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1.
Light-induced efficiency and pigment alterations in red algae   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
The low photosynthetic efficiency of chlorophyll in freshly collected red algae, can, in the case of Porphyra perforata, P. nereocystis, and Porphyridium cruentum, be increased by growing the algae for 10 days in red or blue light. Exposure to darkness or to green light maintains the algae in their originally low efficiency with respect to chlorophyll, while retaining the high efficiency of phycobilins. Red- or blue-adapted algae are rapidly reversed by exposure to green light, the chlorophyll efficiency dropping to low values again in a few hours. This is assumed to account for the action spectrum of freshly gathered plants. Some pigment changes were observed, but not in the direction of "chromatic adaptation;" and the carotenoid pigments were not activated, even by blue light, but remained as photosynthetically inactive shading filters. The higher red algae (Florideae) did not show activation of chlorophyll by red or blue light.  相似文献   

2.
Ley AC  Butler WL 《Plant physiology》1980,65(4):714-722
Cells of Porphyridium cruentum were grown in different colors of light which would be absorbed primarily by chlorophyll (Chl) (red and blue light) or by the phycobilisomes (green or two intensities of cool-white fluorescent light), and samples of these cells were frozen to −196 C for measurements of absorption and fluorescence emission spectra. Cells grown in the high intensity white light had least of all of the photosynthetic pigments, a higher ratio of carotenoid/Chl, but essentially the same ratio of phycobilin to Chl as cells grown in the low intensity white light. The ratio of photosystem II (PSII) to photosystem I (PSI) pigments was affected by light quality; the ratios of phycobilin to Chl and of short wavelength (PSII) Chl to long wavelength (PSI) Chl were both greater in the cells grown in red or blue light.  相似文献   

3.
Changes in the molecular structure of phycobilisomes during complementary chromatic adaptation were studied in the marine cyanophyte Phormidium sp. C86. This strain forms phycoerythrin (PE)-less phycobilisomes under red light but synthesizes PE-rich phycobilisomes under green light. Analysis of phycobiliprotein composition and electron microscopic examination of phycobilisomes in ultra-thin sections of cells and of isolated phycobilisomes were performed for cells acclimated to red and green light, respectively. The structure of phycobilisomes formed under red light conditions was typically hemidiscoidal. Phycobilisomes in cells acclimated to green light were twice as large in size as those in cells acclimated to red light. This increase in phycobilisome size was a result of the increase in the molar ratio of antenna pigment (PE and phycocyanin) to allophycocyanin, from 3.5 to 11.3. Pigment composition and fine structure of phycobilisomes formed under green light were similar to those of “nonhemidiscoidal” phycobilisomes reported in Phormidium persicinum. These results suggest that changes occur not only in the molecular species of peripheral rods but also in the structure of rods and probably of cores in relation to their connection with rods during chromatic adaptation of Phormidium sp. C86.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of light quality on the photosynthetic pigments as chromatic adaptation in 8 species of lichens were examined. The chlorophylls, carotenoids in 5 species with green algae as phycobionts (Cladonia mitis, Hypogymnia physodes, H. tubulosa var. tubulosa and subtilis, Flavoparmelia caperata, Xanthoria parietina) and the chlorophyll a, carotenoids and phycobiliprotein pigments in 3 species with cyanobacteria as photobionts (Peltigera canina, P. polydactyla, P. rufescens) were determined. The total content of photosynthetic pigments was calculated according to the formule and particular pigments were determined by means CC, TLC, HPLC and IEC chromatography. The total content of the photosynthetic pigments (chlorophylls, carotenoids) in the thalli was highest in red light (genus Peltigera), yellow light (Xanthoria parietina), green light (Cladonia mitis) and at blue light (Flavoparmelia caperata and both species of Hypogymnia). The biggest content of the biliprotein pigments at red and blue lights was observed. The concentration of C-phycocyanin increased at red light, whereas C-phycoerythrin at green light.  相似文献   

5.
The physiological behavior of phycoerythrin-deficient mutants of the red seaweed Gracilaria tikvahiae (Mc-Lachlan 1979) is compared to that of their wild types. The mutants are phenotypically green while the wild types are red. Cloned scions were grown factorially at irradiances saturating and limiting to growth, and spectral distributions which were broadband (white) and narrowband (green). The green light field complements the absorptance spectrum of phycoerythrin. Experiments were performed in an outdoor continuous flow system. Physiological measurements included light-harvesting pigment composition, instantaneous photosynthesis-light relationships and growth. In all cases, the mutants performed as their wild type progenitors. Further, physiological responses occurring in no less than 8 days were dependent solely on irradiance (“intensity”), and were independent of spectral distribution (“color”). The data do not conform with the predictions of the theory of complementary chromatic adaptation for seaweeds.  相似文献   

