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1.
J. Barber  G.F.W. Searle  C.J. Tredwell 《BBA》1978,501(2):174-182
The MgCl2-induced chlorophyll fluorescence yield changes in broken chloroplasts, suspended in a cation-free medium, treated with 3,-(3′,4′-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea and pre-illuminated, has been investigated on a picosecond time scale. Chloroplasts in the low fluorescing state showed a fluorescence decay law of the form exp ?At12, where A was found to be 0.052 ps?12, and may be attributed to the rate of spillover from Photosystem II to Photosystem I. Addition of 10 mM MgCl2 produced a 50% increase in the steady-state fluorescence quantum yield and caused a marked decrease in the decay rate. The fluorescence decay law was found to be predominantly exponential with a 1/e lifetime of 1.6 ns. These results support the hypothesis that cation-induced changes in the fluorescence yield of chlorophyll are related to the variations in the rate of energy transfer from Photosystem II to Photosystem I, rather than to changes in the partitioning of absorbed quanta between the two systems.  相似文献   

2.
Picosecond time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy has been used to investigate the fluorescence emission from wild-type barley chloroplasts and from chloroplasts of the barley mutant, chlorina f-2, which lacks the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein complex. Cation-controlled regulation of the distribution of excitation energy was studied in isolated chloroplasts at the Fo and Fm levels. It was found that: (a) The fluorescence decay curves were distinctly non-exponential, even at low excitation intensities (less than 2 x 10(14) photons . cm(-2). (b) The fluorescence decay curves could, however, be described by a dual exponential decay law. The wild-type barley chloroplasts gave a short-lived fluorescence component of approximately 140 ps and a long-lived component of 600 ps (Fo) or 1300 ps (Fm) in the presence of Mg2+; in comparison, the mutant barley yielded a short-lived fluorescence component of approx. 50 ps and a long-lived component of 194 ps (Fo) and 424 ps (Fm). (c) The absence of the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein complex in the mutant results in a low fluorescence quantum yield which is unaffected by the cation composition of the medium. (d) The fluorescence yield changes seen in steady-state experiments on closing Photosystem II reaction centres (Fm/Fo) or on the addition of MgCl2 (+Mg2+/-Mg2+) were in overall agreement with those calculated from the time-resolved fluorescence measurements. The results suggest that the short-lived fluorescence component is partly attributable to the chlorophyll a antenna of Photosystem I, and, in part, to those light-harvesting-Photosystem II pigment combinations which are strongly coupled to the Photosystem I antenna chlorophyll. The long-lived fluorescence component can be ascribed to the light-harvesting-Photosystem II pigment combinations not coupled with the antenna of Photosystem I. In the case of the mutant, the two components appear to be the separate emissions from the Photosystem I and Photosystem II antenna chlorophylls.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 when grown in the presence of sublethal (M) levels of cobalt chloride shows an enhancement of Photosystem II (PS II) catalyzed Hill reaction. This stimulation seems to be induced by cobalt ions as other metal ions inhibit para-benzoquinone catalyzed Hill reaction. At saturating white light intensity, this enhancement is two times over that of the control cells on unit chlorophyll basis. Analysis of the PS II electron transport rate at varying intensities of white, blue or yellow light suggests an increased maximal rates but no change in the quantum yield or effective antenna size of CoCl2-grown cells. There were no structural and functional changes in the phycobilisome as judged by the absence of changes in the phycocyanin/allophycocyanin ratio, fluorescence emission spectra, second derivative absorption spectra at 77 K and SDS-PAGE analysis of isolated phycobilisomes. The 77 K fluorescence emission spectra of the cells showed a decrease in the ratio of Photosystem I emission (F725) to Photosystem II emission (F685) in CoCl2-grown cells compared to the control cells. These observations indicate three possibilities: (1) there is an increase in the number of Photosystem II units; (2) a faster turnover of Photosystem II centers; or (3) an alteration in energy redistribution between PS II and PS I in CoCl2-grown cells which causes stimulation of Photosystem II electron transport rate.Abbreviations APC allophycocyanin - Chl a chlorophyll a - DBMIB 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone - EDTA ethylene diamine tetraacetic acid - PBS phycobilisome - PC phycocyanin - PSI Photosystem I - PS II Photosystem II - pBQ p-benzoquinone - PMSF phenyl methyl sulfonyl fluoride  相似文献   

