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  • Articles  (224)
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  • photosynthesis  (224)
  • Springer  (224)
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  • 1995-1999  (224)
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Mangroves and salt marshes 3 (1999), S. 147-153 
    ISSN: 1572-977X
    Keywords: conductance ; gas exchange ; mangrove ; photorespiration ; photosynthesis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Photosynthetic characteristics were investigated in the geographically isolated and restricted mangrove species, P.rhizophoreae. Gas exchange measurements were made on two to seven years old hydroponically grown plants maintained in 10%, 50% and 100% seawater. CO2 exchange in the 50% and 100% seawater treatments was reduced by 10% and 26%, respectively, compared to the 10% seawater treatment. CO2 response curves indicated that carboxylation efficiency was greater in 10% than in 50% seawater, while stomatal limitation increased from 11% to 16% as salinity increased from 10% to 50% seawater. Carbon losses via photorespiration (31% and 41%) and CO2 compensation point (67 and 81 μ11−1) were greater in 50% than in the 10% seawater treatment. Maximal CO2 exchange occurred at 30 °C with no differences among the salinity treatments. The results indicate that P. rhizophoreae exhibits many gas exchange characteristics previously reported for other mangroves.
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1573-9058
    Keywords: diurnal pattern ; intercellular CO2 concentration ; leaf conductance ; leaf water potential ; micro-habitat ; photosynthesis ; seasonal dominance ; soil-to-leaf hydraulic conductance ; trampling tolerance ; transpiration
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Field gas exchange and water potential in the leaves of a C3 dicot, Plantago asiatica L., and a C4 monocot, Eleusine indica Gaertn., which dominate in trampled vegetation in eastern Japan were surveyed during the growing periods for two consecutive years. Net photosynthetic rate (P N) of E. indica increased with photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) and leaf temperature (TL). P N was not saturated at PPFDs above 1500 µmol m−2 s−1 and at TL above 30 °C. On a sunny day in mid summer, maximum P N was two times higher in E. indica than in P. asiatica [42 vs. 20 µmol(CO2) m−2 s−1], but their transpiration rate (E) and the leaf water potential (ΨL) were similar. Soil-to-leaf hydraulic conductance, which probably plays a role in water absorption from the trampled compact soil, was higher in E. indica than in P. asiatica. The differences in photosynthetic traits between E. indica explain why E. indica communities more commonly develop at heavily trampled sites in summer than the P. asiatica communities.
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Photosynthetica 36 (1999), S. 321-331 
    ISSN: 1573-9058
    Keywords: Calvin cycle enzymes ; chlorophyll ; chloroplast structure ; heavy metals ; photosynthesis ; photosystems ; plant growth ; uptake of mineral elements
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Cadmium is one of the most dangerous environmental pollutants, affecting, among other things, plant mineral composition. It easily interacts with iron, one of the most important elements for plant growth and metabolism. This interaction, including modifying effects of lowered or excessive Fe supply on Cd-exposed plants and its consequences for the photosynthetic apparatus is reviewed. The influence of modified Fe and Cd supply on the uptake of both metals, their distribution, plant growth, and photosynthesis is also explained. Moderate Fe excess has a beneficial influence on Cd-treated plants, resulting in more intensive growth, photosynthetic pigments accumulation, and more efficient light phase of photosynthesis. Nutrient-medium Fe deficiency increases plant susceptibility to Cd. The main open questions of Cd/Fe interaction are: (1) the strong Fe-dependency of Cd mobility within the plant, and (2) photosynthetic dark phase adaptation to Cd stress.
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1573-9058
    Keywords: carbon partitioning ; photosynthesis ; plant growth ; microbial biomass ; respiration rate ; Triticum aestivum L.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract We examined the carbon budget of young winter wheat plants and their associated microorganisms as affected by a doubling of the atmospheric CO2 concentration (700 µmol mol-1). Plants were grown hydroponically in pre-sterilised sand at a controlled irradiance and temperature regime. Net photosynthesis (PN) and respiration (RD) rates of roots and shoots were measured continuously, plant growth and carbon distribution in the plant-root medium-associated microorganism system were determined destructively in interval-based analyses. PN in elevated CO2 grown plants (EC) was 123% of that in the control (AC) plants when averaged over the whole life span (39-d-old plants, 34 d in EC), but the percentage varied with the developmental stage being 115, 88, and 167% in the pretillering, tillering, and posttillering phase, respectively. There was a transient depression of PN, higher amplitude of day/night fluctuations of the chloroplast starch content, and depression of carbon content in rhizosphere of EC plants during the period of tillering. After 34 d in EC, carbon content in shoots, roots, and in rhizodepositions was enhanced by the factors 1.05, 1.28, and 1.96, respectively. Carbon partitioning between above and belowground biomass was not affected by EC, however, proportionally more C in the belowground partitioning was allocated into the root biomass. Carbon flow from roots to rhizodepositions and rhizosphere microflora was proportional to PN; its fraction in daily assimilated carbon decreased from young (17%) to order (3-4%) plants.
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  • 5
    ISSN: 1573-9058
    Keywords: chloroplast dimensions ; electron microscopy ; peripheral reticulum ; photosynthesis ; plastoglobuli ; starch ; stereology ; stroma ; thylakoids
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Changes in Hill reaction activity (HRA) and ultrastructure of mesophyll cell (MC) chloroplasts were studied during the ontogeny of third leaf of maize plants using polarographic oxygen evolution measurement, transmission electron microscopy, and stereology. The chloroplast ultrastructure was compared in young (actively growing), mature, and senescing leaves of two different inbreds and their reciprocal F1 hybrids. Statistically significant differences in both HRA and MC chloroplast ultrastructure were observed between different stages of leaf ontogeny. Growth of plastoglobuli was the most striking characteristic of chloroplast maturation and senescence. The chloroplasts in mature and senescing leaves had a more developed system of thylakoids compared to the young leaves. Higher HRA was usually connected with higher thylakoid volume density of MC chloroplasts.
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  • 6
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Photosynthetica 36 (1999), S. 471-476 
    ISSN: 1573-9058
    Keywords: Ambrosia trifida ; Apocynum cannabinum ; Aster pilosus ; competition ; Eryngium yuccifolium ; Lespedeza capitata ; photosynthesis ; Solidago canadensis ; stomatal conductance ; water potential
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract An ecophysiological approach was used to determine if competition can be detected among plants in a recently abandoned old-field and in a native tallgrass prairie in northeastern Kansas. In situ photosynthetic parameters and water potentials (Ψ) of target plants were measured 1-2 d after neighbor (intra- and interspecific) removal as well as 1-4 weeks later, and compared with values for plants with neighbors. Only two of the six study species (four old-field and two prairie species) responded to removal of neighboring plants, and only after several weeks had elapsed. Net photosynthetic rates (PN) and stomatal conductances (gs) of Ambrosia trifida in an old-field increased after removal of both intra- and interspecific neighbors. For Apocynum cannabinum, another old-field species, PN of target plants without neighbors was significantly higher than that of target plants with neighbors. For both these species, values of Ψ were not different between target plants with and without neighbors, suggesting that increased availability of nutrients may have been responsible for the observed ecophysiological responses. Though numerous past studies indicate that competition is a major factor influencing plants in old-field and in prairie communities, the experimental approach used in this study revealed that neighbor removal had only limited effects on ecophysiology of the target plants in either community.
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  • 7
    ISSN: 1573-9058
    Keywords: endophyte ; Lolium perenne ; Neotyphodium lolii ; photosynthesis ; stomatal conductance ; transpiration rate ; water potential
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The symbiotic association of endophyte fungus, Neotyphodium lolii, and ryegrass improves the ryegrass resistance to drought. This is shown by a 30 % increase in the number of suckers in infected plants (E+), compared to plants lacking endophyte (E−), and by a higher water potential in the E+ than E− plants. The E+ plants have higher stomatal conductance (g s), transpiration rate, net photosynthetic rate (P N), and photorespiratory electron transport rate than the E− plants. The maximal photochemical efficiency (Fv/Fm) and the actual photochemical efficiency (ΦPS2) are not affected by the endophyte fungus. The increase in P N of the E+ plants subjected to water stress was independent from internal CO2 concentration. An increased P N was observed in E+ plants also in optimal water supply. Hence the drought resistance of E+ plants results in increased g s, P N, and photorespiratory electron transport rate.
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  • 8
    ISSN: 1573-9058
    Keywords: Amphisorus ; Amphistegina ; chlorophyll fluorescence kinetics ; electron transport ; irradiance ; photosynthesis ; photosystem 2 ; quantum yield ; Sorites ; temperature
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Coral reef bleaching is a global phenomenon poorly understood today. We investigated during 7 d the photosynthetic behaviour of symbionts of coral reef and temperate foraminifers in hospite, by means of the JIP-test. By this screening test the fast fluorescence rise O-J-I-P, measured by a Plant Efficiency Analyser (PEA) with 10 µs time resolution and 12 bit signal resolution, was analysed. It informs about the structure and function of photosystem 2 being at different physiological states established by adaptation to different irradiance and temperature. The test needs a measuring time in vivo of only 1 to 5 s, and thus many samples can be analysed. The measurements can be done continuously even on a single cell in a test tube or on the reef. The reef foraminifers tested here were Amphistegina and Amphisorus, freshly collected in Mauritius. As a temperate foraminifer, Sorites from the Mediterranean Sea was tested. The cells are very sensitive to slight temperature changes (25 to 32 °C). The comparison showed that the more the foraminifers live in an environment with constant temperature the less they are able to respond to temperature changes and, thus, the less they can adapt. Rising the temperature increases in general the sensitivity to different stress factors, such as high irradiance, pH, CO2, etc. After the test series, the cells recovered fully and were kept in an aquarium for long time observation.
