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1.
Dark-grown etiolated cells of Cyanidium caldarium mutant III-C lacking ≥99% of their normal chlorophyll content and inactive for photosynthesis were greened in continuous light. Measurements of oxygen evolution and fluorescence kinetics indicate that during greening: (a) the photosystem II (PSII) antenna containing between 30 and 40 chlorophyll a per center undergoes little change in size from 5% of the centers synthesized per cell to fully active cells; (b) energy transfer between PSII centers appears very early in the greening process; (c) the plastoquinone pool size per PSII center (about 14 equivalents) does not vary during greening and has already attained full size after synthesis of only 13% of the full complement of centers.  相似文献   

2.
During light-induced greening of dark-grown, nondividing Euglena gracilis Z, there is a delay of about 10 hours in the formation of active photosystem II (PSII) reaction centers compared to chlorophyll synthesis. Experiments with greening under different light intensities rule out the possibility that this delay results from a late induction of active PSII reaction center formation when a definite amount of chlorophyll is attained in the early greened cells. Experiments on greening after preillumination show that this delay does not originate in a long, light-induced formation of specific synthesizing machinery for reaction center components. Experiments with greening in the presence of streptomycin show that, when this inhibitor of protein synthesis by chloroplastic ribosomes is added to dark-grown, preilluminated cells or to cells already greened for 24 hours, the formation of active PSII reaction centers is inhibited after a time which depends on the light intensity used for greening. Under very low light intensity (150 lux), the addition of streptomycin to 24-hour greened cells does not prevent further development of functional chloroplasts. These observations lead to the conclusion that streptomycin-insensitive chloro-plast development occurs due to syntheses of cytoplasmic origin and of light-induced pools of components synthesized early by chloroplastic ribo-somes. Conformational changes requiring time may allow the insertion of components necessary for the reorganization of PSII reaction centers in the developing thylakoid after synthesis. This hypothesis accounts for the observed delay in PSII reaction center formation compared to chlorophyll synthesis.  相似文献   

3.
Seven-day-old dark-grown bean leaves were greened under continuous light. The amount of chlorophyll, the ratio of chlorophyll a to chlorophyll b, the O2 evolving capacity and the primary photochemical activities of Photosystem I and Photosystem II were measured on the leaves after various times of greening. The primary photochemical activities were measured as the photo-oxidation of P700, the photoreduction of C-550, and the photo-oxidation of cytochrome b559 in intact leaves frozen to −196 C. The results indicate that the reaction centers of Photosystem I and Photosystem II begin to appear within the first few minutes and that Photosystem II reaction centers accumulate more rapidly than Photosystem I reaction centers during the first few hours of greening. The very early appearances of the primary photochemical activity of Photosystem II was also confirmed by light-induced fluorescence yield measurements at −196 C.  相似文献   

4.
Geoffrey C. Owens  Itzhak Ohad 《BBA》1983,722(1):234-241
Thylakoid polypeptide phosphorylation has been studied in vivo and in vitro during plastid differentiation in Chlamydomonas reinhardii y-1. Pulse labeling cells at different stages of greening with [32P]orthophosphate revealed differences in the pattern of protein phosphorylation. In the early phase of greening the 44–47 kDa reaction center II polypeptides were labeled but the 22–24 kDa polypeptides of the light-harvesting chlorophyll ab-protein complex (LHC) were not. Later in the greening, coinciding with the formation of the antenna of Photosystem I and membrane stacking, the converse was found. Furthermore, the 22–24 kDa polypeptides of grana lamellae were less labeled than the same polypeptides found in the corresponding stroma lamellae. Polypeptides in the molecular mass range of 32–34 kDa were phosphorylated at all stages following the onset of greening. Dark-grown cells did not incorporate 32P in vivo or in vitro into the polypeptides present in the residual thylakoids. Similarly, cells greened in the presence of chloramphenicol, in which the synthesis of reaction centers is inhibited, showed no light-stimulated phosphorylation in vitro. However, the residual 32–34 kDa and 44–47 kDa polypeptides found in thylakoids of these cells were phosphorylated in vivo, whereas the LHC polypeptides synthesized in the presence of chloramphenicol were not. Phosphorylation of the LHC polypeptides (22–24 kDa) in these cells occurred if new reaction center polypeptides and all antennae components were formed, following removal of the inhibitor and further incubation of the cells in the light. Phosphorylation of LHC polypeptides was not resumed if active reaction centers were formed in the absence of complete restoration of all antenna components (incubation in the dark or light with addition of cycloheximide). It is concluded that phosphorylation is correlated with the thylakoid polypeptide content and organization.  相似文献   