5.
The wavelength-resolved fluorescence emission kinetics of the accessory pigments and chlorophyll a in Porphyridium cruentum have been studied by pico-second laser spectroscopy. Direct excitation of the pigment B-phycoerythrin with a 530 nm, 6 ps pulse produced fluorescence emission from all of the pigments as a result of energy transfer between the pigments to the reaction centre of Photosystem II. The emission from B-phycoerythrin at 576 nm follows a nonexponential decay law with a mean fluorescence lifetime of 70 ps, whereas the fluorescence from R-phycocyanin (640 nm), allophycocyanin (660 nm) and chlorophyll a (685 nm) all appeared to follow an exponential decay law with lifetimes of 90 ps, 118 ps and 175 ps respectively. Upon closure of the Photosystem II reaction centres with 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea and preillumination the chlorophyll a decay became non-exponential, having a long component with an apparent lifetime of 840 ps. The fluorescence from the latter three pigments all showed finite risetimes to the maximum emission intensity of 12 ps for R-phycocyanin, 24 ps for allophycocyanin and 50 ps for chlorophyll a. A kinetic analysis of these results indicates that energy transfer between the pigments is at least 99% efficient and is governed by an exp --At1/2 transfer function. The apparent exponential behaviour of the fluorescence decay functions of the latter three pigments is shown to be a direct result of the energy transfer kinetics, as are the observed risetimes in the fluorescence emissions.  相似文献   

6.
7.
The photochemical activities and fluorescence properties of cells, spheroplasts and spheroplast particles from the blue-green alga Phormidium luridum were compared. The photochemical activities were measured in a whole range of wavelengths and expressed as quantum yield spectra (quantum yield vs. wavelength). The following reactions were measured. Photosynthesis (O2 evolution) in whole cells; Hill reaction (O2 evolution) with Fe(CN)63- and NADP as electron acceptors (Photosystem II and photosystem II + Photosystem I reactions); electron transfer from reduced 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol to diquat (Photosystem I reaction). The fluorescence properties were emission spectra, quantum yield spectra and the induction pattern. On the basis of comparison between the quantum yield spectra and the pigments compositions the relative contribution of each pigment to each photosystem was estimated. In normal cells and spheroplasts it was found that Photosystem I (Photosystem II) contains about 90% (10%) of the chlorophyll a, 90% (10%) of the carotenoids and 15% (85%) of the phycocyanin. In spheroplast particles there is a reorganization of the pigments; they loose a certain fraction (about half) of the phycocyanin but the remaining phycocyanin attaches itself exclusively to Photosystem I (!). This is reflected by the loss of Photosystem II activity, a flat quantum yield vs. wavelength dependence and a loss of the fluorescence induction. The fluorescence quantum yield spectra conform qualitatively to the above conclusion. More quantitative estimation shows that only a fraction (20--40%) of the chlorophyll of Photosystem II is fluorescent. Total emission spectrum and the ratio of variable to constant fluorescence are in agreement with this conclusion. The fluorescence emission spectrum shows characteristic differences between the constant and variable components. The variable fluorescence comes exclusively from chlorophyll a; the constant fluorescence is contributed, in addition to chlorophyll a, by phycocyanine and an unidentified long wavelength component. The variable fluorescence does not change in the transition from whole cells to spheroplasts. However, the constant fluorescence increases considerably. This indicates the release of a small fraction of pigments from the photosynthetic photochemical apparatus which then become fluorescent.  相似文献   

8.
The low-wave phenomenon, i.e., the transient drop of yield of modulated chlorophyll fluorescence shortly after application of a pulse of saturating light, was investigated in intact leaves of tobacco and Camellia by measuring fluorescence, CO(2) assimilation and absorption at 830 nm simultaneously. Limitations on linear electron flow, due to low electron acceptor levels that were induced by low CO(2), induced the low waves of chlorophyll fluorescence. Low-wave amplitudes obtained under different CO(2) concentrations and photon-flux densities yielded single-peak curves when plotted as functions of fluorescence parameters such as PhiPS II (quantum yield of Photosystem II) and qN (coefficient of non-photochemical quenching), suggesting that low-wave formation depends on the redox state of the electron transport chain. Low waves paralleled redox changes of P700, the reaction center of Photosystem I (PS I), and an additional electron flow through PS I was detected during the application of saturating pulses that induced low-waves. It is suggested that low waves of chlorophyll fluorescence are induced by increased non-photochemical quenching, as a result of the formation of a trans-thylakoid proton gradient due to cyclic electron flow around PS I.  相似文献   