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  • 9
    ISSN: 1440-1703
    Keywords: chlorophyll fluorescence ; Macaranga gigantea ; Neobalanocarpus heimii ; photosynthesis ; Shorea leprosula ; tropical rainforest
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Interspecific ecophysiological differences in response to different light environments are important to consider in regeneration behavior and forest dynamics. The diurnal changes in leaf gas exchange and chlorophyll fluorescence of two dipterocarps, Shorea leprosula (a high light-requiring) and Neobalanocarpus heimii (a low light-requiring), and a pioneer tree species (Macaranga gigantea) growing in open and gap sites were examined. In the open site, the maximum net photosynthetic rate (Pn), photosystem II (PSII) quantum yield (δ; F/Fm′), and relative electron transport rate (r-ETR) through PSII at a given photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) was higher in S. leprosula and M. gigantea than in N. heimii, while non-photochemical quenching (NPQ) at a given PPFD was higher in N. heimii. The maximum values of net photosynthetic rate (Pn) in M. gigantea and S. leprosula was higher in the open site (8–11 μmol m−2 s−1) than in the gap site (5 μmol m−2 s−1), whereas that in N. heimii was lower in the open site (2 μmol m−2 s−1) than in the gap site (4 μmol m−2 s−1), indicating that N. heimii was less favorable to the open site. These data provide evidence to support the hypothesis that ecophysiological characteristics link with plant’s regeneration behavior and successional status. Although Pn and stomatal conductance decreased at midday in M. gigantea and S. leprosula in the open site, both r-ETR and leaf temperature remained unchanged. This indicates that stomatal closure rather than reduced photochemical capacity limited Pn in the daytime. Conversely, there was reduced r-ETR under high PPFD conditions in N. heimii in the open site, indicating reduced photochemical capacity. In the gap site, Pn increased in all leaves in the morning before exposure to direct sunlight, suggesting a relatively high use of diffuse light in the morning.
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  • 10
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
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    Photosynthetica 36 (1999), S. 259-266 
    ISSN: 1573-9058
    Keywords: chlorophyll fluorescence ; fern ; fertilization ; growth ; photosynthesis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Plants grown at low irradiance were fertilized with 0, 60, and 600 g m-3 NH4NO3 once every fortnight. Plants treated with high N concentrations showed an increased growth, producing longer and broader fronds with larger areas, and were darker green in colour. Nitrogen also increased the content of chlorophyll (Chl) and carotenoids per leaf area unit. Different N treatments did not affect the photosynthetic efficiency of photosystem 2, as reflected by the high values of Chl fluorescence kinetics Fv/Fm, ranging between 0.81 to 0.84, and Fv/F0 of 4.30 to 5.10. An increase in photochemical quenching (qP), accompanied by a decrease in non-photochemical quenching (qN), was observed in sporophytes fertilized with increased concentrations of NH4NO3. Nitrogen availability allowed sporophytes of Acrostichum aureum to become more established under natural condi tions.
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  • 11
    Electronic Resource
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    Journal of chemical ecology 25 (1999), S. 1611-1621 
    ISSN: 1573-1561
    Keywords: Hydroquinone ; allelopathy ; plant water balance ; photosynthesis ; chlorophyll fluorescence ; 13C isotopes ; leafy spurge ; Euphorbia esula ; small everlasting ; Antennaria microphylla Rydb
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract Field observations indicate leafy spurge (Euphorbia esula) is inhibited by the presence of Antennaria microphylla. Hydroquinone (HQ), one of several compounds isolated from A. microphylla has been shown to inhibit leafy spurge seed germination, root elongation, and callus culture growth. The present study was designed to analyze the effects of HQ on water relations and photosynthesis of leafy spurge. Plants grown in 0.25 mM HQ had consistently higher leaf diffusive resistance and lower transpiration rates than control plants (P 〈 0.05). Chlorophyll fluorescence was significantly lower than controls (P 〈 0.05) towards the end of the treatment period. At the end of the treatment, tissue from 0.25 mM HQ plants had higher levels of 13C, indicating there had been a sustained interference with stomatal function. These data suggest that a disruption of the plant water balance is one mechanism of leafy spurge inhibition by A. microphylla.
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  • 12
    ISSN: 1573-5028
    Keywords: cyanobacteria ; immunogold labelling ; light-harvesting complexes ; photosynthesis ; phycobilins ; phytoplankton
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract An intrinsic divinyl-chlorophyll a/b antenna and a particular form of phycobiliprotein, phycoerythrin (PE) III, coexist in the marine oxyphotobacterium Prochlorococcus marinus CCMP 1375. The genomic region including the cpeB/A operon of P. marinus was analysed. It encompasses 10 153 nucleotides that encode three structural phycobiliproteins and at least three (possibly five) different polypeptides analogous to cyanobacterial or red algal proteins involved either in the linkage of subunits or the synthesis and attachment of chromophoric groups. This gene cluster is part of the chromosome and is located within a distance of less than 110 kb from a previously characterized region containing the genes aspA-psbA-aroC. Whereas the Prochlorococcus phycobiliproteins are characterized by distinct deletions and amino acid replacements with regard to analogous proteins from other organisms, the gene arrangement resembles the organization of phycobiliprotein genes in some other cyanobacteria, in particular marine Synechococcus strains. The expression of two of the Prochlorococcus polypeptides as recombinant proteins in Escherichia coli allowed the production of individual homologous antisera to the Prochlorococcus α and β PE subunits. Experiments using these sera show that the Prochlorococcus PEs are specifically associated to the thylakoid membrane and that the protein level does not significantly vary as a function of light irradiance or growth phase.
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  • 13
    Electronic Resource
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    Hydrobiologia 398-399 (1999), S. 355-359 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: CO2 ; emersion ; macroalgae ; photosynthesis ; seaweeds
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract In order to assess the ecological impacts of the atmospheric CO2 increase on the intertidal macroalgae during emersion, the photosynthesis of Enteromorpha linza (a green alga), Ishige okamurae (a brown alga) and Gloiopeltis furcata (a red alga) was investigated in air as a function of CO2 concentrations and water loss. Their photosynthesis was not saturated at the present atmospheric CO2 level (350 μl l −1 or 15.6 μM), the CO2 compensation point and $$K_{[{\text{mCO}}_{\text{2}} ]} $$ increased with increasing desiccation, showing that desiccation lowers the CO2 affinity of the intertidal macroalgae. It was concluded that E. linza, I. okamurae and G. furcata, while exposed to air, can benefit from atmospheric CO2 rise, especially when the algae have lost some water.
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  • 14
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: photosynthesis ; respiration ; Gelidiella acerosa ; culture ; tidal habitat ; salinity ; temperature
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Several samples of the red seaweed, Gelidiella acerosa (Forssk.) Feldmann & Hamel occurring in tidepools, high intertidal rocks, and shallow subtidal areas on a reef flat in Ilocos Norte, northern Philippines were studied in terms of their photosynthetic and respiratory responses (μl O2 gDW−1 h−1) to four salinity (22, 28, 34, 40‰) and three temperature (22, 28, 34 °C) combinations. The upper intertidal plants tolerated low salinities (22–28‰) better than high salinities (34–40‰), while tidepool and subtidal plants were not affected. Temperatures of 22 through 34 °C resulted in a one-fold increase in their photosynthetic rates and insignificant differences in their respiratory rates while tidepool and subtidal plants almost doubled their photosynthetic rates and their respiration rates increased by about 5–50 times. There were no interaction effects. Therefore, intertidal plants appe ared to be more tolerant to wide temperature fluctuations and low salinity levels; while tidepool and subtidal plants were least affected by salinity variations but were quite sensitive to temperature fluctuations. Vegetative and tetrasporic plants had similar photosynthetic and respiratory responses to salinity and temperature variations, although vegetative plants had significantly higher net photosynthesis under the minimum and maximum temperatures tested (22 and 34 °C). Reproductive G. acerosa showed greater tolerance to temperature fluctuations. These responses indicated that physiological changes may have occurred when the species became reproductive. Tolerance of G. acerosa to low salinities suggests that lowering the salinities in culture tanks could be used to eradicate contaminants, i.e., dinoflagellates and filamentous green algae. Temperature of 28 °C appeared to be optimum for all plant types as reflected by their high photosynthetic and low respiratory rates .
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  • 15
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    Hydrobiologia 398-399 (1999), S. 361-373 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: production ; mathematical model ; Ecklonia cava ; light ; temperature ; photosynthesis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The dependence of photosynthesis on light and temperature is modelled through analysis of transition probabilities of photosystems. In the model, two transition probabilities are functions of light, and one transition probability is a function of temperature. The estimated light-saturated photosynthesis of Ecklonia cava blades at 20 °C was 0.037 mg C cm−2 h−1. The value of the activation energy, the standard enthalpy and the standard entropy were estimated to be 56.5 kJ mol−1, 204 kJ mol−1 and 678 J mol−1 K−1, respectively. A production model (an integral photosynthesis model) for an E. cava stand was developed using the photosynthesis model. Production calculated by the model agreed well with observed data during the growing period of an E. cava stand at a field observation site on the west side of Miura Peninsula, Japan. Results of the analysis of the effects of irradiance and temperature on the production of the E. cava community by the model are: 1. Production decreased with irradiance decrease. The estimated compensation irradiance was 26.5 μmol photons m−2 s−1 when the biomass was 3 kg wet mass m−2 (blade:stipe ratio = 2 kg m−2:1 kg m−2) and the temperature was 20 °C. 2. The optimum temperature decreased when irradiance decreased and when biomass increased. The highest estimated value for the optimum temperature was 24.0 °C. The estimated optimum temperature was 18.2 °C when the biomass was 12 kg wet mass m−2 and the photon irradiance was 200 μmol photons m−2 s−1. 3. The amount of biomass that resulted in the maximum production was influenced by irradiance and temperature. At 400 μmol photons m−2 s−1 and 20 °C, the estimated value of the biomass (blade:stipe = 2:1) giving the maximum pr oduction was about 5.3 kg wet mass m−2. However, at 100 μmol photons m−2 s−1 and 24 °C, the estimated value was about 3.0 kg wet mass m−2. The estimated values of the maximum production under the two conditions were 1.05 and 0.30 g C m−2 h−1, respectively.
