The endogenous thiols (PSH, protein sulfhydryls; NPSH, nonprotein sulfhydryls; and GSH, glutathione) were measured in the 66 and 67 murine carcinoma cells growing under different physiological conditions in vitro (e.g., proliferation, P; nutrient-deprived quiescence QI; and QI cells stimulated by re
Photosynthesis–Irradiance Response at Physiological Level: a Mechanistic Model
✍ Scribed by BO-PING HAN
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 234 KB
- Volume
- 213
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-5193
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✦ Synopsis
A mechanistic model is developed to present the photosynthetic response of phytoplankton to irradiance at the physiological level. The model is operated on photosynthetic units (PSU), and each PSU is assumed to have two states: reactive and activated. Light absorption that drives a reactive PSU into the activated state results from the e!ective absorption of the PSU. Transitions between the two states are asymmetrical in rate. A PSU in the reactive state becomes activated much faster than it recovers from the activated state to the reactive one. The turnover time for an activated PSU to transit into the reactive one is de"ned by the turnover time of the electron transport chain. The present model yields a photosynthesis}irradiance curve (PE-curve) in a hyperbola, which is described by three physiological parameters: e!ective cross-section ( .1''
), turnover time of electron transport chain ( ) and number of PSUs (N). The PE-curve has an initial slope of .1''
;N, a half-saturated irradiance of 1/( .1'' ), and a maximal photosynthetic rate of N/ at the saturated irradiance. The PE-curve from the present model is comparable to the empirical function based on the target theory described by the Poisson distribution.
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