9.
A model for the photochemical apparatus of photosynthesis is presented which accounts for the fluorescence properties of Photosystem II and Photosystem I as well as energy transfer between the two photosystems. The model was tested by measuring at - 196 degrees C fluorescence induction curves at 690 and 730 nm in the absence and presence of 5mMMgCl2 which presumably changes the distrubution of excitation energy between the two photosystems. The equations describing the fluorescence properties involve terms for the distribution of absorbed quanta, alpha, being the fraction distributed to Photosystem I, and beta, the fraction to Photosystem II to Photosystem I, KT(II yields I). The data, analyzed within the context of the model, permit a direct comparison of alpha and kt(II yields I) in the absence (minus) and presence (+) of Mg-2+ :alpha minus/alpha-+ equals 1.2 and k-minus t)II yields I)/K-+T(II yields I) equal to 1.9. If the criterion that alpha + beta equal to 1 is applied absolute values can be calculated: in the presence of Mg-2+, alpha-+ equal to 0.27 and the yield of energy transfer, phi-+ t(II yields I) varied the presence of Mg-2+, alpha-+ equal to 0.27 and the yield of energy transfer, phi-+ t(II yields I) varied from 0.065 when the Photosystem II reaction centers were all open to 0.23 when they were closed. In the absence of Mg-2+, alpha-minus equal to 0.32 and phi t(II yields I) varied from 0.12 to 0.28. The data were also analyzed assuming that two types of energy transfer could be distinguished; a transfer from the light-harvesting chlorophyll of Photosystem II to Photosystem I, kt(II yields I), and a transfer from the reaction centers of Photosystem II to Photosystem I, kt(II yields I). In that case alpha-minus/alpha+ equal to 1.3, k-minus t(II yields I)/k+ t(II yields I)equal to 1.3 and k-minus t(II yields I) equal to 3.0. It was concluded, however, that both of these types of energy transfer are different manifestations of a single energy transfer process.  相似文献   

10.
The parameters listed in the title were determined within the context of a model for the photochemical apparatus of photosynthesis. The fluorescence of variable yield at 750 nm at -196 degrees C is due to energy transfer from Photosystem II to Photosystem I. Fluorescence excitation spectra were measured at -196 degrees C at the minimum, FO, level and the maximum, FM, level of the emission at 750 nm. The difference spectrum, FM-FO, which represents the excitation spectrum for FV is presented as a pure Photosystem II excitation spectrum. This spectrum shows a maximum at 677 nm, attributable to the antenna chlorophyll a of Photosystem II units, with a shoulder at 670 nm and a smaller maximum at 650 nm, presumably due to chlorophyll a and chlorophyll b of the light-harvesting chlorophyll complex. Fluoresence at the FO level at 750 nm can be considered in two parts; one part due to the fraction of absorbed quanta, alpha, which excites Photosystem I more-or-less directly and another part due to energy transfer from Photosystem II to Photosystem I. The latter contribution can be estimated from the ratio of FO/FV measured at 692 nm and the extent of FV at 750 nm. According to this procedure the excitation spectrum of Photosystem I at -196 degrees C was determined by subtracting 1/3 of the excitation spectrum of FV at 750 nm from the excitation spectrum of FO at 750 nm. The spectrum shows a relatively sharp maximum at 681 nm due to the antenna chlorophyll a of Photosystem I units with probably some energy transfer from the light-harvesting chlorophyll complex. The wavelength dependence of alpha was determined from fluorescence measurements at 692 and 750 nm at -196 degrees C. Alpha is constant to within a few percent from 400 to 680 nm, the maximum deviation being at 515 nm where alpha shows a broad maximum increasing from 0.30 to 0.34. At wavelengths between 680 and 700 nm, alpha increases to unity as Photosystem I becomes the dominant absorber in the photochemical apparatus.  相似文献   