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  • 16
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: chlorophyll fluorescence ; cyclic electron flow ; high temperature ; light scattering ; photosynthesis ; Photosystems II and I
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract In illuminated intact spinach chloroplasts, warming to and beyond 40 °C increased the proton permeability of thylakoids before linear electron transport through Photosystem II was inhibited. Simultaneously, antimycin A-sensitive cyclic electron transport around Photosystem II was activated with oxygen or CO2, but not with nitrite as electron acceptors. Between 40 to 42 °C, activation of cyclic electron transport balanced the loss of protons so that a sizeable transthylakoid proton gradient was maintained. When the temperature of darkened spinach leaves was slowly increased to 40°C, reduction of the quinone acceptor of Photosystem II, QA, increased particularly when respiratory CO2 production and autoxidation of plastoquinones was inhibited by decreasing the oxygen content of the atmosphere from 21 to 1%. Simultaneously, Photosystem II activity was partially lost. The enhanced dark QA reduction disappeared after the leaf temperature was decreased to 20 °C. No membrane energization was detected by light-scattering measurements during heating the leaf in the dark. In illuminated spinach leaves, light scattering and nonphotochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence increased during warming to about 40 °C while Photosystem II activity was lost, suggesting extra energization of thylakoid membranes that is unrelated to Photosystem II functioning. After P700 was oxidized by far-red light, its reduction in the dark was biphasic. It was accelerated by factors of up to 10 (fast component) or even 25 (slow component) after short heat exposure of the leaves. Similar acceleration was observed at 20 °C when anaerobiosis or KCN were used to inhibit respiratory oxidation of reductants. Methyl viologen, which accepts electrons from reducing side of Photosystem II, completely abolished heat-induced acceleration of P700+ reduction after far-red light. The data show that increasing the temperature of isolated chloroplasts or intact spinach leaves to about 40 °C not only inhibits linear electron flow through Photosystem II but also activates Photosystem I-driven cyclic electron transport pathways capable of contributing to the transthylakoid proton gradient. Heterogeneity of the kinetics of P700+ reduction after far-red oxidation is discussed in terms of Photosystem I-dependent cyclic electron transport in stroma lamellae and grana margins.
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  • 17
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: bacteriochlorophyll a ; electron transfer ; light harvesting ; photosynthesis ; Rhodobacter sphaeroides ; reaction center
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The effect of the light harvesting 1 (LH1) antenna complex on the driving force for light-driven electron transfer in the Rhodobacter sphaeroides reaction center has been examined. Equilibrium redox titrations show that the presence of the LH1 antenna complex influences the free energy change for the primary electron transfer reaction through an effect on the reduction potential of the primary donor. A lowering of the redox potential of the primary donor due to the presence of the core antenna is consistently observed in a series of reaction center mutants in which the reduction potential of the primary donor was varied over a 130 mV range. Estimates of the magnitude of the change in driving force for charge separation from time-resolved delayed fluorescence measurements in the mutant reaction centers suggest that the mutations exert their effect on the driving force largely through an influence on the redox properties of the primary donor. The results demonstrate that the energetics of light-driven electron transfer in reaction centers are sensitive to the environment of the complex, and provide indirect evidence that the kinetics of electron transfer are modulated by the presence of the LH1 antenna complexes that surround the reaction center in the natural membrane.
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  • 18
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    Photosynthesis research 59 (1999), S. 187-200 
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: chlorophyll fluorescence ; CO2 ; oxygen ; photosynthesis ; rice
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The kinetic properties of photosynthesis (both transient and steady-state) were monitored using three non-invasive techniques to evaluate limitations on triose-phosphate (triose-P) conversion to carbohydrate in rice. These included analyzing the O2 sensitivity of CO2 fixation and the assimilatory charge (AC) using gas exchange (estimate of the ribulose 1,5- bisphosphate pool) and measuring Photosystem II activity by chlorophyll fluorescence analysis under varying light, temperature and CO2 partial pressures. Photosynthesis was inhibited transiently upon switching from 20 to 2 kPa O2 (reversed O2 sensitivity), the degree of which was correlated with a terminal, steady-state suppression of low O2 enhancement of photosynthesis. Under current ambient levels of CO2 and moderate to high light, the transient pattern was more obvious at 18 °C than at 26 °C while at 34 °C no tra nsient response was observed. The transient inhibition at 18 °C ranged from 15% to 31% depending on the pre-measurement temperature. This pattern, symptomatic of feedback, was observed with increasing light and CO2 partial pressures with the degree of feedback decreasing from moderate (18 °C) up to high temperature (34 °C). Under feedback conditions, the rate of assimilation is shifted from being photorespiration limited to being triose-P utilization limited. Transitory changes in CO2 assimilation rates (A) under low O2 indicative of feedback coincided with a transitory drop in assimilatory charge (AC) and inhibition of electron transport. In contrast to previous studies with many C3 species, our studies indicate that rice shows susceptibility to feedback inhibition under moderate temperatures and current atmospheric levels of CO2.
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  • 19
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    Bioscience reports 19 (1999), S. 499-509 
    ISSN: 1573-4935
    Keywords: Arabidopsis ; auxiliary enzymes ; light stress ; photosynthesis ; protein phosphorylation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract An improved cultivation system for Arabidopsis thaliana was developed, allowing advanced biochemical studies in vitro and in vivo of this important model plant. Highly functional Arabidopsis thylakoids were isolated and used to study both basic and regulatory photosynthetic functions with the aim to create a platform for the characterization of mutants deficient in auxiliary proteins. Light-induced proteolytic degradation of the D1 protein could be followed and shown to be a subsequent event to photoinactivation of electron transport. The phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of thylakoid proteins resembled that seen in spinach leaves although phospho-CP43 revealed an unusual regulatory behavior.
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  • 20
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: EPR ; iron-sulphur ; photosynthesis ; P700 ; reaction center
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A site directed mutant of the Photosystem I reaction center of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii has been described previously. [Hallahan et al. (1995) Photosynth Res 46: 257–264]. The mutation, PsaA: D576L, changes the conserved aspartate residue adjacent to one of the cysteine ligands binding the Fe-SX center to PsaA. The mutation, which prevents photosynthetic growth, was observed to change the EPR spectrum of the Fe-SA/B centers bound to the PsaC subunit. We suggested that changes in binding of PsaC to the PsaA/PsaB reaction center prevented efficient electron transfer. Second site suppressors of the mutation have now been isolated which have recovered the ability to grow photosynthetically. DNA analysis of four suppressor strains showed the original D576L mutation is intact, and that no mutations are present elsewhere within the Fe-SX binding region of either PsaA or PsaB, nor within PsaC or PsaJ. Subsequent genetic analysis has indicated that the suppressor mutation(s) is nuclear encoded. The suppressors retain the altered binding of PsaC, indicating that this change is not the cause of failure to grow photosynthetically. Further analysis showed that the rate of electron transfer from the quinone electron carrier A1 to Fe-SX is slowed in the mutant (by a factor of approximately two) and restored to wild type rates in the suppressors. ENDOR spectra of A1 ·– in wild-type and mutant preparations are identical, indicating that the electronic structure of the phyllosemiquinone is not changed. The results suggest that the quinone to Fe-SX center electron transfer is sensitive to the structure of the iron-sulfur center, and may be a critical step in the energy conversion process. They also indicate that the structure of the reaction center may be modified as a result of changes in proteins outside the core of the reaction center.
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  • 21
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: photosynthesis ; photosynthetic induction ; sunflecks
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The effects of CO2 concentration and the effects of growth-light conditions on Ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) deactivation were examined for Spinacea oleracea (spinach). Rubisco deactivation kinetics and the degree that Rubisco activation limited the rise in photosynthesis following an increase in photon flux density (PFD) were determined from gas-exchange time courses. There were no significant differences in the apparent relaxation time for Rubisco deactivation among leaves exposed to high or low CO2 (50 or 1000 μmol mol-1) and low PFD (170 μmol m-2 s-1) or darkness. However, when PFD was increased to 1700 μmol m-2 s-1 following a period of low PFD or darkness, leaves exposed to low CO2 × low PFD showed a lower contribution to the photosynthetic induction process by the activation of Rubisco than leaves exposed to the other treatments. For the growth-light experiments, spinach was grown under high PFD × high red:far-red ratio (R:FR), low PFD × high R:FR, or low PFD × low R:FR light environments. Leaves that matured under the low PFD × low R:FR treatment showed a lower percent change in photosynthesis due to Rubisco activation than leaves exposed to the other growth-light treatments. However, there were no significant differences among the growth-light treatments in the maximum contribution of Rubisco activation to the induction response or in the apparent relaxation time for Rubisco deactivation during shade events.
