| Literature DB >> 7213676 |
Abstract
The characteristics of double hitting in Photosystem II charge separation and oxygen evolution in algae and chloroplasts were investigated with saturating excitation flashes of 3 microseconds, 300 ns and 5 ns duration. Two types of double hitting or advancement in S-states were found to occur in oxygen evolution: a non-photochemical type found even with 5 ns flashes and a photochemical type seen only with microsecond-long flashes, which have extensive tails. The non-photochemical type, occurring with a probability of about 3%, is sensitive to the physiological condition of the sample, and is only present in algae or chloroplast samples that have been freshly prepared. In chloroplasts incubated with ferricyanide, a 3-fold increase in double advancement of S-states is observed with xenon-flash illumination but not with 300 ns or 5 ns laser illumination. However, double turnovers in Photosystem II reaction center charge separation are large with xenon flash or 300 ns laser illumination but not with 5 ns laser illumination. This indicates that quite different kinetic processes are involved in double advancement in S-states for oxygen evolution and double turnovers in charge separation. Various models of the Photosystem II reaction center are discussed. Also, based on experiments with chloroplasts incubated with ferricyanide, an unique solution to the oxygen S-state distribution in the dark suggested by Thibault (Thibault, P. (1978) C.R. Acad. Sci. Paris 287, 725-728) can be rejected.Entities:
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Year: 1981 PMID: 7213676 DOI: 10.1016/0005-2728(81)90005-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochim Biophys Acta ISSN: 0006-3002