11.
Elisha Tel-Or  Shmuel Malkin 《BBA》1977,459(2):157-174
The photochemical activities and fluorescence properties of cells, spheroplasts and spheroplast particles from the blue-green alga Phormidium luridum were compared. The photochemical activities were measured in a whole range of wavelengths and expressed as quantum yield spectra (quantum yield vs. wavelength). The following reactions were measured: Photosynthesis (O2 evolution) in whole cells; Hill reaction (O2 evolution) with Fe(CN)63? and NADP as electron acceptors (Photosystem II and Photosystem II+Photosystem I reactions); electron transfer from reduced 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol to diquat (Photosystem I reaction). The fluorescence properties were emission spectra, quantum yield spectra and the induction pattern.On the basis of comparison between the quantum yield spectra and the pigments compositions the relative contribution of each pigment to each photosystem was estimated. In normal cells and spheroplasts it was found that Photosystem I (Photosystem II) contains about 90 % (10 %) of the chlorophyll a, 90 % (10 %) of the carotenoids and 15 % (85 %) of the phycocyanin. In spheroplast particles there is a reorganization of the pigments: they loose a certain fraction (about half) of the phycocyanin but the remaining phycocyanin attaches itself exclusively to Photosystem I (!). This is reflected by the loss of Photosystem II activity, a flat quantum yield vs. wavelength dependence and a loss of the fluorescence induction.The fluorescence quantum yield spectra conform qualitatively to the above conclusion. More quantitative estimation shows that only a fraction (20–40 %) of the chlorophyll of Photosystem II is fluorescent. Total emission spectrum and the ratio of variable to constant fluorescence are in agreement with this conclusion.The fluorescence emission spectrum shows characteristic differences between the constant and variable components. The variable fluorescence comes exclusively from chlorophyll a; the constant fluorescence is contributed, in addition to chlorophyll a, by phycocyanine and an unidentified long wavelength component.The variable fluorescence does not change in the transition from whole cells to spheroplasts. However, the constant fluorescence increases considerably. This indicates the release of a small fraction of pigments from the photosynthetic photochemical apparatus which then become fluorescent.  相似文献   

12.
W.S. Chow  R.C. Ford  J. Barber 《BBA》1981,635(2):317-326
Salt-induced chlorophyll fluorescence and spillover changes in control and briefly sonicated chloroplasts have been studied under conditions where Photosystem II traps are closed. In a low-salt medium containing 10 mM KCl, control envelope-free chloroplasts exhibited good spillover, as measured by low chlorophyll fluorescence yield at room temperature, a high ratio of the fluorescence peaks F735F685 at 77 K, and increased Photosystem I activity in the presence of 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea and Photosystem II light. In contrast, when stacked chloroplasts were briefly sonicated and subsequently diluted into a low-salt medium, a high fluorescence yield at room temperature and a low ratio of F735F685 at 77 K persisted. When unstacked chloroplasts were sonicated and then diluted into a high-salt medium, the room temperature fluorescence yield remained low. The results are interpreted in terms of a model relating the changes in chlorophyll fluoresecence with the lateral diffusion of Photosystem I and Photosystem II chlorophyll-protein complexes in the plane of the thylakoid membrane creating randomized or segregated domains, depending on the degree of electrostatic screening of surface charges (Barber, J. (1980) FEBS Lett. 188, 1–10). It is argued that brief sonication of stacked chloroplasts separates stromal membranes from granal stacks, thus limiting the inter-mixing of the photosystems via lateral diffusion even when the ionic composition of the medium is varied. Consequently energy transfer from Photosystem II to Photosystem I is relatively poor and chlorophyll fluorescence from Photosystem II is enhanced. The loss of the salt effect on sonicated unstacked membranes can also be accommodated by the model. In this case it seems that the generation of small membrane fragments does not allow the normal salt-induced phase separation of the pigment-protein complexes to occur.  相似文献   