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  • 22
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: ESR ; electron transport ; FTIR ; lipid ; membrane structure ; protein ; photosynthesis
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The specific effects exerted by different heavy metals on both the function and the structure of the photosynthetic apparatus were addressed. The functional analysis performed via the fluorescence induction kinetics revealed that the applied toxic heavy metals can be classified into two groups: Cd and Ni had no significant effect on the photosynthetic electron transport, while Cu, Pb and Zn strongly inhibited the Photosystem II (PS II) activity, as evidenced by the dramatic decreases in both the variable (Fv) and the maximal (Fm) fluorescence. The structural effects of the heavy metal ions on the thylakoid membranes were considered in three relations: (1) lipids, (2) proteins — studied by Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy, and (3) lipid—protein interactions — investigated by electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy using spin-labeled probe molecules. The studied heavy metal ions had only a non-specific rigidifying effect on the thylakoid lipids. As regards proteins, Cd and Ni had no effect on the course of their heat denaturation. The heat denaturation of the proteins was accompanied by a decrease in the α-helix content (1656 cm-1), a parallel increase in the disordered segments (1651 cm-1), a decrease in the intramolecular β-sheet (1636 cm-1) content and the concomitant appearance of an intermolecular β-structure (1621 cm-1). In contrast with Cd and Ni, Cu and Zn blocked the appearance of the intermolecular β-structure. Pb represented an intermediate case. It seems that these heavy metals alter the native membrane structure in such a way that heat-induced aggregation becomes more limited. The ESR data revealed that certain heavy metals also affect the lipid—protein interactions. While Cd and Ni had hardly any effect on the solvation fraction of thylakoid lipids, Cu, Pb and Zn increased the fraction of lipids solvating the proteins. On the basis of the FTIR and ESR data, it seems that Cu, Pb, and Zn increase the surfaces available for lipid—protein interactions by dissociating membrane protein complexes, and that these ‘lipidated’ proteins have a smaller chance to aggregate upon heat denaturation. The data presented here indicate that the damaging effects of poisonous heavy metals are element-specific, Cu, Pb and Zn interact directly with the thylakoid membranes of the photosynthetic apparatus, while Cd and Ni interfere rather with other metabolic processes of plants.
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  • 23
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: CO2 assimilation ; metabolic control analysis ; photosynthesis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract In order to explain the mechanisms of Calvin-cycle regulation, the general properties of metabolic systems under homeostatic flux control are analyzed. It is shown that the main characteristic point for an enzyme in such a system can be the value of a sharp transition from some constant homeostatic flux to a limitation by this enzyme. A special method for the quantitative treatment of the experimental dependence of a metabolic flux such as photosynthesis on enzyme content is developed. It is pointed out that reactions close to a thermodynamic equilibrium under normal conditions can considerably limit the homeostatic fluxes with a decrease of the enzyme content. Calvin-cycle enzymes are classified as non-limiting, near-limiting and limiting. The deduced rules for the regulation of a homeostatic metabolic pathway are used to explain the data obtained for transgenic plants with reduced activities of Calvin-cycle enzymes. The role of compensating mechanisms that maintain the photosynthesis rate constant upon the changes of enzyme contents is analyzed for the Calvin cycle. The developed analysis explains the sharp transitions between limiting and non-limiting conditions that can be seen in transgenic plants with reduced content of some Calvin-cycle enzymes, and the limiting role of such reversible enzymes as aldolase, transketolase and others. The attempt is made to predict the properties of plants with increased enzyme contents in the Calvin cycle.
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  • 24
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    Photosynthesis research 62 (1999), S. 1-29 
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: chloroplast ; chlorosome ; chromatophore ; granules ; inositol ; Neurospora ; path of carbon ; photosynthesis ; polythdroxyalkanoate (PHA) ; prokaryote cellular inclusions ; protozoan biochemistry ; ribulose 1 ; 5-bis-phosphate ; Tetrahymena
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract What follows is a very personal account of my professional life and the early years that preceded it. I have described the social and economic conditions in America and how the nineteen twenties and thirties nurtured our scientific future. The description of the early part of post-World War II research covers my experience in the areas of nutritional biochemistry, biochemical genetics and proceeds to photosynthesis. The latter era lasted around 35 years. For me the most memorable research accomplishments in which I was a participant during this period was the first demonstration of the primary carboxylation enzyme in an in vitro system in algal and higher plants as well to show that it was structurally associated with the chloroplast.Our group while at Oak Ridge and the University of Massachusetts assembled data that described the complete macromolecular assembly of the photosynthetic apparatus of the unusual photosynthetic green bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus and created a model of that system which differed greatly from the chomatophore system for the purple bacteria. For the last decade, my scientific journey, with numerous new colleagues has turned to the exciting area of biomaterials.We characterized and modeled the completely new bacterial intracellular inclusions responsible for the synthesis and degredation of biosynthetic, biodegradable and biocompatible bacterial polyesters in the cytoplasm of Pseudomonads.
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  • 25
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: (bacterio)chlorophyll ; energy transfer ; light harvesting ; membrane proteins ; photosynthesis
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Unlike the α and β polypeptides of the core light-harvesting complex (LH1) of Rhodobacter (Rb.) sphaeroides, the α and β polypeptides of the peripheral light-harvesting complex (LH2) of this organism will not form a subunit complex by in vitro reconstitution with bacteriochlorophyll. Guided by prior experiments with the LH1 β polypeptides of Rb. sphaeroides and Rhodospirillum rubrum, which defined a set of interactions required to stabilize the subunit complex, a series of mutations to the Rb. sphaeroides LH2 β polypeptide was prepared and studied to determine the minimal changes necessary to enable it to form a subunit-type complex. Three mutants were prepared: Arg at position −10 was changed to Asn (numbering is from the conserved His residue which is known to be coordinated to bacteriochlorophyll); Arg at position −10 and Thr at position +7 were changed to Asn and Arg, respectively; and Arg at position −10 was changed to Trp and the C-terminus from +4 to +10 was replaced with the amino acids found at the corresponding positions in the LH1 β polypeptide of Rb. sphaeroides. Only this last multiple mutant polypeptide formed subunit-type complexes in vitro. Thus, the importance of the C-terminal region, which encompasses conserved residues at positions +4, +6 and +7, is confirmed. Two mutants of the LH1 β polypeptide of Rb. sphaeroides were also constructed to further evaluate the interactions stabilizing the subunit complex and those necessary for oligomerization of subunits to form LH1 complexes. In one of these mutants, Trp at position −10 was changed to Arg, as found in LH2 at this position, and in the other His at position −18 was changed to Val. The results from these mutants allow us to conclude that the residue at the −10 position is unimportant in subunit formation or oligomerization, while the strictly conserved His at −18 is not required for subunit formation but is very important in oligomerization of subunits to form LH1.
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  • 26
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    Photosynthesis research 60 (1999), S. 1-28 
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: biodiversity ; carboxylase ; genetic selection ; photosynthesis ; regulation ; specificity
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Marine and terrestrial photosynthetic and chemoautotrophic microorganisms assimilate considerable amounts of carbon dioxide. Like green plastids, the predominant means by which this process occurs is via the Calvin-Benson-Bassham reductive pentose phosphate pathway, where ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) plays a paramount role. Recent findings indicate that this enzyme is subject to diverse means of control, including specific and elaborate means to guarantee its high rate and extent of synthesis. In addition, powerful and specific means to regulate Rubisco activity is a characteristic feature of many microbial systems. In many respects, the diverse properties of microbial Rubisco enzymes suggest interesting strategies to elucidate the molecular basis of CO2/O2 specificity, the ‘holy grail’ of Rubisco biochemistry. These systems thus provide, as the title suggests, ‘different perspectives’ to this fundamental problem. These include vast possibilities for imaginative biological selection using metabolically versatile organisms with well-defined genetic transfer capabilities to solve important issues of Rubisco specificity and molecular control. This review considers the major issues of Rubisco biochemistry and regulation in photosynthetic microoganisms including proteobacteria, cyanobacteria, marine nongreen algae, as well as other interesting prokaryotic and eukaryotic microbial systems recently shown to possess this enzyme.
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  • 27
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    Photosynthesis research 60 (1999), S. 29-42 
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: enzyme catalysis ; evolution ; genetic engineering ; photosynthesis ; protein assembly ; protein degradation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco; EC 4.1.1.39) has played a central role in our understanding of chloroplast biogenesis and photosynthesis. In particular, its catalysis of the rate-limiting step of CO2 fixation, and the mutual competition of CO2 and O2 at the active site, makes Rubisco a prime focus for genetically engineering an increase in photosynthetic productivity. Although it remains difficult to manipulate the chloroplast-encoded large subunit and nuclear-encoded small subunit of crop plants, much has been learned about the structure/function relationships of Rubisco by expressing prokaryotic genes in Escherichia coli or by exploiting classical genetics and chloroplast transformation of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. However, the complexity of chloroplast Rubisco in land plants cannot be completely addressed with the existing model organisms. Two subunits encoded in different genetic compartments have coevolved in the formation of the Rubisco holoenzyme, but the function of the small subunit remains largely unknown. The subunits are posttranslationally modified, assembled via a complex process, and degraded in regulated ways. There is also a second chloroplast protein, Rubisco activase, that is responsible for removing inhibitory molecules from the large-subunit active site. Many of these complex interactions and processes display species specificity. This means that attempts to engineer or discover a better Rubisco may be futile if one cannot transfer the better enzyme to a compatible host. We must frame the questions that address this problem of chloroplast-Rubisco complexity. We must work harder to find the answers.
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  • 28
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: absorption ; Kennard–Stepanov theory ; photosynthesis ; spectral equilibration ; thermal equilibration
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Absorption and fluorescence spectra of chlorophyll a have been analyzed on the basis of an extended version of Kennard–Stepanov (KS) theory. It is proposed that at least one new electronic state lies just below the normal S1 − S0 transition (Qy), borrowing approximately 2–4% of its strength and contributing to the fluorescence in the tail. The KS anomalies leading to this hypothesis occur in a wide variety of cases, including chlorophyll a in solution and protein-bound chlorophyll a, suggesting that the phenomenon is an intrinsic property of the molecule. Natural candidates for the new state(s) are the second and third triplet states. The relationship of the fluorescence excitation spectrum to KS theory is investigated and applied to explain a red drop in yield.
