| Literature DB >> 29426901 |
Melinda Magyar1, Gábor Sipka1, László Kovács1, Bettina Ughy1, Qingjun Zhu2, Guangye Han2, Vladimír Špunda3,4, Petar H Lambrev1, Jian-Ren Shen2,5, Győző Garab6,7.
Abstract
Photosystem II (PSII) catalyses the photoinduced oxygen evolution and, by producing reducing equivalents drives, in concert with PSI, the conversion of carbon dioxide to sugars. Our knowledge about the architecture of the reaction centre (RC) complex and the mechanisms of charge separation and stabilisation is well advanced. However, our understanding of the processes associated with the functioning of RC is incomplete: the photochemical activity of PSII is routinely monitored by chlorophyll-a fluorescence induction but the presently available data are not free of controversy. In this work, we examined the nature of gradual fluorescence rise of PSII elicited by trains of single-turnover saturating flashes (STSFs) in the presence of a PSII inhibitor, permitting only one stable charge separation. We show that a substantial part of the fluorescence rise originates from light-induced processes that occur after the stabilisation of charge separation, induced by the first STSF; the temperature-dependent relaxation characteristics suggest the involvement of conformational changes in the additional rise. In experiments using double flashes with variable waiting times (∆τ) between them, we found that no rise could be induced with zero or short ∆τ, the value of which depended on the temperature - revealing a previously unknown rate-limiting step in PSII.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29426901 PMCID: PMC5807364 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-21195-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Temperature dependence of chlorophyll-a fluorescence induction. Kinetic traces at different temperatures (a) and parameters of STSF-induced fluorescence transients as a function of temperature in isolated spinach thylakoid membranes (b) and in isolated PSII core complexes of T. vulcanus (c). In panel a, red and black data points belong to transients induced by a single STSF and a train of STSFs, respectively. Fm′ and F1′ denote the corresponding fluorescence levels measured after 15 min in the dark following the excitation(s), and thus the black, blue and red curves represent the temperature dependences of Fm, Fm′ and F1′, respectively, normalized to F1. In panel a, the decay kinetics of F1 and Fm levels were measured on separate samples. In all cases when measuring the decay kinetics, in order to avoid its actinic effect, the measuring beam was turned on and off intermittently.
Figure 2Activation energies associated with the fluorescence relaxation in thylakoid membranes and PSII core particles. The activation energies (EA) were calculated from the decay of Fm in a temperature range where the decay of F1 was negligible.
Figure 3Chlorophyll-a fluorescence induced by double flashes. Kinetic traces of the F1-to-F2 increment with two different dark times (Δτ) between the first and second flashes, at two different temperatures in isolated spinach thylakoid membranes (a) and dependences of the F1-to-F2 increments on the waiting time (Δτ) between the flashes in thylakoid membranes (b), and in TRIS-washed thylakoid membranes, intact cells of the PAL mutant of Synechocystis PCC6803 and in the PSII core particles (c) at different temperatures as indicated. F1,2 denotes the fluorescence intensity level following the first double STSF.