13.
The wavelength-resolved fluorescence emission kinetics of the accessory pigments and chlorophyll a in Porphyridium cruentum have been studied by picosecond laser spectroscopy. Direct excitation of the pigment B-phycoerythrin with a 530 nm, 6 ps pulse produced fluorescence emission from all of the pigments as a result of energy transfer between the pigments to the reaction centre of Photosystem II. The emission from B-phycoerythrin at 576 nm follows a nonexponential decay law with a mean fluorescence lifetime of 70 ps, whereas the fluorescence from R-phycocyanin (640 nm), allophycocyanin (660 nm) and chlorophyll a (685 nm) all appeared to follow an exponential decay law with lifetimes of 90 ps, 118 ps and 175 ps respectively. Upon closure of the Photosystem II reaction centres with 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea and preillumination the chlorophyll a decay became non-exponential, having a long component with an apparent lifetime of 840 ps. The fluorescence from the latter three pigments all showed finite risetimes to the maximum emission intensity of 12 ps for R-phycocyanin, 24 ps for allophycocyanin and 50 ps for chlorophyll a.A kinetic analysis of these results indicates that energy transfer between the pigments is at least 99% efficient and is governed by an exp ?At12 transfer function. The apparent exponential behaviour of the fluorescence decay functions of the latter three pigments is shown to be a direct result of the energy transfer kinetics, as are the observed risetimes in the fluorescence emissions.  相似文献   

14.
SANDOZ 9785, also known as BASF 13.338, is a pyridazinone derivative that inhibits Photosystem II (PS II) activity leading to an imbalance in the rate of electron transport through the photosystems. Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942 cells grown in the presence of sublethal concentration of SANDOZ 9785 (SAN 9785) for 48 hours exhibited a 20% decrease in Chl a per cell. However, no changes were observed in the content of phycocyanin per cell, the size of the phycobilisomes or in the PS II:PS I ratio. From an estimate of PS II electron transport rate under varying light intensities and spectral qualities and analysis of room temperature Chl a fluorescence induction, it was deduced that growth of Synechococcus PCC 7942 in the presence of SAN 9785 leads to a redistribution of excitation energy in favour of PS II. Though the redistribution appears to be primarily caused by changes affecting the Chl a antenna of PS II, the extent of energetic coupling between phycobilisomes and PS II is also enhanced in SAN 9785 grown Synechococcus PCC 7942 cells. There was a reduction in the effective size of PS I antenna based on measurement of P700 photooxidation kinetics. These results indicate that when PS II is partially inhibited, the structure of photosynthetic apparatus alters to redistribute the excitation energy in favour of PS II so that the efficiency of utilization of light energy by the two photosystems is optimized. Our results suggest that under the conditions used, drastic structural changes are not essential for redistribution of excitation energy between the photosystems.Abbreviations APC Allophycocyanin - Chl a chlorophyll a - DBMIB 2,5-dibromo-3-methyl-6-isopropyl-p-benzoquinone - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophyenyl)-1,1-dimethyl urea - DCIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - Fo fluorescence when all the reaction centres are open - fm fluorescence yield when all the reaction centres are closed - Fv variable chlorophyll fluorescence - HEPES N-2-Hydroxyethylpiperazine-N-2-ethanesulphonic Acid - I50 concentration that causes 50% inhibition in activity - MV methyl viologen - pBQ para benzoquinone - PBS phycobilisome - PC phycocyanin - PS I, PS II Photosystem I, Photosystem II - P700 reaction centre Chl a of PS I - SAN 9785 SANDOZ 9785 i.e. 4-chloro-5-dimethylamino-2-phenyl-3 (2H) pyridazinone, also known as BASF 13.338  相似文献   

15.
Wheat leaves were exposed to light treatments that excite preferentially Photosystem I (PS I) or Photosystem II (PS II) and induce State 1 or State 2, respectively. Simultaneous measurements of CO2 assimilation, chlorophyll fluorescence and absorbance at 820 nm were used to estimate the quantum efficiencies of CO2 assimilation and PS II and PS I photochemistry during State transitions. State transitions were found to be associated with changes in the efficiency with which an absorbed photon is transferred to an open PS II reaction centre, but did not correlate with changes in the quantum efficiencies of PS II photochemistry or CO2 assimilation. Studies of the phosphorylation status of the light harvesting chlorophyll protein complex associated with PS II (LHC II) in wheat leaves and using chlorina mutants of barley which are deficient in this complex demonstrate that the changes in the effective antennae size of Photosystem II occurring during State transitions require LHC II and correlate with the phosphorylation status of LHC II. However, such correlations were not found in maize leaves. It is concluded that State transitions in C3 leaves are associated with phosphorylation-induced modifications of the PS II antennae, but these changes do not serve to optimise the use of light absorbed by the leaf for CO2 assimilation.Abbreviations Fm, Fo, Fv maximal, minimal and variable fluorescence yields - Fm, Fv maximal and variable fluorescence yields in a light adapted state - LHC II light harvesting chlorophyll a/b protein complex associated with PS II - qP photochemical quenching - A820 light-induced absorbance change at 820 nm - PS I, PS II relative quantum efficiencies of PS I and PS II photochemistry - CO 2 quantum yield of CO2 assimilation  相似文献   

