Significant differences in net photosynthetic rate (PN) of leaves between two maize (Zea mays L.) strains (Shuang 105 and 40×44) grown in the field were observed. At several growth stages, PN of 40×44 was higher than that of Shuang 105 (from 10.3 to 32.5 %). Moreover, the strain 40×44 had a higher plant height, larger leaf area, lower chlorophyll content, and higher photochemical efficiency of photosystem 2 (PS2) (Fv/Fm and ΔF/Fm') than strain Shuang 105. Shuang 105, which showed lower PN, had lower stomatal conductances (gs) but slightly higher intercellular CO2 concentrations (Ci) than those of 40×44. Hence the differences in
PN between the two strains did not result from the difference in gs, but probably from that in light reaction system. and Hua Jiang, Da-Quan Xu.
At the whole plant level, the effect of stress is usually perceived as a decrease in photosynthesis and growth. That is why this review is focused mainly on the effect of drought on photosynthesis, its injury, and mechanisms of adaptation. The analysed literature shows that plants have evolved a number of adaptive mechanisms that allow the photochemical and biochemical systems to cope with negative changes in environment, including increased water deficit. In addition, the acquisition of tolerance to drought includes both phenotypic and genotypic changes. The approaches were made to identify those metabolic steps that are most sensitive to drought. Some studies also examined the mechanisms controlling gene expression and putative regulatory pathways. and I. Yordanov, V. Velikova, T. Tsonev.
Photon-induced absorbance changes at 830 nm (ΔA830) related to redox transformations of P700, primary electron donor of photosystem 1 (PS1), were examined in barley leaves treated with diuron and methyl viologen. In such leaves, only soluble reductants localized in chloroplast stroma could serve as electron donors for P700+. Δ A830 were induced by 1-min irradiation of leaves with "actinic light" (AL, 700±6 nm) of various irradiances. Two exponentially decaying components with half-times of 2.75 (fast component, relative magnitude of 62 % of ΔA830) and 11.90 s (slow one, 38 % of ΔA830) were distinguished in the kinetics of dark relaxation of ΔA830 after leaf irradiation with saturating AL. The components reflecting P700+ dark reduction in two units of PS1 differed in the rate of electron input from stromal reductants. The decline in AL irradiance reduced steady state δA830 magnitude, which was also accompanied by a decrease in the contribution of fast component to the overall P700+ dark reduction kinetics. The photon-response curves were obtained separately for rapidly and slowly decaying δA830. The values of half-saturating irradiance were 0.106 and 0.035 μmol m-2 s-1 for rapidly and slowly reduced PS1 units, respectively. The ratio of rate constants of P700+ dark reduction for rapidly and slowly reduced PS1 units was 1.4 times higher than the ratio of their half-saturating irradiances thus indicating higher relative antenna size in rapidly reduced PS1 units. The latter finding, taken together with higher relative amount of P700, favours the view that rapidly and slowly reduced PS1 units reflect P700+ reduction by stromal reductants in spatially separated PS1α and PS1β complexes. and E. A. Egorova, N. G. Bukhov.
Bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L. cv. Berbukskaya) seedlings were pre-treated with choline compounds, 19 mM 2-ethyltrimethylammonium chloride (Ch) or 1.6 mM 2-chloroethyltrimethylammonium chloride (CCh), during 24 h, then after 6 d the excised primary leaves were exposed to UV-B and high temperature stress. Chlorophyll (Chl) fluorescence, delayed light emission, accumulation of photosynthetic pigments, contents of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances, and activities of the active oxygen detoxifying enzymes (superoxide dismutase, ascorbate peroxidase, and glutathione reductase) were examined. Pre-treatment of plants with Ch or CCh enhanced the resistance of photosystem 2 (PS2) photochemistry to UV-B and heat injuries. The higher stress resistance can be explained by the increased activity of the detoxifying enzymes. The increased content of UV-B-absorbing pigments may also contribute to the enhanced resistance of choline-treated plants to UV-B radiation. and V. D. Kreslavski ... [et al.].
The inhibition of photosynthetic activity by bisulphite was studied in intact leaves of abscisic acid (ABA)-treated and non-treated (control) barley plants. ABA inhibited the photosynthetic process as evidenced by lower values of chlorophyll fluorescence kinetic parameters Fv/Fm (photosystem 2 activity) and Rfd (vitality index, related to the whole photosynthetic activity) compared with ABA-non-treated plants. After bisulphite treatment, the extent of inhibition was smaller in ABA-treated plants than in the control ones indicating a protective effect of ABA. The protective action sites of ABA were the QA reduction and the Calvin cycle. and C. N. N'Soukpoè-Kossi ... [et al.].
Infiltration of methyl viologen (MV, source of O2-) and Na-diethyldithiocarbamate (DDC, inhibitor of SOD) into wheat leaves resulted in the accumulation of active oxygen species and photo-oxidative damage to photosynthetic apparatus under both moderate and high irradiance. Exogenous antioxidants, ascorbate (ASA) and mannitol, scavenged active oxygen efficiently, protected the photosynthetic system from MV and DDC induced oxidative damage, and maintained high Fv/Fm [maximal photochemical efficiency of photosystem 2 (PS2) while all PS2 reaction centres are open], Fm/F0 (another expression for the maximal photochemical efficiency of PS2), ΦPS2 (actual quantum yield of PS2 under actinic irradiation), qP (photochemical quenching coefficient), PN (net photosynthetic rate), and lowered qNP (non-photochemical quenching coefficient) of the leaves kept under high irradiance and oxidative stress. Phenolic compounds used in these experiments, catechol (Cat), resorcinol (Res), and tannic acid (Tan), had similar anti-oxidative activity and protective effect on photosynthetic apparatus as ASA and mannitol. The anti-oxidative activity and the protective effect of phenolic compounds increased with increase in their concentration from 100 to 300 g m-3. The number and the position of hydroxyl group in phenolic molecules seemed to influence their antioxidative activity. and Hui Jie Zhao, Qi Zou.