5.
The stepwise synthesis and assembly of photosynthetic membrane components in the y-1 mutant of Chlamydomonas reinhardi have been previously demonstrated (Ohad 1975 In Membrane Biogenesis, Mitochondria, Chloroplasts and Bacteria, Plenum, pp 279-350). This experimental system was used here in order to investigate the process of formation and interconnection of the energy collecting chlorophylls with the reaction centers of both photosystems I and II. The following measurements were carried out: photosynthetic electron flow at various light intensities, including parts or the entire electron transfer chain; analysis of the kinetics of fluorescence emission at room temperature and fluorescence emission spectra at 77 K, and electrophoretic separation of membrane polypeptides and chlorophyll protein complexes. Based on the data obtained it is concluded that: (a) each photosystem (PSI and PSII) contains, in addition to the reaction center, an interconnecting antenna and a main or light harvesting antenna complex; (b) the formation of the light harvesting complex, interconnecting antenna, and reaction centers for each photosystem can occur independently. (c) the interconnecting antennae link the light harvesting complexes with the respective reaction centers. In their absence, energy transfer between the light harvesting chlorophylls and the reaction centers is inefficient. The formation of the interconnecting antennae and efficient assembly of photosystem components occur simultaneously with the de novo synthesis of chlorophyll and at least three polypeptides, one translated in the cytoplasm and two translated in the chloroplast. The synthesis of these polypeptides was found to be light dependent.  相似文献   

6.
G. Dubertret  M. Lefort-Tran 《BBA》1978,503(2):316-332
The relationships between light-harvesting chlorophyll and reaction centers in Photosystem II were analyzed during the chloroplast development of dark-grown, non-dividing Euglena gracilis Z. Comparative measurements included light saturation of photosynthesis, oxygen evolution under flashing-light and fluorescence induction. The results obtained can be summarized as follows: (1) Photosystem II photocenters are formed in parallel with chlorophyll synthesis, but after a longer lag phase. (2) As a consequence, the chlorophyll: reaction center ratio (Emerson's type photosynthetic unit) decreases during greening. (3) This decrease is accompanied by considerable changes in the energy transfer and trapping properties of Photosystem II. Most of the initially synthesized chlorophylls are inactive in the transfer of excitations to active photochemical centers and are shared among newly formed Photosystem II photocenters; as a consequence, the number of chlorophylls functionally connected to each Photosystem II photocenter decreases and cooperativity between these centers appears. Results are discussed in terms of chlorophyll organization in developing photosynthetic membranes with reference to the lake or puddle models of photosynthetic unit organization.  相似文献   

7.
Light-shade adaptation of the chlorophyll a/b containing procaryote Prochlorothrix hollandica was studied in semicontinuous cultures adapted to 8, 80 and 200 μmole quanta per square meter per second. Chlorophyll a contents based on dry weight differed by a factor of 6 and chlorophyll b by a factor of 2.5 between the two extreme light conditions. Light utilization efficiencies determined from photosynthesis response curves were found to decrease in low light grown cultures due to lower light harvesting efficiencies; quantum requirements were constant at limiting and saturating irradiances for growth. At saturating growth irradiances, changes in light saturated oxygen evolution rate originated from changes in chlorophyll a antenna relative to the number of reaction centers II. At light-limiting conditions both the number of reaction centers II and the antenna size changed. The amount of chlorophyll b relative to reaction center II remained constant. As in cyanobacteria, the ratio of reaction center I to reaction center II was modulated during light-shade adaptation. On the other hand, time constants for photosynthetic electron transport (4 milliseconds) were low as observed in green algae and diatoms. The occurrence of state one to two and state two to one transitions is reported here. Another feature linking photosynthetic electron transport in P. hollandica to that in the eucaryotic photosynthetic apparatus was blockage of the state one to two transition by 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea. Although chlorophyll b was reported in association with photosystem I, the 630 nanometer light effect does not exclude that chlorophyll b is the photoreceptor for the state one to two transition.  相似文献   

