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1.
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
2.
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 R 2− 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 QR 2−. 相似文献
3.
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
4.
The effects of lowering the pH on Photosystem II have been studied by measuring changes in absorbance and electron spin resonance in spinach chloroplasts.At pH values around 4 a light-induced dark-reversible chlorophyll oxidation by Photosystem II was observed. This chlorophyll is presumably the primary electron donor of system II. At pH values between 5 and 4 steady state illumination induced an ESR signal, similar in shape and amplitude to signal II, which was rapidly reversed in the dark. This may reflect the accumulation of the oxidized secondary donor upon inhibition of oxygen evolution. Near pH 4 the rapidly reversible signal and the stable and slowly decaying components of signal II disappeared irreversibly concomitant with the release of bound manganese.The results are discussed in relation to the effects of low pH on prompt and delayed fluorescence reported earlier (van Gorkom, H. J., Pulles, M. P. J., Haveman, J. and den Haan, G. A. (1976) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 423, 217–226). 相似文献
5.
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
6.
Absorption changes ( ΔA) at 820 nm, following laser flash excitation of spinach chloroplasts and Chlorella cells, were studied in order to obtain information on the reduction time of the photooxidized primary donor of Photosystem II at physiological temperatures.In the microsecond time range the difference spectrum of ΔA between 750 and 900 nm represents a peak at 820 nm, attributable to a radical-cation of chlorophyll a. In untreated dark-adapted material the signal can be attributed solely to P+?700; it decays in a polyphasic manner with half-times of 17 μs, 210 μs and over 1 ms. The oxidized primary donor of Photosystem II (P +II) is not detected with a time resolution of 3 μs. After treatment with 3–10 mM hydroxylamine, which inhibits the donor side of Photosystem II, P +II is observed and decays biphasically (a major phase with , and a minor phase with ), probably by reduction by an accessory electron donor.In the nanosecond range, which was made accessible by a new fast-response flash photometer operating at 820 nm, it was found the P +II is reduced with a half-time of 25–45 ns in untreated dark-adapted chloroplasts. It is assumed that the normal secondary electron donor is responsible for this fast reduction. 相似文献
7.
1. Chloroplasts washed with Cl ?-free, low-salt media (pH 8) containing EDTA, show virtually no DCMU-insensitive silicomolybdate reduction. The activity is readily restored when 10 mM Cl ? is added to the reaction mixture. Very similar results were obtained with the other Photosystem II electron acceptor 2,5-dimethylquinone (with dibromothymoquinone), with the Photosystem I electron acceptor FMN, and also with ferricyanide which accepts electrons from both photosystems.2. Strong Cl ?-dependence of Hill activity was observed invariably at all pH values tested (5.5–8.3) and in chloroplasts from three different plants: spinach, tobacco and corn (mesophyll).3. In the absence of added Cl ? the functionally Cl ?-depleted chloroplasts are able to oxidize, through Photosystem II, artificial reductants such as catechol, diphenylcarbazide, ascorbate and H 2O 2 at rates which are 4–12 times faster than the rate of the residual Hill reaction.4. The Cl ?-concentration dependence of Hill activity with dimethylquinone as an electron acceptor is kinetically consistent with the typical enzyme activation mechanism: E(inactive) + Cl ?ag E · Cl ? (active), and the apparent activation constant (0.9 mM at pH 7.2) is unchanged by chloroplast fragmentation.5. The initial phase of the development of inhibition of water oxidation in Cl ?-depleted chloroplasts during the dark incubation with NH 2OH ( H 2SO 4) is 5 times slower when the incubation medium contains Cl ? than when the medium contains NH 2OH alone or NH 2OH plus acetate ion. (Acetate is shown to be ineffective in stimulating O 2 evolution.)6. We conclude that the Cl ?-requiring step is one which is specifically associated with the water-splitting reaction, and suggests that Cl ? probably acts as a cofactor (ligand) of the NH 2OH-sensitive, Mn-containing O 2-evolving enzyme. 相似文献
8.
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
9.
