Quaternary ammonium salts, besides having an inhibitory effect which was studied by Králová eí al. (1992), exhibited at low concentrations a stimulating effect upon the oxygen evolution rate in spinách chloroplasts. The stimulation is caused by changes in arrangement of thylakoid membranes due to a detergent-like effect of the compoimds.
The stimulating effect of 1-alkyl-1-ethyl piperidinium bromides on the oxygen evolution rate in spinách chloroplasts was caused by rearrangement of thylakoid membrane.
Two wheat {Triticum aestivum L.) cultivars, Trakia (drought-sensitive, DS) and Slavianka 196 (drought-tolerant, DT), were subjected to water stress induced by polyethyleneglycol (PEG) 6000; 15 % PEG for 6 h (mild stress); 25 % PEG for 6 h and 15 % PEG for 24 h (severe stress). Exposure of plants to water stress led to a noticeable decrease in both the initial slope of net photosynthetic rate to intercellular CO2 concentration {Pfilc^ curves and the maximum P-^. Ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (RuBPC) activity was almost unchanged under mild stress while under severe stress it was reduced by about 26-27 %. The ratio of variable to maximal chlorophyll fluorescence did not change which implied that there was little effect of examined stress conditions on the photosystem 2 electron transport. The relative magnitude of stomatal and nonstomatal factors in limitation of photosynthesis depended on stress severity.