6.
The influence of red, blue, green, and white light on growth and photosynthetic rates, carbon metabolism, and rates of release of extracellular compounds in the freshwater alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Dangeard was examined. Relative growth constants were 0.28, 0.32, 0.40, and 0.41 in green, white, blue, and red light, respectively. Photosynthetic rates were higher in white, blue, or red than in green light of the same intensity. More than 66% of the 14CO2 assimilated by cells grown under blue or green light was incorporated into the ethanol-insoluble fraction, compared with about 50% in cells grown under white or red light. The percentage of sugars in this fraction was significantly higher in cells grown under green or red light than in cells cultured in white or blue light, while the percentage of proteins was highest in blue light. Light quality also influenced the composition of the ethanol-soluble fraction. The percentage of organic acids was highest in cells grown in green and white light, while amino acids were highest in blue and green cultures. The percentage of ethanol-soluble sugars was greatest in cultures grown in blue and red light. The percentage release of dissolved organic carbon into the medium was highest in white light and lowest in blue or red light. The nature of the extracellular products varied according to the quality of light under which the cells were cultured, but had no consistent relation to the nature or concentration or components in the ethanol-soluble fraction.  相似文献   

7.
Blue-green light increased the chlorophyll concentration and chloroplast number of cells of Stephanopyxis turris (Grev.) Ralfs, compared to white light controls. Light fields for growth were 400 μW·cm?2 (12:12 LD cycles). Chlorophyll increased up to 100%/cell, but no change in the ratio of chlorophylls to major carotenoids occurred. The effect was, therefore, not that of complementary chromatic adaptation. At the same time, blue-green light enhanced the photosynthetic fixation of CO2. At the ultrastructure level, an increase in, and rearrangement of, the thylakoid system occurred.  相似文献   

8.
If one wishes to distinguish chromatic effects from irradiance effects on metabolism. it is technically invalid to expose cells lo irradiances of equal photosynthetically available radiation (PAR) unless PAR is absorbed in totality. Therefore, the effects of blue light on growth and cellular concentrations of carbon, protein and carbohydrate of the diatom Chaetoceros protuberans Lauder, (in semi-continuous cultures), were studied by exposing the cells to irradiances of equal photosynthetically usable radiation (PUR), of white (PURw) and blue (PURb) light. Three average levels: PURw=PURb=56, 125 and 13 μ m?2.s?1 were used in the stated sequence. With increasing PUR the relative concentration of carbohydrate increased in both types of light. The efficiency of this increase was not modified by blue light. The relative concentration of protein remained constant in white light out the efficiency of net protein production improved at the lowest blue light irradiance. The saturation threshold of this chromatic effect was higher in C. proluberans than in the Chlorophyceae. The chromatic change did not affect the average cell doubling rate, calculated over (5 or 6 days) an observation which does not agree with recently published work.  相似文献   

9.
Acclimation of the photosynthetic apparatus to light absorbed primarily by phycobilisomes (which transfer energy predominantly to photosystem II) or absorbed by chlorophyll a (mainly present in the antenna of photosystem I) was studied in the macroalga Palmaria palmata L. In addition, the influence of blue and yellow light, exciting chlorophyll a and phycobilisomes, respectively, ivas investigated. All results were compared to a white light control. Complementary chromatic adaptation in terms of an enhanced ratio of phycoerythrin to phycocyanin under green light conditions was observed. Red light (mainly absorbed by chlorophyll a) and green light (mainly absorbed by phycobilisomes) caused an increase of the antenna system, which was not preferentially excited. Yellow and blue light led to intermediate states comparable to each other and white light. Growth was reduced under all light qualities in comparison to white light, especially under conditions preferably exciting phycobilisomes (green light-adapted algae had a 58% lower growth rate compared to white light-adapted algae). Red and blue light-adapted algae showed maximal photosynthetic capacity with white light excitation and significantly lower values with green light excitation. In contrast, green and yellow light-adapted algae exhibited comparable photosynthetic capacities at all excitation wavelengths. Low-temperature fluorescence emission analysis showed an increase of photosystem II emission in red light-adapted algae and a decrease in green light-adapted algae. A small increase of photosystem I emission teas also found in green light-adapted algae, but this was much less than the photosystem II emission increase observed in red light-adapted algae (both compared to phycobilisome emission). Efficiency of energy transfer from phycobilisomes to photosystem II was higher in red than in green light-adapted algae. The opposite was found for the energy transfer efficiency from phycobilisomes to photosystem I. Zeaxanthin content increased in green and blue light-adapted algae compared to red, white, and yellow light-adapted algae. Results are discussed in comparison to published data on unicellular red algae and cyanobacteria.  相似文献   