In Tris-washed chloroplasts the kinetics of the primary electron acceptor X 320 of reaction center II has been investigated by fast repetitive flash spectroscopy with a time resolution of . It has been found that X 320 is reduced by a flash in . The subsequent reoxidation in the dark occurs mainly by a reaction with a 100–200 μs kinetics. The light-induced difference spectrum confirms X 320 to be the reactive species. From these results it is concluded that in Tris-washed chloroplasts the reaction centers of System II are characterized by a high photochemical turnover rate mediated either via rapid direct charge recombination or via fast cyclic electron flow. 相似文献
10.
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 E′ 08.0 = +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
11.
The redox state of the secondary electron acceptor B of Photosystem II was studied using fluorescence measurements. Preillumination of algae or chloroplasts with a variable number of short saturating flashes followed rapidly by the addition of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethylurea induces oscillations of the initial level of fluorescence. The phase of these oscillations is characteristic of a given ratio in the dark-adapted samples.We conclude from our results that about 50% of the secondary electron acceptors are singly reduced in the dark in Chlorella cells, but that more than 70% are fully oxidized in the dark adapted chloroplasts.Benzoquinone treatment modifies this distribution in Chlorella leading to the same situation as in chloroplasts, i.e. more than 70% of the secondary acceptors are oxidized in the dark.The same ratio is observed if these algae are illuminated and then dark-adapted, unless an artificial donor (hydroxylamine) is added before this illumination. In that case about 50% B ? is generated and stabilized in the dark. 相似文献
12.
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 Q 1 and Q 2; (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
14.
From Emerson enhancement measurements of O 2 evolution in Chlorella pyrenoidosa, it was possible to establish a relationship between the concentration of photosystem II open reaction centers (E) and the distribution of photons between photosystems I and II [(1 − )/] during steady state. The superposition of lights of two different wavelengths (1 and 2) gives concentrations of E and intermediate between those obtained with light 1 and 2 separately. This relationship extends a previous one based on quantum yield measurements. It has been expressed here by a curve corresponding to a fixed value of the intersystem apparent equilibrium constant ( K). Up to 700 nm, K remains equal to 6. Above this wavelength, although the margin of error is rather great, K apparently increases to 12 or more. The possibility of “spill-over” of light absorbed by System II to System I was studied. There is no probability that this spill-over, if any, exceeds 25% in Chlorella. The apparent equilibrium constant is decreased by 3(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea. This is not in favor of the hypothesis of fully independent electron-transfer chains in photosynthesis; it is therefore likely that some communication between those chains exists. 相似文献
15.
The effects of NH 2OH and carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP) on 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU)-treated algae and chloroplasts were studied. In the presence of DCMU, the photochemically separated charges can only disappear through a recombination back reaction; both substances induce an irreversible reduction of the donor side and after sufficient illumination their action in the presence of DCMU leads to the formation of a permanent fluorescent state. In the DCMU + CCCP system, a fast fluorescence induction curve is observed. The fluorescence yield is brought to its maximum by two flashes. The luminescence emission is strongly inhibited and most centers reach their permanent fluorescent state after one flash. In the DCMU + NH2OH system, a slow fluorescence rise is observed and several saturating flashes are needed for the fluorescence yield to reach its maximum. The exhaustion of the NH2OH oxidizing capacity and the complete transformation to a permanent fluorescent state also require a large number of flashes. The reduction pathway catalyzed by CCCP appears to be a good competitor to the back reaction, while NH2OH seems to be a relatively inefficient donor. In addition the action of NH2OH and CCCP on fluorescence suggests that the donor side influences the quenching properties of Photosystem II centers. A possible mechanism is proposed. 相似文献
16.
Fluorescence and energy transfer properties of bean leaves greened by brief, repetitive xenon flashes were studied at −196 °C. The bleaching of P-700 has no influence on the yield of fluorescence at any wavelength of emission. The light-induced fluorescence yield changes which are observed in both the 690 and 730 nm emission bands in the low temperature fluorescence spectra are due to changes in the state of the Photosystem II reaction centers. The fluorescence yield changes in the 730 nm band are attributed to energy transfer from Photosystem II to Photosystem I. Such energy transfer was also confirmed by measurements of the rate of photooxidation of P-700 at −196 °C in leaves in which the Photosystem II reaction centers were either all open or all closed. It is concluded that energy transfer from Photosystem II to Photosystem I occurs in the flashed bean leaves which lack the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/ b protein. 相似文献
17.