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  • 29
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    Photosynthesis research 60 (1999), S. 247-256 
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: irradiance ; kinetics ; method ; photosynthesis ; regulation ; rubisco
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract An in vivo method for the estimation of kinetic parameters of partial reactions of carboxylation of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP) catalyzed by ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) is described. Rubisco in barley, wheat and bean is different in the ability of its active centers to bind RuBP. The rate constant of the formation of the Rubisco-RuBP complex in these plants at 25 °C is 0.414, 0.245 and 0.660 mM-1 s-1, respectively. The rate constant of the reaction of the Rubisco-bound enediol with CO2 does not differ significantly in barley and wheat, and averages 66 mM-1 s-1. Decreased irradiance inhibits Rubisco in two ways: by reducing the concentration of operating catalytic sites and by decreasing the rate constant of binding of RuBP to Rubisco. High concentrations of CO2 inhibit Rubisco by decreasing the concentration of competent carboxylation centers, without any s ignificant influence upon the rate constants of partial reactions.
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  • 30
    ISSN: 1573-5028
    Keywords: green algae ; high-CO2 stress ; photosynthesis ; regulation ; Rubisco activase
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract cDNA and the corresponding genomic DNA region encoding Rubisco activase were isolated from the unicellular green alga Chlorococcum littorale. The deduced amino acid sequence encoded by the cDNA was 403 amino acids long and exhibited important homology with those of other known Rubisco activases. Its N-terminal sequence was similar to the chloroplastic transit peptides in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. The mature protein had a predicted molecular mass of 42 kDa. Five introns were located inside the genomic gene encoding Rubisco activase (rca). Genomic Southern blots indicated that two copies of the rca gene were present in the genome of C. littorale. The level of rca messenger RNA increased when cells of C. littorale were subjected to high-CO2 stress (i.e. grown under at least 20% CO2). Hsp70 heat-shock protein was also induced under high-CO2 conditions and, as expected, was also induced at 35 °C. The rca gene, in contrast, was not induced at 35 °C, indicating that this gene was induced in response to the high CO2 concentration and not to general stress. A search of the promoter-binding proteins by a gel retardation assay showed that, under the high-CO2 conditions, a protein(s) which was probably an activator of the rca transcription was synthesized.
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  • 31
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    Plant and soil 209 (1999), S. 283-295 
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: leaf emergence ; phosphorus ; photosynthesis ; tillering ; wheat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract Phosphorus (P) deficiency limits the yield of wheat, particularly by reducing the number of ears per unit of area because of a poor tiller emergence. The objectives of this work were to (i) determine whether tiller emergence under low phosphorus availability is a function of the availability of assimilates for growth or a direct result of low P availability, (ii) attempt to establish a quantitative relation between an index of the availability of P in the plant and the effects of P deficiency on tiller emergence, and (iii) to provide a better understanding of the mechanisms involved in tiller emergence in field-grown wheat. Wheat (Triticum aestivum L., cv. INTA Oasis), was grown in the field under drip irrigation on a typic Argiudol, low in P (5.5 μg P g-1 soil Bray & Kurtz I) in Balcarce, Argentina. Treatments consisted of the combination of three levels of P fertilization 0, 60 and 200 kg P2O5 ha-1, and two levels of assimilate availability, a control (non-shaded) and 65% of reduction in incident irradiance from seedling emergence until the end of tillering (shaded). Phosphorus treatments significantly modified the pattern of growth and development of the plants. Shading reduced the growth and concentration of water-soluble carbohydrates in leaves and stems. Leaf photosynthetic rate at saturating irradiance was reduced by P deficiency, but was not affected by shading. At shoot P concentrations less than 4.2 g P kg-1 the heterogeneity in the plant population increased with respect to the number of plants bearing a certain tiller. At a shoot P concentration of 1.7 g P kg-1 tillering ceased completely. Phosphorus deficiency directly altered the normal pattern of tiller emergence by slowing the emergence of leaves on the main stem (i.e. increasing the phyllochron), and by reducing the maximum rate of tiller emergence for each tiller.
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  • 32
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: elevated CO2 ; leaf transpiration ; nonstructural carbohydrate ; P nutrition ; photosynthesis ; white clover
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract The growth response of white clover (Trifolium repens L.) to the expected increase in atmospheric partial pressure of CO2 (pCO2) may depend on P availability. A decrease in the rate of transpiration due to increased pCO2 may reduce the amount of P transported to the shoot, thereby causing a change in the partitioning of P between the root and shoot. To test these hypotheses, four concentrations of P in the nutrient solution, combined with two pCO2 treatments, were applied to nodulated white clover plants. Compared to ambient pCO2 (35 Pa), twice ambient pCO2 (70 Pa) reduced the rate of transpiration but did not impair the total P uptake per plant. However, at twice ambient pCO2 and a moderate to high supply of P, concentrations of structural P and soluble P (Pi) were lower in the leaves and higher in the roots. The activity of root acid phosphatase was lower at twice ambient pCO2 than at ambient pCO2; it depended on the Pi concentration in the roots. At the highest P concentration, twice ambient pCO2 stimulated photosynthesis and the growth rate of the plant without affecting the concentration of nonstructural carbohydrates in the leaves. However, at the lower P concentrations, plants at twice ambient pCO2 lost their stimulation of photosynthesis in the afternoon, they accumulated nonstructural carbohydrates in the leaves and their growth rate was not stimulated; indicating C-sink limitation of growth. P nutrition will be crucial to the growth of white clover under the expected future conditions of increased pCO2.
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  • 33
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    Plant cell, tissue and organ culture 58 (1999), S. 31-37 
    ISSN: 1573-5044
    Keywords: carbohydrates ; chlorophylls ; photosynthesis ; tissue culture ; Vitis vinifera L
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Grapevine plantlets multiplied in vitro were acclimatized at 40 or 90 μmol m−2 s−1 photon flux density for 12 or 16 h per day, respectively. In the high-light regime a decrease in total chlorophyll and an increase in chlorophyll a/chlorophyll b ratio occurred. However, at high-light intensity lower photosynthetic capacities and higher apparent photosynthesis were measured than at the low-light regime. In leaves expanded during acclimatization, the light compensation point was higher in plantlets under high-light while quantum yield was higher in low-light conditions. High-light also gave rise to an increase in carbohydrate concentration. As a whole, the results suggest that high-light increases carbon assimilation and growth although with a low investment in the photosynthetic apparatus.
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  • 34
    ISSN: 1573-2932
    Keywords: Genetic variability ; elevated CO2 ; climate change ; pine ; conifer ; photosynthesis ; growth
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering
    Notes: Abstract Genetic variability can have profound effects on the interpretation of results from elevated CO2 studies, and future forest management decisions. Information on which varieties are best suited to future atmospheric conditions is needed to develop future forest management practices. A large-scale screening study of the effects of elevated CO2 on 15 half-sibling sources of genetically superior ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa Dougl ex P. Laws.) is presented. These sources represent multiple elevations and latitudes throughout California. Among-provenance variability in the effects of elevated CO2 on gas exchange and growth, and their correlation with geographic origin were investigated in ponderosa pine seedlings subjected to ambient or elevated CO2 concentrations (525 μmol mol-1 CO2, and 700 μmol mol-1 CO2) for more than two years in open-top chambers. Substantial among-provenance variability in growth response to elevated CO2 was evident, with 8 sources demonstrating no significant growth response to elevated CO2 while 7 sources responded positively. For all sources, elevated CO2 increased photosynthesis (ranging from 19% increase at 525 μmol mol-1 CO2 to 49% increase at 700 μmol mol-1 CO2). A modest correlation existed between geographic origin and above ground growth response to elevated CO2.
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  • 35
    ISSN: 1573-5125
    Keywords: chlorophyll fluorescence ; nutrient limitation ; phytoplankton ; photosynthesis ; quantum efficiency
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    Topics: Biology
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  • 36
    ISSN: 1573-5176
    Keywords: algal growth ; Porphyra ; inorganic carbon (Ci) ; photosynthesis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Photosynthetic (oxygen evolution) and growth (biomass increase) responses to ambient pH and inorganic carbon (Ci) supply were determined for Porphyralinearis grown in 0.5 L glass cylinders in the laboratory, or in 40 L fibreglass outdoor tanks with running seawater. While net photosynthetic rates were uniform at pH 6.0–8.0, dropping only at pH 8.7, growth rates were significantly affected by pH levels other than that of seawater (c. pH 8.3). In glass cylinders, weekly growth rates averaged 76% at external pH 8.0, 13% at pH 8.7 and 26% at pH 7.0. Photosynthetic O2 evolution on a daily basis(i.e. total O2 evolved during day time less total O2 consumed during night time) was similar to the growth responses at all experimental pH levels, apparently due to high dark respiration rates measured at acidic pH. Weekly growth rates averaged 53% in algae grown in fibreglass tanks aerated with regular air (360 mg L-1 CO2) and 28% in algae grown in tanks aerated with CO2-enriched air (750 mg L-1 CO2). The pH of the seawater medium in which P. linear is was grown increased slightly during the day and only rarely reached 9.0. The pH at the boundary layer of algae submerged in seawater increased in response to light reaching, about pH 8.9 within minutes, or remained unchanged for algae submerged in a CO2-free artificial sea water medium. Photosynthesis of P. linearissaturated at Ci concentrations of seawater (K0.5560 μM at pH 8.2) and showed low photosynthetic affinity for CO2(K0.5 61 μM) at pH 6.0. It is therefore concluded that P. linearisuses primarily CO2 with HCO3 - being an alternative source of Ci for photosynthesis. Its fast growth could be related to the enzyme carbonic anhydrase whose activity was detected intra- and extracellularly.
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  • 37
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    Journal of applied phycology 11 (1999), S. 473-477 
    ISSN: 1573-5176
    Keywords: aquaculture ; light ; photosynthesis ; Porphyra
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Due to their rapid growth and nutrient assimilation,Porphyra spp. are good candidates for bioremediation and polyculture. The production potential of two strains of P. purpurea and P. umbilicalis from north-east USA was evaluated by measuring rates of photosynthesis (as O2evolution) of material grown at 20 °C. Photosynthetic rates of P. umbilicalis were 80%higher than P. purpurea over the temperature range 5–20 °C, at both sub-saturating andsaturating irradiances (37 and 289 μmol photonm-2 s-1). Porphyra umbilicalis was more efficient at low irradiances (higher α) and had a higher Pmax (23.0 vs 15.6 μmolO2 g-1 DW min-1) than P.purpurea, suggesting that P. umbilicalis is a better choice for mass culture, where self-shading maybe severe.