8.
Shoots of anaerobically germinated Echinochloa crus-galli var oryzicola are nonpigmented whether germinated in light or dark, and chlorophyll synthesis is minimal for the first 12 to 18 hours of greening after exposure to ambient conditions. When chlorophyll development is compared between greening anoxic and etiolated shoots, there is a 100-fold difference in chlorophyll levels at 8 hours, an 8-fold difference at 24 hours, but roughly equal amounts at 60 hours. The chlorophyll a/b ratio approaches 3 earlier in greening anoxic shoots than in greening etiolated shoots, relative to total chlorophyll. The long lag in chlorophyll synthesis can be shortened by giving dark-grown anoxic shoots a 24-hour midtreatment of air before light.

Development of photosynthetic activity in etiolated shoots, determined by CO2 gas exchange, 14CO2 uptake, and activity of carboxylating enzymes closely parallels development of chlorophylls. However, development of photosynthetic capability in greening anoxic shoots does not parallel chlorophyll development; ability to fix carbon lags behind chlorophyll synthesis. A reason for this lag is the very low activity of RuBP carboxylase during the first 36 hours of greening in anoxic shoots. The activity of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase is also delayed, but its kinetics more closely match those of chlorophyll development.

  相似文献   

9.
Greening cells of Euglena were transferred back to darkness at different stages of chloroplast development in the presence or absence of specific inhibitors of protein synthesis. The analysis of chloroplast components showed that: (a) cycloheximide or streptomycin does not significantly inhibit the formation in darkness of active photosystem II (PSII) reaction centers if added after the lag phase for chloroplast development; (b) a limited number of active reaction centers are formed in the dark, sufficient to increase PSII reaction center to chlorophyll ratios to values close to those found in fully greened cells; (c) these dark-formed reaction centers appear to be inserted in already constituted and complete light-harvesting antennae. These results complement previous ones and lead us to propose a model for a sequential formation of PSII photosynthetic units during greening of Euglena, whereby conformational changes requiring time would allow already synthesized components of PSII reaction centers to be inserted or reorganized as active photochemical complexes in association with previously formed light-harvesting antennae.  相似文献   

10.
The response of the photosynthetic apparatus in the green alga Dunaliella salina, to irradiance stress was investigated. Cells were grown under physiological conditions at 500 millimoles per square meter per second (control) and under irradiance-stress conditions at 1700 millimoles per square meter per second incident intensity (high light, HL). In control cells, the light-harvesting antenna of photosystem I (PSI) contained 210 chlorophyll a/b molecules. It was reduced to 105 chlorophyll a/b in HL-grown cells. In control cells, the dominant form of photosystem II (PSII) was PSIIα(about 63% of the total PSII) containing >250 chlorophyll a/b molecules. The smaller antenna size PSIIβ centers (about 37% of PSII) contained 135 ± 10 chlorophyll a/b molecules. In sharp contrast, the dominant form of PSII in HL-grown cells accounted for about 95% of all PSII centers and had an antenna size of only about 60 chlorophyll a molecules. This newly identified PSII unit is termed PSIIγ. The HL-grown cells showed a substantially elevated PSII/PSI stoichiometry ratio in their thylakoid membranes (PSII/PSI = 3.0/1.0) compared to that of control cells (PSII/PSI = 1.4/1.0). The steady state irradiance stress created a chronic photoinhibition condition in which D. salina thylakoids accumulate an excess of photochemically inactive PSII units. These PSII units contain both the reaction center proteins and the core chlorophyll-protein antenna complex but cannot perform a photochemical charge separation. The results are discussed in terms of regulatory mechanism(s) in the plant cell whose function is to alleviate the adverse effect of irradiance stress.  相似文献   