10.
Spectroscopic Changes in the Chlorophyll a of Porphyridium Induced by Illumination and Chemical Action and Observed at ?196°C. Photo-oxidation of P700 by 708 nm light can take place under weak intensity (10?6 W × cm?2) when the medium is frozen. Spectral characteristics of “700 nm” and “690 nm” variations are accurately measured. The amplitude of the photoinduced changes of absorption are similar to those induced by chemical action. In the case of Porphyridium, an apparent increase of the extinction power of P700 at ?196°C is observed. This fact seems to be due to a diminution of the bandwith of the neighbouring pigments. Irradiation with red light (685 nm), of a relatively high intensity (10?2 W × cm?2), in the presence of oxygen at ?196°C, induces a slight shift (0.5 nm) of the red absorption band maximum towards longer wavelengths. This change is similar to the one promoted by ferricyanide in the dark. The origin and the functional significance of the phenomenon is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Photoheterotrophic growth of a filamentous cyanobacterium Calothrix sp. PCC 7601, which is capable for complementary chromatic adaptation, in the presence of glucose was accompanied by changes in the content of phycobiliproteins. Glucose, a source of energy and a metabolism regulator, differently affected the level of major phycobilisome pigments, phycocyanin (PC) and phycoerythrin (PE) in the cells. When red light enhanced PC synthesis, glucose enhanced it additionally. When green light suppressed PC synthesis, glucose did not affect it. Under both light regimes, glucose inhibited PE synthesis. Thus, glucose oppositely affected the content of two major phycobiliproteins. Glucose not only affected the ratio between phycobiliproteins but also decreased the content of carotenoids, inhibited activity of photosystem II, and affected cell sizes. A stereochemical analog of glucose, 2-deoxy-D-glucose, induced effects similar to those of glucose. A comparison with the effects of red and green light demonstrated that glucose acted on Calothrix similarly to red light and oppositely to green light.Translated from Fiziologiya Rastenii, Vol. 52, No. 2, 2005, pp. 266–273.Original Russian Text Copyright © 2005 by Lebedeva, Boichenko, Semenova, Pronina, Stadnichuk.This revised version was published online in April 2005 with a corrected cover date.  相似文献   

13.
The optimal photon fluence rate for growth of tha llus tips of Gracilaria sp. was low (about 100 μE·–2·1); higher photon fluence rates inhibited growth. Both phycoerythrin (PE) and chlorophyll (chl) contents decreased with increasing photon fluence rates (up to 100 μE·–m–2s–1) in a fashion inverse to the growth response. Chl/PE ratios varied directly as the growth response over a larger photon fluence rate range. The peak chl/PE ratios were obtained at a photon fluence rate optimal for growth, suggesting that this parameter may be used to estimate in situ growth rates. A low compensation point (about 7 μE·–2s–1) was observed for low light (15 μE·–2s–1) grown plants. This compensation point was also obtained for growth in the long–term (5–6 weeks) experiments. Plants grown at 60 and 140 μE·–2s–1 showed higher light compensation and saturation points, suggesting that the variations in pigment composition found between the different treatments determine the photosynthetic responses at sub–optimal photon fluence rates. Photosynthetic rates at light saturation were the same, on a biomass basis, for plants grown at the various photon fluence rates. Thus, the photosynthetic dark reactions were not influenced by previous light regimes. It is suggested that maximal photosynthetic rates expressed on a biomass basis better reflect the potential productivity at tight saturation than if expressed on a pigment basis. Gracilaria sp. grew better under non–filtered fluorescent and greenish than under reddish and blue–enriched light of equal and sub–optimal photon, fluence rate. However, the pigment relations of the algae did not change in a direction complementary to the light composition at which they grew. This, together with the relatively higher photosynthetic rates under reddish and blueish light for plants previously grown under reddish and blueish light, suggests that adaptations to variouslight spectra are based on mechanisms different from complementary chromatic adaptation of the pigments.  相似文献   