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  • 38
    ISSN: 1573-868X
    Keywords: Carbon dioxide ; coral reefs ; atoll ; lagoon ; photosynthesis ; calcification ; total alkalinity ; partial pressure ; topography ; residence time
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Factors controlling the CO2 system parameters, including the partial pressure of CO2 (PCO2) in coral reef waters, were investigated in three mid-oceanic reefs of the Indo-Pacific region. Surface water PCO2 in the lagoons of Majuro Atoll and Palau barrier reef in the Pacific were 25 µatm and 48 µatm higher than those of the offshore waters, respectively, while South Male Atoll lagoon of the Maldives in the Indian Ocean exhibited relatively small difference in PCO2 compared to the offshore water. Observations from Majuro Atoll and Palau barrier reef are consistent with the view that calcium carbonate production predominates in coral reefs. On the other hand, results from South Male Atoll can be attributed to the thorough flushing of the lagoon, which is connected to the open ocean by numerous deep channels. The offshore-lagoon PCO2 difference depends on system-level net organic-to-inorganic carbon production ratio while reef topography, especially residence time of the lagoon, has a secondary effect on the magnitude of the offshore-lagoon difference. A potential for releasing CO2 might be more evident in an enclosed atoll where the reef water has a longer residence time. Oceanic atoll and barrier reef lagoons, which are in the terminal stage of evolutionary history of oceanic volcanic islands, have the potential to release CO2 to the atmosphere.
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  • 39
    ISSN: 1573-5125
    Keywords: intertidal areas ; photosynthetically active radiation ; photosynthesis ; Tagus estuary ; tides
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) and temperature were measured continuously at the surface of estuarine intertidal sediments in the Tagus estuary, Portugal, along two spring-neap tidal cycles. PAR and temperature were strongly conditioned by the periodic tidal inundation, with large and abrupt variations occurring during flooding and ebbing. PAR levels reaching the sediment surface decreased very rapidly to zero or very low values during most of the daytime immersion. Inundation during high tide had the general effect of attenuating the amplitude of daily temperature fluctuation, with the incoming water usually warmer than the sediment during the night or early morning and cooler during the day. The daily progression of tidal emersion resulted in a clear fortnightly variation in total daily PAR reaching the sediment surface, while both daily mean temperature and mean temperature of diurnal low tide periods failed to exhibit a well-defined fortnightly periodicity. The obtained results indicate that the estuarine intertidal environment is dominated, at sub-seasonal time scales, by fortnightly periodicity in irradiance and temperature conditions favourable for benthic photosynthesis.
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  • 40
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    Journal of applied phycology 11 (1999), S. 157-163 
    ISSN: 1573-5176
    Keywords: Euglena gracilis ; photosynthesis ; waste water ; pulp and paper industry ; ultraviolet-B radiation (280–320 nm) ; pentachlorophenol
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The green flagellate Euglena gracilis has been used as a model organism to elucidate the possible large-scale and short-term effects of waste substances from the pulp and paper industry on photosynthetic efficiency (PE). Different concentrations of waste substances before and after treatment in a cleaning system were studied. The uncleaned sample at concentrations up to 1:10 and the cleaned sample at concentrations up to 1:5 showed stimulating effects on the PE after 7 days of incubation compared to the control. The effects of waste substances on the PE of E. gracilis were also studied in combination with short-term studies (20 and 40 min) of ultraviolet-B radiation (UV-B, 280–320 nm). It was shown that increasing concentrations of the uncleaned sample had continuously stimulating effects on the PE and worked protectively against UV-B radiation. The cleaned sample exhibited no effects, or negative effects, on the PE of E. gracilis together with UV-B radiation compared to the experiments with only UV-B radiation. At the concentration 1:1 of the cleaned sample an increase in the PE was detected due to the high concentration of the coloured substances and a decrease in the UV-B penetration. PE revealed itself to be highly sensitive for detecting toxic effects on E. gracilis and is thus very promising for use in regular toxicity tests of waste water from pulp and paper industry.
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  • 41
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    Journal of applied phycology 11 (1999), S. 195-201 
    ISSN: 1573-5176
    Keywords: dense algal suspension ; light-harvesting pigment ; photosynthesis ; productivity ; cyanobacterium ; Synechocystis PCC 6714
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Microalgal productivity was examined using both a wild type and a phycocyanin-deficient mutant of Synechocystis PCC 6714 (PD-1). The culture was conducted at various light intensities under low and high cell densities in a continuous culture system. At low light intensity, photosynthetic productivity was almost the same for both low and high cell densities. However, at higher light intensities photosynthetic productivity was higher in mutant PD-1 than in the wild type. At 2000 μmol photon m−2 s−1 the productivity was 50% higher in mutant PD-1. This result is consistent with our first report (Nakajima & Ueda, 1997), which showed that photosynthetic productivity can be improved by reducing the light harvesting pigment content in high cell density cultures at high light intensities. It is concluded that the technology for reducing LHP content is a useful method for improving photosynthetic productivity in algal mass production.
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  • 42
    ISSN: 1573-5176
    Keywords: CO2 ; inorganic carbon ; macroalgae ; photosynthesis ; PAM
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Photosynthesis and cell composition of Porphyraleucosticta discs grown at low (〈 0.0001% in air), current (control) and high (1% CO2 in air)inorganic carbon (Ci) concentrations were analyzed. Carbohydrate content in discs grown at high Ci increased (15.1 mg g-1 FW) with respect to the control (6.4 mg g FW-1), whereas soluble protein content decreased to one-third (5.6 to2.1 mg g-1 FW). Carbohydrate content was unaffected and soluble protein slightly increased in discs grown at low Ci. As a consequence of these changes, a lower C/N molar ratio (8.6) was found in the discs grown at low compared to high Ci(12.4). Nitrate reductase activity increased at high Ci from 0.3 ± 0.2 to 1.7 ± 0.4 μmolNO2 - g-1 FW h-1indicating that reduction and assimilation of nitrate were uncoupled. The response of photosynthesis to increasing irradiance, estimated from O2evolution vs. irradiance curves, was affected by the treatments. Maximum quantum yield (Φ O2°) and effective quantum yield (Φ O2) at 150 μmol photon m-2s-1 decreased by 20% and 50%, respectively, at low Ci. These differences could be due to changes in photosynthetic electron flow between PSII and PSI. Treatments also produced changes in maximal (Fv/Fm) and effective (ΔF/Fm′)quantum yield for photosystem II charge separation.
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  • 43
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    Journal of applied phycology 11 (1999), S. 535-541 
    ISSN: 1573-5176
    Keywords: cyanobacterium ; Nostoc flagelliforme ; nutrients ; photosynthesis ; potassium ; re-hydration
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The effects of nutrients on the photosynthetic recovery of Nostoc flagelliforme during re-hydration were investigated in order to see if their addition was necessary. Net photosynthesis was negligible in distilled water without nutrient-enrichment. Addition of K+ resulted in significant enhancement of net photosynthesis, whereas other nutrients (Fe3+, Mg2+, Na+, NO3 -, PO4 3-, Cl-) and trace-metals (A5) showed little effect. The recovered net photosynthetic activity increased with the increased K+, and reached the maximum at concentrations above 230 μM. Desiccation and re-hydration did not affect the dependence of photosynthetic recovery on K+. It was concluded that dried field populations of N. flagelliforme require exogenous addition of potassium for photosynthetic recovery and that growth may be potassium-limited in nature.
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  • 44
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    Mangroves and salt marshes 2 (1998), S. 99-107 
    ISSN: 1572-977X
    Keywords: conductance ; mangrove ; photosynthesis ; productivity ; water potential
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Diurnal gas exchange characteristics were measured simultaneously in two mangrove species, Avicennia marina and Bruguiera gymnorrhiza, over 7 d in summer (February–March), to compare their productivity. The study was undertaken in the Beachwood Mangroves Nature Reserve, Durban, South Africa, using fully expanded leaves of young and mature trees at the top of the canopy. Gas exchange was strongly influenced by photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD), leaf temperature and the accompanying leaf to air vapour pressure deficit (Δ w). Carbon dioxide exchange was saturated at a PPFD of about 600 μmol m-2s-1 in B. gymnorrhiza compared to 800 μmol m-2s-1 in A. marina. Maximal CO2 exchange occurred between 12h00 and 14h00 and was consistently greater in A. marina (8.8 μmol m-2s-1) than in B. gymnorrhiza (5.3 mu;mol m-2s-1). Mean internal CO2 concentrations ( ci) were 260 μl l-1 in A. marina and 252 μl l-1 in B. gymnorrhiza. Photorespiratory activity was 32% in A. marina and 30% in B. gymnorrhiza. Mean water use efficiency (WUE) was 8.0 μmol mmol-1 in A. marina and 10.6 μmol mmol-1 in B. gymnorrhiza. Diurnal leaf water potentials ranged from –0.8 to –3.5 MPa and were generally lower in A. marina.
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  • 45
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    Mangroves and salt marshes 2 (1998), S. 191-198 
    ISSN: 1572-977X
    Keywords: canopy ; Hinchinbrook ; leaf area index ; mangrove ; photosynthesis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Data on stand structure and rates of photosynthesis were used to estimate net canopy carbon fixation and carbon accumulation as living biomass in mangrove forests in Hinchinbrook Channel, Australia. Total annual canopy net carbon fixation was estimated to be about 29 t C ha−1 yr−1. This equates to about 204,000 t C yr−1 for all mangrove forests in Hinchinbrook Channel. Of this, only about 12% was stored as living plant biomass. Although it is not yet possible to present a robust carbon balance for mangrove trees, the remainder is presumably lost through plant respiration, litter fall, root turnover and exudation of organic compounds from roots.