11.
The relationships between light-harvesting chlorophyll and reaction centers in Photosystem II were analyzed during the chloroplast development of dark-grown, non-dividing Euglena gracilis Z. Comparative measurements included light saturation of photosynthesis, oxygen evolution under flashing-light and fluorescence induction. The results obtained can be summarized as follows: (1) Photosystem II photocenters are formed in parallel with chlorophyll synthesis, but after a long lag phase. (2) As a consequence, the chlorophyll reaction center ratio (Emerson's type photosynthetic unit) decreases during greening. (3) This decrease is accompanied by considerable changes in the energy transfer and trapping properties of Photosystem II. Most of the initially synthesized chlorophylls are inactive in the transfer of excitations to active photochemical centers and are shared among newly formed Photosystem II photocenters; as a consequence, the number of chlorophylls functionally connected to each Photosystem II photocenter decreases and cooperatively between these centers appears. Results are discussed in terms of chlorophyll organization in developing photosynthetic membranes with reference to the lake or puddle models of photosynthetic unit organization.  相似文献   

12.
Cells of two species of single-celled marine algae, the diatom Skeletonema costatum (Greve), Cleve, and the chlorophyte Dunaliella tertiolecta Butcher, were cultured in white light of high (500-600 microeinsteins per square meter per second) and low (30 microeinsteins per square meter per second) intensity. For both algal species, cells grown at low light levels contained more chlorophyll a and had a lower ratio of chlorophyll a to chlorophylls b or c than did cells grown at high light levels. When photosynthetic unit sizes were measured on the basis of either oxygen flash yields or P700 photooxidation, different results were obtained with the different species. In the chlorophyte, the cellular content of photosystem I (PSI) and photosystem II (PSII) reaction centers increased in tandem as chlorophyll a content increased so that photosynthetic unit sizes changed only slightly and the ratio PSI:PSII reaction centers remained constant at about 1.1. In the diatom, as the chlorophyll content of the cells increased, the number of PSI reaction centers decreased and the number of PSII reaction centers increased so that the ratio of PSI:PSII reaction centers decreased from about unity to 0.44. In neither organism did photosynthetic capacity correlate with changes in cellular content of PSI or PSII reaction centers. The results are discussed in relationship to the physical and biological significance of the photosynthetic unit concept.  相似文献   

13.
The preparation of a rabbit antibody to ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (RuBPCase) from Euglena gracilis and its use to quantitate RuBPCase in dark- and light-grown cells and during light-induced chloroplast development (greening) are described. Light-grown Euglena have at least 36 times more RuBPCase than dark-grown Euglena. Light is required for both the initiation and continued increase in net synthesis of RuBPCase over the dark level: brief illumination 12 hours before exposure to continuous light eliminates the lags in the accumulation and increase in activity of RuBPCase (as well as in chlorophyll accumulation); net synthesis is blocked in greening cells returned to the dark or exposed to 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea. Streptomycin or cycloheximide prevents RuBPCase accumulation when added at the beginning of greening but only partially blocks accumulation when added after 25 hours of greening. After 24 hours of greening, the activity of RuBPCase per milligram chlorophyll continues to increase slowly while concentration of the enzyme per milligram chlorophyll remains constant. This increased activity may be due to activation of the enzyme as well as to net synthesis.  相似文献   

14.
The origin of thylakoid membranes was studied in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii y-1 cells during greening at 38°C. Previous studies showed that, when dark-grown cells are exposed to light under these conditions, the initial rates of accumulation of chlorophyll and the chlorophyll a/b-binding proteins in membranes are maximal (MA Maloney JK Hoober, DB Marks [1989] Plant Physiol 91: 1100-1106; JK Hoober MA Maloney, LR Asbury, DB Marks [1990] Plant Physiol 92: 419-426). As shown in this paper, photosystem II activity, which was nearly absent in dark-grown cells, also increased at a linear rate in parallel with chlorophyll. As compared with those made at 25°C, photosystem II units assembled during greening at 38°C were photochemically more efficient, as judged by saturation at a lower fluence of light and a negligible loss of excitation energy as fluorescence. Electron microscopy of cells in light for 5 or 15 minutes at 38°C showed that these initial, functional thylakoid membranes developed in association with the chloroplast envelope.  相似文献   