16.
Cells of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus 6301 were grown in yellow light absorbed primarily by the phycobilisome (PBS) light-harvesting antenna of photosystem II (PS II), and in red light absorbed primarily by chlorophyll and, therefore, by photosystem I (PS I). Chromatic acclimation of the cells produced a higher phycocyanin/chlorophyll ratio and higher PBS-PS II/PS I ratio in cells grown under PS I-light. State 1-state 2 transitions were demonstrated as changes in the yield of chlorophyll fluorescence in both cell types. The amplitude of state transitions was substantially lower in the PS II-light grown cells, suggesting a specific attenuation of fluorescence yield by a superimposed non-photochemical quenching of excitation. 77 K fluorescence emission spectra of each cell type in state 1 and in state 2 suggested that state transitions regulate excitation energy transfer from the phycobilisome antenna to the reaction centre of PS II and are distinct from photosystem stoichiometry adjustments. The kinetics of photosystem stoichiometry adjustment and the kinetics of the appearance of the non-photochemical quenching process were measured upon switching PS I-light grown cells to PS II-light, and vice versa. Photosystem stoichiometry adjustment was complete within about 48 h, while the non-photochemical quenching occurred within about 25 h. It is proposed that there are at least three distinct phenomena exerting specific effects on the rate of light absorption and light utilization by the two photoreactions: state transitions; photosystem stoichiometry adjustment; and non-photochemical excitation quenching. The relationship between these three distinct processes is discussed.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - DCMU 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea - F relative fluorescence intensity at emission wavelength nm - F o fluorescence intensity when all PS II traps are open - light 1 light absorbed preferentially by PS I - light 2 light absorbed preferentially by PS II - PBS phycobilisome - PS photosystem  相似文献   

17.
The effects of low temperature acclimation and photoinhibitory treatment on Photosystem 2 (PS 2) have been studied by thermoluminescence and chlorophyll fluorescence decay kinetics after a single turnover saturating flash. A comparison of unhardened and hardened leaves showed that, in the hardened case, a decrease in overall and B-band thermoluminescence emissions occurred, indicating the presence of fewer active PS 2 reaction centers. A modification in the form of the B-band emission was also observed and is attributed to a decrease in the apparent activation energy of recombination in the hardened leaves. The acclimated leaves also produced slower QA reoxidation kinetics as judged from the chlorophyll fluorescence decay kinetics. This change was mainly seen in an increased lifetime of the slow reoxidation component with only a small increase in its amplitude. Similar changes in both thermoluminescence and fluorescence decay kinetics were observed when unhardened leaves were given a high light photoinhibitory treatment at 4°C, whereas the hardened leaves were affected to a much lesser extent by a similar treatment. These results suggest that the acclimated plants undergo photoinhibition at 4°C even at low light intensities and that a subsequent high light treatment produces only a small additive photoinhibitory effect. Furthermore, it can be seen that photoinhibition eventually gives rise to PS 2 reaction centers which are no longer functional and which do not produce thermoluminescence or variable chlorophyll fluorescence.Abbreviations D1 The 32 kDa protein of Photosystem 2 reaction center - Fm maximum chlorophyll fluorescence yield - F0 minimal chlorophyll fluorescence yield obtained when all PS 2 centers are open - Fi intermediate fluorescence level corresponding to PS 2 centers which are loosely or not connected to plastoquinone (non-B centers) - Fv maximum variable chlorophyll fluorescence yield (Fv=Fm–F0) - PS 2 Photosystem 2 - QA and QB respectively, primary and secondary quinonic acceptors of PS 2 - S1, S2 and S3 respectively, the one, two and three positively charged states of the oxygen evolving system - Z secondary donor of PS 2  相似文献   

