Dissipation of absorbed excitation energy as heat, measured by its effect on the quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence, is induced under conditions of excess light in order to protect the photosynthetic apparatus of plants from light-dependent damage. The spectral characteristics of this quenching h
Photoinhibition, 77K chlorophyll fluorescence quenching and phosphorylation of the light-harvesting chlorophyll-protein complex of photosystem II in soybean leaves
✍ Scribed by Barbara Demmig; Robyn E. Cleland; Olle Björkman
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag
- Year
- 1987
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 878 KB
- Volume
- 172
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0032-0935
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✦ Synopsis
When the capacity of leaves for orderly dissipation of excitation energy in photosynthesis is exceeded, one mechanism by which the excess energy appears to be dissipated is through a nonradiative decay process. This process is observed as a reversible quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence emission (77K) from both photosystem II and photosystem I which persists in darkness (Demmig and Bj6rkman 1987, Planta 171, 171-184). Fluorescence quenching was induced in soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) leaves by two methods: 1)changing the composition of the gas surrounding the leaf from normal air to 2% O2, 0% CO2 at a low, constant photon flux density (PFD = photon fluence rate), and 2) increasing the PFD in the presence of normal air. In either case the quenching was fully reversible after return to the original condition (low PFD, normal air). The half-time of the relaxation of the quenching was in the order of 30 min. Both treatments resulted in reversible dephosphorylation of the light-harvesting chlorophyll-protein complex of photosystem II (LHC-II). Treatment under photoinhibitory conditions (high PFD plus chloramphenicol) also caused dephosphorylation of LHC-II. Therefore, phosphorylation of LHC-II cannot account for the
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