15.
Recently, it has been suggested (Horton et al. 1992) that aggregation of the light-harvesting a-b complex (LHC II) in vitro reflects the processes which occur in vivo during fluorescence induction and related to the major non-photochemical quenching (qE). Therefore the requirement of this chlorophyll a-b containing protein complex to produce qN was investigated by comparison of two barley mutants either lacking (chlorina f2) or depressed (chlorina104) in LHC II to the wild-type and pea leaves submitted to intermittent light (IL) and during their greening in continuous light. It was observed that qN was photoinduced in the absence of LHC II, i.e. in IL grown pea leaves and the barley mutants. Nevertheless, in these leaves qN had no (IL, peas) or little (barley mutants) inhibitory effect on the photochemical efficiency of QA reduction measured by flash dosage response curves of the chlorophyll fluorescence yield increase induced by a single turn-over flash During greening in continuous light of IL pea leaves, an inhibitory effect on QA photoreduction associated to qN developed as Photosystem II antenna size increased with LHC II synthesis. Utilizing data from the literature on connectivity between PS II units versus antenna size, the following hypothesis is put forward to explain the results summarized above. qN can occur in the core antenna or Reaction Center of a fraction of PS II units and these units will not exhibit variable fluorescence. Other PS II units are quenched indirectly through PS II-PS II exciton transfer which develops as the proportion of connected PS II units increases through LHC II synthesis.  相似文献   

16.
A systematic study was made of the spectrum for exciting long-wave-length fluorescence (at 77°K) during the first 100 hr of greening in Euglena gracilis. A band at 705-710 nm is observable after cells have been greening in light for 30 hr. The ratio of the 705-nm to the 675-nm peak increases during greening, reaching a maximum value at 85 hr, then declining. With concentrated solutions of chlorophyll a, fluorescence excitation spectra are similar to those observed in vivo. The ratio of aggregate to monomer bands increases with concentration of chlorophyll, reaching a maximum value in ethanol and in pyridine at about 3 × 10-2 M and 6 × 10-2 M respectively, then declining. Several model systems were analyzed. It is shown that the band observed in solution with maximum at 705-710 nm is not an artifact of the fluorescence apparatus; it does not arise from undissolved chlorophyll; it does not arise from a fluorescent or nonfluorescent impurity; it does not arise solely from light absorption by a dimer or larger aggregate of chlorophyll. Agreement is obtained between the experimental observations and the results of a mathematical model by including terms for the efficiency of energy transfer from monomeric to dimeric chlorophyll, as well as for the formation of dimers by an equilibrium reaction.  相似文献   

17.
The formation of chlorophyll, cytochrome f, P-700, ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase as well as photosynthesis and Hill reaction activities were tested during the light-dependent greening process of the Chlorella fusca mutant G 10. Neither chlorophyll nor protochlorophyllide was detected in the darkgrown cells. When transferred to light the mutant cells developed chlorophyll and established its photosynthetic capacity after a short lag phase. In the in vivo absorption spectra a spectral shift of the red absorption peak position from 674 to 680 nm was indicated during the first 3 h of greening. Cytochrome f was already present in the dark-grown cells, but during the greening phase a threefold increase in the cytochrome f content could be seen. At the early stages of greening a characteristic primary oscillation in the content of cytochrome f was observed. P-700 was lacking in the dark and during the first 30 min of illumination. From the first to the second h of light a forced synthesis of P-700 took place and the time-course curve for the ratios of P-700/chlorophyll rose to a sharp maximum. The synthesis of P-700 started together with photosystem I activity and showed similar kinetics. We found the simultaneous appearance of photosystem II, photosystem I, and photosynthetic activities 30 min after the beginning of the illumination. Based on chlorophyll content they attained maximum activity after 2 h of light, but at this time photosystem I capacity proved to be remarkably higher than photosynthetic and photosystem II activities. Highest carboxylase activity existed in darkgrown cells. During the greening process the activity of the enzyme decreased continuously. After 2 h of illumination chlorophyll synthesis partially served to increase the size of the photosynthetic unit, which consequently led to a decrease in the light energy needed to saturate photosynthesis and also to a decrease of photosynthetic rate based on chlorophyll content.Abbreviations Chl chlorophyll - Cyt f cytochrome f - DPIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - EDTA ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid - GSH glutathione - LH light-harvesting - PS photosystem - RuBP ribulose bisphosphate  相似文献   