Chloroplast thylakoid contains several membrane-bound protein kinases that phosphorylate thylakoid polypeptides for the regulation of photosynthesis. Thylakoid protein phosphorylation is activated when the plastoquinone pool is reduced either by light-dependent electron flow through photosystem 2 (PS2) or by adding exogenous reductants such as durohydroquinone in the dark. The major phosphorylated proteins on thylakoid are components of light-harvesting complex 2 (LHC2) and a PS2 associated 9 kDa phosphoprotein. Radiation inactivation technique was employed to determine the functional masses of various kinases for protein phosphorylation in thylakoids. Under the photosynthetically active radiation (PAR), the apparent functional masses of thylakoid protein kinase systems (TPKXs) for catalyzing phosphorylation of LHC2 27 and 25 kDa polypeptides were 540±50 and 454±35 kDa as well as it was 448±23 kDa for PS2 9 kDa protein phosphorylation. Furthermore, the functional sizes of dark-regulated TPKXs for 25 and 9 kDa proteins were 318±25 and 160±8 kDa. The 9 kDa protein phosphorylation was independent of LHC2 polypeptides phosphorylation with regard to its TPKX functional mass. Target size analysis of protein phosphorylation mentioned above indicates that thylakoid contains a group of distinct protein kinase systems. A working model is accordingly proposed to interpret the interaction between these protein kinase systems. and S. C. Lee ... [et al.].
The responses to irradiance of photosynthetic CO2 assimilation and photosystem 2 (PS2) electron transport were simultaneously studied by gas exchange and chlorophyll (Chl) fluorescence measurement in two-year-old apple tree leaves (Malus pumila Mill. cv. Tengmu No.1/Malus hupehensis Rehd). Net photosynthetic rate (PN) was saturated at photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) 600-1 100 (μmol m-2 s-1, while the PS2 non-cyclic electron transport (P-rate) showed a maximum at PPFD 800 μmol m-2 s-1. With PPFD increasing, either leaf potential photosynthetic CO2 assimilation activity (Fd/Fs) and PS2 maximal photochemical activity (Fv/Fm) decreased or the ratio of the inactive PS2 reaction centres (RC) [(Fi - Fo)/(Fm - Fo)] and the slow relaxing non-photochemical Chl fluorescence quenching (qs) increased from PPFD 1 200 μmol m-2 s-1, but cyclic electron transport around photosystem 1 (RFp), irradiance induced PS2 RC closure [(Fs - Fo')/Fm' - Fo')], and the fast and medium relaxing non-photochemical Chl fluorescence quenching (qf and qm) increased remarkably from PPFD 900 (μmol m-2 s-1. Hence leaf photosynthesis of young apple leaves saturated at PPFD 800 μmol m-2 s-1 and photoinhibition occurred above PPFD 900 μmol m-2 s-1. During the photoinhibition at different irradiances, young apple tree leaves could dissipate excess photons mainly by energy quenching and state transition mechanisms at PPFD 900-1 100 μmol m-2 s-1, but photosynthetic apparatus damage was unavoidable from PPFD 1 200 μmol m-2 s-1. We propose that Chl fluorescence parameter P-rate is superior to the gas exchange parameter PN and the Chl fluorescence parameter Fv/Fm as a definition of saturation irradiance and photoinhibition of plant leaves. and Husen Jia, Dequan Li.
Flooding stress (FS) induced changes in pigment and protein contents and in photochemical efficiency of thylakoid membranes of chloroplasts were investigated during senescence of primary leaves of rice seedlings. Leaf senescence was accompanied by loss in 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol (DCPIP) photoreduction, rate of oxygen evolution, quantum yield of photosystem 2 with an increase in MDA accumulation, and non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) of chlorophyll fluorescence. These changes were further aggravated when the leaves during this period experienced FS. The increase in NPQ value under stress may indicate photosynthetic adaptation to FS. and S. K. Mishra ... [et al.].
Experiments were carried out to investigate the changes in CO2 assimilation, photon allocation, and photosynthetic electron flux in leaves of cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.) plants after chilling stress. Chilling significantly decreased CO2 assimilation, the energy flux via linear electron transport (J PS2) and non-constitutive thermal dissipation (J NPQ) but increased fluorescence and constitutive thermal dissipation (J f,D) in chilling-sensitive genotype Jinyan No. 4. In contrast, chilling had little effects on J NPQ and J f,D although CO2 assimilation and J PS2 were inhibited in chilling-tolerant genotype Jinchun No. 3. In parallel with the reduction in J PS2, electron flux to oxygenation and carboxylation by ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase all significantly decreased while electron flux to O2 significantly increased, especially in chilling-sensitive genotype. Thermal and fluorescence dissipation were the main energy dissipation pathways whilst water-water cycle was an important electron sink when photosynthetic carbon reduction was suppressed after chilling. Chilling sensitivity of the photosynthetic apparatus was related to the operation of different photoprotection mechanisms. and Z. H. Zhou ... [et al.].