We have studied the 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) action on the different S states by oxygen, fluorescence and luminescence measurements.We show that no oxygen is evolved during a flash following the addition of DCMU to centers in their S 3 state. This suggests that oxygen inhibition cannot be attributed solely to a blocking between Q and A. For all the photoinactive states, the only remaining pathway for the quencher reoxidation, in the presence of DCMU, appears to proceed through a back reaction. Therefore, the complete quencher regeneration still occurring when the fourth positive charge is formed in the presence of DCMU is also an indication of an action by DCMU at the donor side.The data well fit the model in which the oscillations of the fluorescence yield and their damping are attributed to a fast equilibrium between two forms of the centers: a photoactive and a photoinactive form, both of which are quenchers. The equilibrium constant depends on the number of positive charges stored and DCMU changes the characteristics of this equilibrium. 相似文献
18.
A rapid, light-induced reversible component in Signal II is observed upon inhibition of oxygen evolution in broken spinach chloroplasts. The inhibitory treatments used include Tris washing, heat, treatment with chaotropic agents, and aging. This new Signal II component is in a 1 : 1 ratio with Signal I (P700). Its formation corresponds to a light-induced oxidation which occurs in less than 500 μs. The subsequent decay of the radical results from a reduction which occurs more rapidly as the reduction potential of the chloroplast suspension is decreased. The formation of this free radical component is complete following a single 10-μs flash, and it occurs with a quantum efficiency similar to that observed for Signal I formation. Red light is more effective than far-red light in the generation of this species, and, in preilluminated chloroplasts, 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea blocks its formation. Inhibition studies show that the decline in oxygen evolution parallels the activation of this Signal II component.These results are interpreted in terms of a model in which two pathways, one involving water, the other involving the rapid Signal II component, compete for oxidizing equivalents generated by Photosystem II. In broken chloroplasts this Signal II pathway is deactivated and water is the principal electron donor. However, upon inhibition of oxygen evolution, the Signal II pathway is activated. 相似文献
19.
Partition in an aqueous Dextran-polyethylene glycol two-phase system has been used for the separation of chloroplast membrane vesicles obtained by press treatment of a grana-enriched fraction after unstacking in a low salt buffer. The fractions obtained were analysed with respect to chlorophyll, photochemical activities and ultrastructural characteristics. The results reveal that the material partitioning to the Dextran-rich bottom phase consisted of large membrane vesicles possessing mainly Photosystem II properties with very low contribution from Photosystem I. Measurements of the H2O to phenyl-p-benzoquinone and ascorbate-Cl2Ind to NADP+ electron transport rates indicate a ratio of around six between Photosystem II and I. The total fractionation procedure could be completed within 2–3 h with high recovery of both the Photosystem II water-splitting activity and the Photosystem I reduction of NADP+. These data demonstrate that press treatment of low-salt destabilized grana membranes yields a population of highly Photosystem-II enriched membrane vesicles which can be discriminated by the phase system. We suggest that such membrane vesicles originate from large regions in the native grana membrane which contain virtually only Photosystem II. 相似文献
20.
Two sites are distinguished for the oxidation of exogenous donors by Photosystem II in non-oxygen evolving chloroplasts. In the presence of lipophilic donors (e.g. phenylenediamine, benzidine, diphenylcarbazide), the rate for Signal IIf rereduction following a flash increases as the concentration of exogenous reductant increases. There is a decrease (20–40%) in Signal IIf magnitude accompanying donor addition at low (< 10 ?5M) concentrations, but the extent of the decrease does not change further with increasing donor concentration. Complementary polarographic experiments monitoring donor (phenylenediamine) oxidation show an increase in oxidation rate with increasing donor concentration.In the presence of the hydrophilic donor, Mn 2+, the Signal IIf decay halftime remains constant with increasing Mn 2+ concentration. However, the flash-induced Signal IIf magnitude progressively decreases with increasing Mn 2+ concentration.These results are interpreted in terms of two competing paths for the reduction of P680 +. In one path P680 + reduction is accompanied by the appearance of Signal IIf, and lipophilic donors subsequently rereduce the Signal IIf species in a series reaction. This reduction follows pseudo-first order kinetics as a function of donor concentration. In the second path Mn 2+ reduces P680 + in a parallel reaction that competes with the formation of the Signal IIf species. This results in a decrease in the magnitude of Signal IIf, but no change in its decay time. 相似文献
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