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  • 46
    ISSN: 1573-9058
    Keywords: absorption spectra ; chlorophyll fluorescence ; photosynthesis ; Vigna radiata
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract In seedlings of Vigna radiata (L.) R. Wilczek cultivars ADT-1 and CO-5 exposed to acidic showers (H2SO4 : HNO3 : HCl, 4 : 2 : 1, v/v) of different pH (7.0, 5.5, 4.0, and 2.5) for 10 d, net CO2 uptake and stomatal conductance were reduced. The chlorophyll (Chl) a and b contents were reduced but the carotenoid (Car) content increased. In vivo Chl a fluorescence patterns of both the cultivars were altered. No significant change in photosystem (PS) 1 activity was observed except at pH 2.5 where an inhibition was evident. By contrast, PS2 activities declined rapidly with increasing acidity. The room temperature absorption spectra of isolated chloroplasts showed very little changes. SDS-PAGE analysis revealed depletion of 23, 33, and 55 kDa polypeptides. Cultivar CO-5 was more sensitive to acidic rain than cv. ADT-1.
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  • 47
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    Photosynthetica 35 (1998), S. 1-11 
    ISSN: 1573-9058
    Keywords: evolution ; hydrogen ; life ; photosynthesis ; radiant energy
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Photosynthesis, as a fundamental element in the life process, is integrated in the evolution of living systems on the basis of hydrogen cycles on various hierarchic levels. Conversion of radiant energy enables the oxidation of water, whereby free oxygen accumulates in the atmosphere. Hydrogen is (reversibly) stored in organic materials formed under reductive CO2-fixation and by the incorporation of the other elements, which are necessary for living systems. All endergonic processes in living cells are finally driven by the energy released through the clean recombination of protons and electrons with oxygen to water. Duration of the stored energy and the complexity of the systems thus produced is correlated negatively with the conversion efficiency of the radiation energy. Entropy is a unifying principle in the evolution of living systems, inclusive human societies.
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  • 48
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    Photosynthetica 35 (1998), S. 551-559 
    ISSN: 1573-9058
    Keywords: EPR spectroscopy ; fluorescence spectroscopy ; HgCl2 ; photosynthesis ; radionuclide X-ray fluorescence analyses
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract In chloroplasts of Spinacea oleracea L., Hg2+ ions interact with some sites in the photosynthetic electron transport chain: (l) with the intermediates Z+/D+ situated in the D1 and D2 proteins and with the manganese cluster in the oxygen evolving complex which are located on the donor side of photosystem (PS) 2, (2) with the chlorophyll a dimer in the core of PS1 (P700). P700 is oxidized in the dark by HgCl2. The Hg2+ ions form organometallic complexes with amino acids contained in chloroplast proteins.
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  • 49
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    Photosynthetica 35 (1998), S. 631-635 
    ISSN: 1573-9058
    Keywords: Gossypium hirsutum ; leaf age ; photosynthesis ; stomatal conductance ; transpiration
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Relationships between leaf nitrogen (N) content and leaf gas exchange components of a single cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) leaf subtending the fruit during ontogeny were investigated under field conditions. A 20-d old leaf exhibited the highest physiological activity characterized by net photosynthetic (PN) and transpiration (E) rates, stomatal conductances to CO2 exchange (gsCO2) and water vapor transfer (gsH2O), and nitrogen (N) content. With the advent of leaf senescence, the gas exchange rates declined as exhibited by the 30-, 40-, and 60-d old leaves. Regression analysis indicated close relationships between gsCO2 and PN, and gsH2O and E as the leaves advanced towards senescence. Both PN and gsCO2 were related to N as they declined with leaf age. Thus, the declines in PN were associated with stomatal closure and removal of N during leaf ontogeny.
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  • 50
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    Hydrobiologia 389 (1998), S. 7-19 
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: photosynthesis ; respiration ; photorespiration ; diel oxygen curve ; macrophytes
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract We conducted two-station diel surveys of dissolved oxygen content to estimate whole-stream productivity in the experimental streams of the Monticello Ecological Research Station for two years following channel reconstruction. Community productivity measurements compare well to previous measurements in these streams, but apparent hysteresis in the P/I relation was measured in over two-thirds of the diel surveys. Apparent hysteresis in photosynthesis with solar irradiance is a characteristic of photorespiration, and modeling the effect of light on whole-stream respiratory rates reduced the magnitude of P/I curve hysteresis and improved the predictions of dissolved oxygen content (DO) in the stream. Stream productivity models normally assume respiratory rates measured at night are constant throughout the day, but when this assumption yields apparent hysteresis in the P/I curve, the inclusion of a photorespiration model in the analyses of whole-stream productivity facilitates the comparison of photosynthesis and respiratory rates between different streams. The computed total daily consumption of oxygen by photorespiratory processes is proportional to the total daily photosynthetic production of oxygen in the streams. We also found that the diel DO curves occurring in the experimental streams are best described by a photorespiration model that utilizes a four hour moving average of irradiance. Accounting for photorespiration in the streams increases the apparent efficiency of photosynthesis, improves the accuracy of DO predictions, and reduces uncertainty in photosynthesis and respiratory rate estimates.
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  • 51
    ISSN: 1573-5087
    Keywords: carbohydrates ; elevated CO2 ; Gossypium hirsutum L. ; interaction ; photosynthesis ; temperature
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract Cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L., cv DPL 5415) plants were grown in naturally lit environment chambers at day/night temperature regimes of 26/18 (T-26/18), 31/23 (T-31/23) and 36/28 °C (T-36/28) and CO2 concentrations of 350 (C-350), 450 (C-450) and 700 μL L-1 (C-700). Net photosynthesis rates, stomatal conductance, transpiration, RuBP carboxylase activity and the foliar contents of starch and sucrose were measured during different growth stages. Net CO2 assimilation rates increased with increasing CO2 and temperature regimes. The enhancement of photosynthesis was from 24 μmol CO2 m-2 s-1 (with C-350 and T-26/18) to 41 μmol m-2 s-1 (with C-700 and T-36/28). Stomatal conductance decreased with increasing CO2 while it increased up to T-31/23 and then declined. The interactive effects of CO2 and temperature resulted in a 30% decrease in transpiration. Although the leaves grown in elevated CO2 had high starch and sucrose concentrations, their content decreased with increasing temperature. Increasing temperature from T-26/18 to 36/28 increased RuBP carboxylase activity in the order of 121, 172 and 190 μmol mg-1 chl h-1 at C-350, C-450 and C-700 respectively. Our data suggest that leaf photosynthesis in cotton benefited more from CO_2 enrichment at warm temperatures than at low growth temperature regimes.
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  • 52
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    Euphytica 103 (1998), S. 83-88 
    ISSN: 1573-5060
    Keywords: chlorophyll ; lethal ; marker gene ; photosynthesis ; Solanum tuberosum
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract A light green mutant was found in a population of adapted cultivated diploid potatoes. Genetic analysis indicates that this trait is controlled by a single nuclear gene. The gene symbol lg is proposed. The segregation ratios fit a pattern which strongly suggest that there is a close linkage between the Lg allele and a locus which confers lethality in its homozygous recessive state. Some crossing over between the lg locus and the lethal was found to occur but LgLg genotypes were not observed in progenies from sib-matings. The lg locus mapped to the potato linkage group VI between the restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) loci CP18 and GP24.
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  • 53
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: epimerization ; isomerization ; inhibitor binding ; photosynthesis ; Rubisco
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) (EC 4.1.1.39) not only catalyzes carboxylation and oxygenation of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate (RuBP), but it can also act either as an epimerase or isomerase converting RuBP into xylulose-1,5-bisphosphate (XuBP) or 3-ketoarabinitol-1,5-bisphosphate (KABP), respectively, a process called misfire. XuBP is formed as a result of misprotonation at C3 of the RuBP-enediol. It is released from Rubisco active sites and accumulates in the reaction mixture. Increasing the amounts of CO2 or O2 decreases XuBP production. However, KABP synthesis, which has been proposed to be only a product due to C2 misprotonation of the RuBP-endiol, is dependent upon the presence of O2. KABP remains tightly bound to Rubisco active sites after its formation, causing the loss of Rubisco activity (‘fallover’). The results suggest that the non-stabilized form of the peroxy-intermediate in the oxygenase reaction can be converted in a backreaction to KABP and molecular oxygen. The stabilization of the peroxy-intermediate due to the presence of Mn2+ instead of Mg2+ eliminates the formation of KABP.
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  • 54
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: electron transfer ; phenotypic revertants ; photosynthesis ; proton transfer ; site-specific mutagenesis
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract To probe the structural elements that contribute to the functional asymmetries of the two ubiquinone10 binding pockets in the reaction center of Rhodobacter capsulatus, we targeted the L212Glu–L213Asp (near QB) and the M246Ala-M247Ala (near QA) pairs of symmetry-related residues for site-specific mutagenesis. We have constructed site-specific mutants that eliminate the sequence differences at these positions (L212Glu–L213Asp→Ala-Ala or M246Ala–M247Ala→Glu-Asp), and have reversed that asymmetry by constructing a quadruple-mutant strain, ‘RQ’ (L212Glu–L213Asp-M246Ala–M247Ala→Ala-Ala-Gl u-Asp). The mutations were designed to change the charge distribution in the quinone-binding region of the reaction center; none of the strains is capable of photosynthetic growth. In photocompetent phenotypic revertants of the RQ strain, second-site mutations which affect QB function are coupled to mutations in the QA site which restore an Ala or substitute a Tyr at the M247 site; one strain carries an additional Met→Leu substitution at M260 near QA. All of the RQ revertants retain the engineered M246Ala→Glu mutation in the QA site as well as the L212Ala–L213Ala mutations in the QB site. Kinetic characterization of the RQ revertants will give us an idea of what structural and functional elements are important for restoring efficiency to electron and proton transfer pathways in the RQ RC, which is far from native. To date, these preliminary results underscore the importance of an asymmetric distribution of polar amino acids in the quinone binding pockets and its influence on the functional properties of the reaction center.