18.
Suspension cultures of SB-P cells of soybean (Glycine max) provide a novel, reproducible, and readily manipulable greening system useful for inducing chloroplast differentiation. The cells are subcultured and grown heterotrophically (3% sucrose) in the dark for at least three successive 14-day periods, subcultured and grown in the dark for 7 days more, and finally placed under white light and grown photoautotrophically. Chlorophyll begins to accumulate by 1 hour of light and continues up to 12 days. The chlorophyll a:chlorophyll b ratio is 3:1. Dark-grown cells contain a small amount of total carotenoids which increase 10-fold during greening. Chloroplast differentiation is strictly light dependent, with photosynthetic pigments accumulating in the light and being lost from cells returned to the dark. In the dark, the chloroplasts dedifferentiate to amyloplasts as the organized thylakoid network is lost and starch accumulates. Under continuous light, the amyloplasts differentiate into mature chloroplasts as the organelle elongates, becomes spanned by several bands of thylakoids, and undergoes grana formation. Chloroplast differentiation in SB-P cells is similar to that in intact angiosperms developing under normal light-dark cycles.  相似文献   

19.
In Cryptomonas rufescens (Cryptophyceae), phycoerythrin located in the thylakoid lumen is the major accessory pigment. Oxygen action spectra prove phycoerythrin to be efficient in trapping light energy.The fluorescence excitation spectra at ?196°C obtained by the method of Butler and Kitajima (Butler, W.L. and Kitajima, M. (1975) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 396, 72–85) indicate that like in Rhodophycease, chlorophyll a is the exclusive light-harvesting pigment for Photosystem I.For Photosystem II we can observe two types of antennae: (1) a light-harvesting chlorophyll complex connected to Photosystem II reaction centers, which transfers excitation energy to Photosystem I reaction centers when all the Photosystem II traps are closed. (2) A light-harvesting phycoerythrin complex, which transfers excitation energy exclusively to the Photosystem II reaction complexes responsible for fluorescence at 690 nm.We conclude that in Cryptophyceae, phycoerythrin is an efficient light-harvesting pigment, organized as an antenna connected to Photosystem II centers, antenna situated in the lumen of the thylakoid. However, we cannot afford to exclude that a few parts of phycobilin pigments could be connected to inactive chlorophylls fluorescing at 690 nm.  相似文献   

20.
White RA  Hoober JK 《Plant physiology》1994,106(2):583-590
Initiation of thylakoid membrane assembly was examined in degreened cells of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii y1 cells depleted of thylakoid membranes and photosynthetic activity by growth in the dark for 3 to 4 d. Photoreductive activities of photosystem II (PSII) and photosystem I (PSI) increased with no apparent lag when degreened cells were exposed to light at 38[deg]C. However, fluorescence transients induced by actinic light, which reflect the functional state of PSII, changed only slightly during the first 2 h of greening. When these cells were treated with 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethyl urea (DCMU) or saturating light, fluorescence increased commensurate with the cellular content of chlorophyll. In similar experiments with greening cells of C. reinhardtii CC-2341 (ac-u-g-2.3), a PSI-minus strain, fluorescence increased with chlorophyll without treatment with DCMU. These data suggested that fluorescence of initial PSII centers in greening y1 cells was quenched by activity of PSI. Continuous monitoring of fluorescence in the presence or absence of DCMU showed that assembly of quenched PSII centers occurred within seconds after exposure of y1 cells to light. These results are consistent with initial assembly of PSI and PSII within localized domains, where their proximity allows efficient energy coupling.  相似文献   

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