14.
The influence of spectral quality on growth and pigmentation was compared among five strains of marine and freshwater picocyanobacteria grown under the same photon flux density (28 μE · m?2·s?1). Growth and phycoerythrin (PE) concentration per unit carbon increased when marine Synechococcus WH7803 was grown under green light as compared to red light, but no change in phycocyanin concentration occurred. Marine Synechococcus strain 48B66 also showed greater levels of PE when grown under green light than under red light, but no concomitant growth increase occurred. Both strains thus exhibited Group II chromatic adaptation. Additionally, strain 48B66 increased the relative level of phycourobilin compared to phycoerythrobilin when grown under red light. In contrast, both marine and freshwater Synechococcus strains containing no PE showed decreased growth under green light. Chlorophyll a concentrations were greatest or among the greatest in all strains grown under green light. These results suggest that light quality, through its effects on growth rate, may be an important factor controlling the distribution and abundance of the various pigment types of Synechococcus.  相似文献   

15.
Many cyanobacteria are highly adaptable to light quality, and many species undergo a complex life cycle. In this study we show that adaptive changes in the photosynthetic apparatus of cyanobacteria are not only caused by environmental, but also by developmental factors. Spectral confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) was used to analyse in vivo the fluorescence spectra of the photosynthetic pigments chlorophyll a (Chl a), allophycocyanin (APC), phycocyanin (PC) and phycoerythrin (PE) of two Nostoc punctiforme strains. Changes in pigment fluorescence emission occurred in different developmental stages. Strain 1:1-26 showed an emission maximum at 674 nm in motile hormogonia stages, whereas vegetative stages showed maxima at 658 and 575 nm. These changes were not caused by chromatic adaptation. In contrast, the second strain (1:1-26lg) showed distinct fluorescence spectra, pigment localization and clear chromatic adaptation in red light. When these properties are known, both strains can be easily distinguished by the spectral CLSM method, which also allows the localization of the pigments within single cells. To calculate the contribution of individual phycobiliproteins to the observed changes, fluorescence spectra were analysed by spectral unmixing. This allowed the mathematical estimation of fluorescence shares for the individual phycobiliproteins in different developmental stages and both before and after chromatic adaptation. It is concluded that care should be taken when characterizing cyanobacteria by differences in pigment fluorescence, because these differences are influenced not only by chromatic adaptation, but also developmental stages. Spectral CLSM offers a powerful method to study the phycobiliprotein composition in vivo.  相似文献   

16.
Photoinhibition of mechanically stimulable bioluminescence (MSL) in the heterotrophic dinoflagellate Protoperidinium depressum Bailey was investigated using samples collected from the Massachusetts and southern Texas coasts. The times for both photoinhibition of MSL (ca. 10 min) and dark recovery from photoinhibition of MSL (ca. 45 min) in this species were similar to those reported for autotrophic dinoflagellates. The degree of photoinhibition of MSL was a linear function of the logarithm of photon flux density (PFD). The threshold PFDs for the photoinhibition of MSL were 0.02, 0.6, and 21 μmol photons · m?2· s?1 for broad-band blue, green, and red light, respectively. These PFDs are lower than those required for photoinhibition of MSL by the autotrophic dinoflagellates Pyrocystis lunula and Ceratium fusus. We speculate that photosynthetic pigments in autotrophic dinoflagellates shield the photoreceptor that causes photoinhibition of MSL, thus lowering the sensitivity of these dinoflagellates to light. When field-collected P. depressum were kept in the laboratory without growth for a week, photoinhibition of MSL's sensitivity to light increased progressively along with 1) a decrease in its bioluminescence capacity (BCAP), 2) a decrease in the ratio of MSL to BCAP (MSL/BCAP), and 3) a decrease in the orange pigmentation (probably carotenoid) of the dinoflagellate. The action spectrum for photoinhibition of MSL in P. depressum was characterized primarily with a broad peak in the blue extending into the green. We suggest that carotenoid was not a photoreceptor for the photoinhibition of MSL in P. depressum because the peak of the action spectrum was too broad and extended too far into the green part of the spectrum, and because the orange pigment present decreased as photoinhibition of MSL became more sensitive to light.  相似文献   