18.
Fractions enriched in either Photosystem I or Photosystem II activity have been isolated from the blue-green alga, Synechococcus cedrorum after digitonin treatment. Sedimentation of this homogenate on a 10--30% sucrose gradient yielded three green bands: the upper band was enriched in Photosystem II, the lowest band was enriched in Photosystem I, while the middle band contained both activities. Large quantities of both particles were isolated by zonal centrifugation, and the material was then further purified by chromatography on DEAE-cellulose. The resulting Photosystem II particles carried out light-induced electron transport from semicarbizide to ferricyanide of over 2000 mumol/mg Chlorophyll per h (which was sensitive to 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethylurea), and was nearly devoid of Photosystem I activity. This particle contains beta-carotene, very little phycocyanin, has a chlorophyll absorption maximum at 675 nm, and a liquid N2 fluorescence maximum at 685 nm. The purest Photosystem II particles have a chlorophyll to cytochrome b-559 ratio of 50 : 1. The Photosystem I particle is highly enriched in P-700, with a chlorophyll to P-700 ratio of 40 : 1. The physical structure of the two Photosystem particles has also been studied by gel electrophoresis and electron microscopy. These results indicate that the size and protein composition of the two particles are distinctly different.  相似文献   

19.
A relative decrease of the high temperature part (above 60°C) of the chlorophyll fluorescence temperature curve during 3 h to 10 h greening period of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) leaves was found to be concomitant to a decrease of Chl alb ratio and to a gradual increase of LHCP/core ratio found by electrophoresis and the ratio of granal to total length of thylakoid membranes. It is suggested that the high temperature part of the fluorescence temperature curve depends inversely on the relative amount of LHC II in thylakoid membranes.Abbreviations Chl a(b) chlorophyll a(b) - CPa chlorophyll a protein complex of PS II - CP1 P700 chlorophyll a protein complex of PS I - FP free pigments - FTC fluorescence temperature curve - F(T30) fluorescence intensity at 30°C - LHC II light harvesting complex II - LHCP light harvesting chlorophyll protein - LHCP3 (LHCPm) monomeric form of LHC II - LHCPo oligomeric form of LHC II complex - M1 first maximum of FTC - M2 second maximum (region) of FTC - PAA polyacrylamide - PAR photosynthetically active radiation - PS I(II) Photosystem I(II) - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis  相似文献   

20.
The amplitudes ratio of the fast and slow phases (Afast/Aslow) in the kinetics of the dark relaxation of variable chlorophyll fluorescence (FV) was studied after various periods of illumination of dark-adapted primary barley leaves. Simultaneously, photosynthetic activity was monitored using the photoacoustic technique and the photochemical and non-photochemical fluorescence quenching parameters. The ratio Afast/Aslow changed with the preceding illumination time in a two-step manner. During the first stage of photosynthetic induction (0–20 s of illumination), characterized by a drop in O2-dependent photoacoustic signal following an initial spike and by a relatively stable small value of photochemical FV quenching, the ratio Afast/Aslow remained practically unaltered. During the second stage (20–60 s of illumination), when both the rate of O2 evolution and the photochemical FV quenching were found to be sharply developed, a marked increase in the above ratio was also observed. A linear correlation was found between the value of the photochemical quenching and the ratio Afast/Aslow during the second phase of photosynthetic induction. It is concluded that the slow phase appearing in the kinetics of FV dark relaxation is not due to the existence of Photosystem II reaction centres lacking the ability to reduce P700+ with high rates, but is instead related to the limitation of electron release from Photosystem I during the initial stage of the induction period of photosynthesis. This limitation keeps the intersystem electron carriers in the reduced state and thus increases the probability of back electron transfer from QA to the donor side of Photosystem II.Abbreviations Afast/Aslow the ratio of magnitudes between the fast and slow phases of dark relaxation of variable fluorescence - FO initial level of chlorophyll fluorescence - FV variable chlorophyll fluorescence (F-FO) - (FV)S the yield of variable chlorophyll fluorescence under saturating pulse in illuminated leaves - (FV)M the yield of variable chlorophyll fluorescence under saturating pulse in dark-adapted leaves - PA photoacoustic - PSI Photosystem I - PS II Photosystem II - qN non-photochemical quenching - qQ photochemical quenching  相似文献   

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