ANALYSIS OF MICROSECOND FLUORESCENCE YIELD AND DELAYED LIGHT EMISSION CHANGES AFTER A SINGLE FLASH IN PEA CHLOROPLASTS: EFFECTS OF MONO‐ AND DIVALENT CATIONS
1978; Wiley; Volume: 28; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1111/j.1751-1097.1978.tb07735.x
ISSN1751-1097
AutoresDaniel Wong, Paul A. Jursinic,
Tópico(s)Plant Stress Responses and Tolerance
ResumoAbstract. New results are presented on the effects of mono‐ and divalent cations on concurrent changes in the microsecond yields and kinetics of chlorophyll a fluorescence and delayed light emission, and the light saturation curve for the latter at 100 μs, following a 10 ns flash at 337 nm. (1) The fluorescence yield increases exponentially from 3 to 30 μs (lifetime, τ, 6.4 ± 0.6/μs), and decays biphasically between 50 and 800μs. (2) The delayed light emission decays biphasically with two exponential phases: fast phase, T = 7–10μs, and slow phase, T = 33–40μs. (3) The light saturation curve for 100μs delayed light emission is satisfactorily represented by a one‐hit Poisson saturation curve. (4) Addition of 5 mM NaCl to salt‐depleted chloroplasts decreases (by as much as 40%) the yields of μs fluorescence and delayed light emission, and the subsequent addition of 5 mM MgCl 2 increases the yields (≤2 × over samples with only NaCl). (5) The fluorescence yield rise and delayed light emission decay kinetics are independent of low concentrations of cations. The lifetime of the fast phase of fluorescence decay changes from ˜90μs to ˜160μs, when Na + or Na + + Mg 2+ are added. Based on a detailed analysis presented in this paper, the following conclusions regarding the effects of low concentrations (few m M ) of mono‐and divalent cations in sucrose‐washed chloroplasts at room temperature are made: (a) Na + decreases (˜6%) and Mg 2+ increases (˜ 20% compared with the Na + sample) the sensitization of photosystem II photochemistry: this effect is small, but significant. (b) Na + increases and Mg 2+ decreases the efficiency for radiationless transitions in singlet excited Chl a in the antenna and closed reaction center of PS II; this includes non‐radiative energy transfer to PS I, intramolecular intersystem crossing and internal conversion. The ratio of the sum of the rate constants for radiationless transitions to that for fluorescence increases by ˜ 2‐fold upon the addition of Na + , and is completely reversed by the addition of Mg 2+ . (c) The rate constant for the re‐oxidation of Q ‐ decreases (about 50%) in the presence of Na + or Na + + Mg 2+ . These conclusions imply that cations produce multiple changes in the primary photoprocesses of PS II at physiological temperatures. It is proposed that these changes are mutually independent and can co‐exist.
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