17.
Visual orientation in the greenhouse whitefly (Trialeurodes vaporariorum Westwood, Hemiptera: Aleyrodidae) is the result of “wavelength‐specific behaviours.” Green–yellow elicits “settling behaviour” while ultraviolet (UV) radiation initiates “migratory behaviour.” The only available physiological study of the photoreceptors' spectral efficiency showed peaks in the green and the UV range and whitefly vision was said to be dichromatic so far. In order to study the visual behaviour of T. vaporariorum, 19 narrow‐bandwidth light emitting diodes (LEDs) covering the UV‐A and visible range were used in combination with light scattering acrylic glass screens in a small‐scale choice arena under greenhouse conditions. Multiple‐choice and dual‐choice assays were performed, resulting in LED‐based behavioural action spectra of settling (green) and migratory behaviour (UV). A potential inhibitory blue–green chromatic mechanism was studied by combining yellow with different bluish LEDs. Intensity dependencies were illustrated by changing LED intensities. Regarding the “settling response,” highest attraction was achieved by a green LED with a centroid wavelength of 550 nm, while a blue LED with 469 nm proved to be most inhibitory. Besides this inhibitory interaction, an intensity dependence was observed within the action spectrum in the green–yellow range. “Migratory behaviour” was elicited the most by the UV LED with the shortest available wavelength of 373 nm. The results provide compelling behavioural evidence for the presence of a green and a yet undescribed blue sensitive photoreceptor and a blue–green opponent mechanism. Furthermore, empirical colour choice models were built and receptor peaks were estimated around 510–520 nm (green), 480–490 nm (blue) and 340–370 nm (UV). Consequently, a trichromatic receptor setup is suggested for T. vaporariorum.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of biomass concentration and growth temperature on the molecular species composition of the major galactolipids of the red microalga Porphyridium cruentum Nag. were detmined. At lower biomass concentrations, the Δ17 desaturation of arachidonic acid to eicosapentaenoic acid (20:5) was enhanced in both prokaryotic-type and eukalyotic-type molecular species of monogalactosyldiacylglycerol (MGDG) and digalactosyldiacylglycerol. We suggest that chloroplastic Δ17 desaturation is correlated with the availability of light. A reduction in the growth temperature led to an increase in the proportion of the eukalyotic molecular species of MGDG, especially for 20:5/ 20:5 MGDG, These results suggest that this molecular species, and perhaps eukaryotic molecular species in general, may play a role in the adaptation of cells to low growth temperatures.  相似文献   

19.
Reef‐building corals occur as a range of colour morphs because of varying types and concentrations of pigments within the host tissues, but little is known about their physiological or ecological significance. Here, we examined whether specific host pigments act as an alternative mechanism for photoacclimation in the coral holobiont. We used the coral Montipora monasteriata (Forskål 1775) as a case study because it occurs in multiple colour morphs (tan, blue, brown, green and red) within varying light‐habitat distributions. We demonstrated that two of the non‐fluorescent host pigments are responsive to changes in external irradiance, with some host pigments up‐regulating in response to elevated irradiance. This appeared to facilitate the retention of antennal chlorophyll by endosymbionts and hence, photosynthetic capacity. Specifically, net Pmax Chl a?1 correlated strongly with the concentration of an orange‐absorbing non‐fluorescent pigment (CP‐580). This had major implications for the energetics of bleached blue‐pigmented (CP‐580) colonies that maintained net Pmax cm?2 by increasing Pmax Chl a?1. The data suggested that blue morphs can bleach, decreasing their symbiont populations by an order of magnitude without compromising symbiont or coral health.  相似文献   

20.
Dunaliella tertiolecta Butcher was grown at two intensities (33, 150μEin · m?2· s?1) of blue light and white light at 0.25, 0.50 and 1.00 M NaCl. Growth rates were used as an indication of the relative osmoregulatory ability of cells in the various treatments. There was no significant effect on growth rate due to various NaCl molarities. No significant difference in growth rate was found between blue- and white-light cultures at the high intensity, the average growth constant being 2.07 divisions/day. However, at the low intensity illumination, blue light produced a significant increase in growth rate; 1.42 vs. 0.93 divisions/day for blue light and white light grown cells respectively. The average glycerol content of exponentially dividing cells grown at 0.25, 0.50 and 1.00 M NaCl was 0.12, 0.41 and 1.12 mg/108 cells, respectively, as measured by gas chromatography. The intracellular glycerol content was significantly reduced by blue light at both light intensities and at each NaCl molarity. However, high light intensity reduced cellular glycerol content more than the reduction effected by blue light. Glycerol accumulated in the medium throughout culture growth. Intracellular glycerol content also increased with cellular aging reaching 2.72 mg/108 cells in stationary phase, low intensity 1.00 M NaCl cultures. A negative correlation between glycerol content and growth rate was found. Total inhibition of glycerol production could not be obtained by treatment with blue light. However, this negative correlation possibly indicates that D. tertiolecta expends energy producing an excess amount of glycerol over that required for osmoregulation, leading to a reduction in the growth rate for the organism.  相似文献   

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