triplet-triplet energy transfer from chlorophyll a to carotenoids has been derived from the rise time of the absorption change at 515 nm, in chloroplasts and in several light-harvesting pigment-protein complexes. In all cases the rate is very high, around 8 · 107 s−1 at 294 K. It is about 2–3 times slower at 5 K. The transitory formation of chlorophyll triplet has been verified in two pigment-protein complexes, at 5 K.  相似文献   


18.
S. Okayama  W. L. Butler 《BBA》1972,267(3):523-529
The maximum light-induced fluorescence yield, FM, of spinach chloroplasts at − 196 °C was less when the chloroplasts were oxidized with ferricyanide prior to freezing; the minimum fluorescence yield, F0, of the dark-adapted chloroplasts at − 196 °C was unaffected. The ratio of the fluorescence yields, FM/F0, measured at 695 nm at low temperature was 4.5–5.0 for normal chloroplasts and 2.0–2.5 in the presence of ferricyanide. The oxidative titration curve of FM followed a 1 electron Nernst equation with a midpoint potential of 365 mV and followed closely to the oxidation of cytochrome b559. The photoreduction of C−550 at low temperature was the same at all redox potentials over the range of 200–500 mV. It is suggested that a relatively strong oxidant associated with the water-splitting side of Photosystem II, possibly the primary electron donor, can chlorophyll fluorescence of Photosystem II as well as the primary electron acceptor.  相似文献   

19.
During photosynthesis carotenoids normally serve as antenna pigments, transferring singlet excitation energy to chlorophyll, and preventing singlet oxygen production from chlorophyll triplet states, by rapid spin exchange and decay of the carotenoid triplet to the ground state. The presence of two beta-carotene molecules in the photosystem II reaction centre (RC) now seems well established, but they do not quench the triplet state of the primary electron-donor chlorophylls, which are known as P(680). The beta-carotenes cannot be close enough to P(680) for triplet quenching because that would also allow extremely fast electron transfer from beta-carotene to P(+)(680), preventing the oxidation of water. Their transfer of excitation energy to chlorophyll, though not very efficient, indicates close proximity to the chlorophylls ligated by histidine 118 towards the periphery of the two main RC polypeptides. The primary function of the beta-carotenes is probably the quenching of singlet oxygen produced after charge recombination to the triplet state of P(680). Only when electron donation from water is disturbed does beta-carotene become oxidized. One beta-carotene can mediate cyclic electron transfer via cytochrome b559. The other is probably destroyed upon oxidation, which might trigger a breakdown of the polypeptide that binds the cofactors that carry out charge separation.  相似文献   

20.
Extraction of Triton Photosystem II chloroplast fragments with 0.2% methanol in hexane for 3 h results in the removal of 90 to 95% of the plastoquinone in the original preparation. The extracted fragments (chlorophyll : plastoquinone ratio, 900 : 1) showed no P-680 photooxidation at 15 K after a single laser flash. The extracted fragments also showed no light-induced C-550 absorbance change at 77 K. Reconstitution of the primary reaction of Photosystem II, as evidenced by restoration of low-temperature photooxidation of P-680, could be obtained by the addition of plastoquinone A but not by the addition of β-carotene. The addition of β-carotene plus plastoquinone A restored the C-550 absorbance change. These results indicate that plastoquinone functions as the primary electron acceptor of Photosystem II and that β-carotene does not play a direct role in the primary photochemistry but is required for the C-550 absorbance change.  相似文献   

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