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  • 55
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: electron transfer ; hydrogen bond ; photosynthesis ; purple bacteria ; recombination rates ; site-directed mutagenesis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The direct charge recombination rates from the primary quinone, k AD (D+Q A − → DQA) and the secondary quinone, k BD (D+Q B − → DQB), in reaction centers from Rhodobacter sphaeroides were measured as a function of the free energy differences for the processes, ΔG AD 0 and ΔG BD 0 , respectively. Measurements were performed at 21 °C on a series of mutant reaction centers that have a wide range of dimer midpoint potentials and consequently a large variation in ΔG AD 0 and ΔG BD 0 . As –ΔG AD 0 varied from 0.43 to 0.78 eV, k AD varied from 4.6 to 28.6 s−1. The corresponding values for the wild type are 0.52 eV and 8.9 s−1. Observation of the direct charge recombination rate k BD was achieved by substitution of the primary quinone with naphthoquinones in samples in which ubiquinone was present at the secondary quinone site, resulting specifically in an increase in the free energy of the D+Q A − state relative to the D+QAQ B − state. As –ΔG BD 0 varied from 0.37 to 0.67 eV, k BD varied from 0.03 to 1.4 s−1. The corresponding values for the wild type are 0.46 eV and 0.2 s−1. A fit of the two sets of data to the Marcus theory for electron transfer yielded significantly different reorganization energies of 0.82 and 1.3 eV for k AD and k BD, respectively. In contrast, the fitted values for the coupling matrix element, or equivalently the maximum possible rate, were comparable (∼25 s−1) for the two charge recombination processes. These results are in accord with QB having more interactions with dipoles, from both the surrounding protein and bound water molecules, than QA and with the primary determinant of the maximal rate being the quinone-donor distance.
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  • 56
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: electrometry ; electron transfer ; membrane ; menaquinone ; photosynthesis ; potential ; proton transfer ; Rhodobacter sphaeroides ; Rhodopseudomonas viridis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The thermophilic phototroph Chloroflexus aurantiacus possesses a photosynthetic reaction center (RC) containing a pair of menaquinones acting as primary (MQa) and secondary (MQB) electron acceptors and a tetraheme cytochrome c554 as an electron donor. We used native, chlorosome-containing photosynthetic membranes of this bacterium to study the MQB turnover. The binary oscillations of the semiquinone form MQB − in response to a train of short light flashes were monitored at 416 nm, in the isosbestic point of the light-induced difference spectrum of cytochrome c554. After the first flash MQB − was formed, after the second one it disappeared due to the MQa −MQB − → MQaMQBH2 transition. The latter reaction was kinetically resolved by means of electrometry. For this purpose chromatophores of Chl. aurantiacus were adsorbed onto a phospholipid and menaquinone-impregnated collodion film. We found that after the second excitation flash, but not after the first one, the photoelectric response included, in addition to the fast kinetic components reflecting the charge separation between the tetraheme cytochrome c and MQa, a slower kinetic component with a rise time of 3 µs (pH = 8.3) and a relative amplitude of about 10% of the charge separation phase in the RC. We attributed this reaction to the electrogenic proton transfer which accompanied the transfer of the second electron during the MQa −MQB − → MQaMQBH2 transition. The rise time of the same reaction was reported to be almost three orders of magnitude slower in the isolated, proteoliposome-incorporated RC from this bacterium. The possible reasons of the faster turnover rates observed in the chlorosome-carrying native membrane preparations from Chl. aurantiacus are discussed.
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  • 57
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: chlorophyll antenna size ; damage and repair cycle ; Dunaliella salina ; photoinhibition ; photosynthesis ; Photosystem-II ; photosystem stoichiometry ; productivity
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract High-light (HL) grown Dunaliella salina cells exhibit lower pigment content, a highly truncated chlorophyll (Chl) antenna size, and accumulation of photodamaged PS II centers in the chloroplast thylakoids (chronic photoinhibition). In HL-grown cells, the rate of photosynthesis saturated at higher irradiances and the quantum yield was lower compared to that of normally-pigmented low-light (LL) grown cells. In spite of these deficiencies, the light-saturated rate of photosynthesis for the HL-cells, when measured on a per chlorophyll basis, was ∼3 times greater than that of the LL-grown cells. To delineate the effect of photoinhibition from the Chl antenna size on quantum yield and rate of photosynthesis, HL-acclimated cells were switched to LL-conditions. Repair of photodamaged PS II, estimated from the recovery of functional PS II centers and from the increase in the quantum yield of photosynthesis, occurred with a half-time of ∼1 h. Chlorophyll accumulation in the cells occurred with a half-time of ∼4 h. The differential kinetics in repair versus Chl accumulation provided a ‘window of opportunity’, within about 2–3 h after the HL→LL shift, when cells exhibited a high quantum yield of photosynthesis, a small Chl antenna size and a light-saturated rate that was ∼6–9 times greater than that of the normally pigmented LL-grown cells. The work provides insight on the temporal sequence of events at the chloroplast and thylakoid membrane levels, leading from a chronic photoinhibition of PS II to repair and recovery. It is suggested that it is possible to maximize photosynthetic productivity and light utilization in mass microalgal cultures by minimizing the light-harvesting Chl antenna size of the photosystems.
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  • 58
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    Photosynthesis research 56 (1998), S. 143-155 
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: carbon dioxide ; Glycine max ; photosynthesis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Elevated carbon dioxide (CO2) concentration increases plant photosynthesis, biomass and carbohydrate accumulation. Since plants have grown in low CO2 (200 to 300 µmol mol−1) for the last several million years, how will they use extra photoassimilate as the atmospheric CO2 continues to rise? The objectives were to determine the effects of past, present and projected future levels of CO2 on diurnal and seasonal patterns of total nonstructural carbohydrate (TNC) concentration of soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] tissues. Plants were grown at 160, 220, 280, 330, 660 and 990 µmol mol−1 CO2 in outdoor, sunlit chambers wherein CO2 uptake rates were measured continuously. Early morning and late afternoon plant samples were taken at eight dates. The TNC concentration of leaves, petioles and stems increased as CO2 increased. Canopy photosynthetic rates also increased with increasing CO2, apparently without any negative impact of increased leaf TNC. Concentrations of TNC in all vegetative tissues were lower in the morning than the afternoon, which indicates overnight mobilization and utilization of carbohydrates for growth processes. The concentration of TNC was lowest in all plant components during rapid vegetative growth at V8 to R2 developmental stages. Leaves of all plants, especially those grown in superambient CO2, contained large pools of TNC at plant maturity, which indicated that not all of the reserves were utilized for seed yield. Soybean cultivars for the future should be designed to utilize carbohydrates more readily for seed production so that greater benefit can be realized from rising atmospheric CO2.
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  • 59
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: electron transport ; nitrite ; oxaloacetate ; photosynthesis ; proton transport
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Photosystem I-dependent cyclic electron transport is shown to operate in intact spinach chloroplasts with oxaloacetate, but not with nitrite or methylviologen as electron acceptors. It is regulated by the redox state of the chloroplast NADP system. Inhibition of cyclic electron transport by antimycin A occurs immediately on addition of this antibiotic in the light. It is unrelated to a different function of antimycin A, inhibition of nonphotochemical quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence, which requires prior dissipation of the transthylakoid proton gradient before antimycin A can become effective.
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  • 60
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: chlorophyll fluorescence ; high-temperature stress ; O2 evolution ; photosynthesis ; Photosystem II ; spinach
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Activities of oxygen evolution, fluorescence Fv (a variable part of chlorophyll fluorescence) values, and amounts of the 33 kDa protein remaining bound to the thylakoids in intact spinach chloroplasts were measured during and after high-temperature treatment. The following results were obtained. (1) Both the Fv value and the flash-induced oxygen evolution measured by an oxygen electrode were decreased at high temperatures, but they showed partial recovery when the samples were cooled down and incubated at 25°C for 5 min after high-temperature treatment. (2) Oxygen evolution was more sensitive to high temperatures than the Fv value, and the decrease in the Fv/Fm ratio at high temperatures rather corresponded to that in the oxygen evolution measured at 25°C after high-temperature treatment. (3) Photoinactivation of PS II was very rapid at high temperatures, and this seems to be a cause of the difference between the Fv values and the oxygen-evolving activities at high temperatures. (4) At around 40°C, the manganese-stabilizing 33 kDa protein of PS II was supposed to be released from the PS II core complexes during heat treatment and to rebind to the complexes when the samples were cooled down to 25°C. (5) At higher temperatures, the charge separation reaction of PS II was inactivated, and the PS II complexes became less fluorescent, which was recovered partially at 25°C. (6) Increases in the Fv value due to a large decrease in the electron flow from QA to QB became prominent after high-temperature treatment at around 50°C. This was the main cause of the discrepancy between the Fv values and the oxygen-evolving activities measured at 25°C. Relationship between the process of heat inactivation of PS II reaction center complexes and the fluorescence levels is discussed.
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  • 61
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: D1 degradation fragments ; D1 proteolysis ; photosynthesis ; thylakoid membrane
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Degradation of the D1 protein of the Photosystem II (PS II) complex was studied in the Fad6/desA::Kmr mutant of a cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. The D1 protein of the mutant was degraded during solubilization of thylakoid membranes with SDS at 0°C in darkness, giving rise to the 23 kDa amino-terminal and 10 kDa carboxy-terminal fragments. Moreover, the D2 and CP43 proteins were also degraded under such conditions of solubilization. Degradation of the D2 protein generated 24, 17 and 15.5 kDa fragments, and degradation of the CP43 protein gave rise to 28, 27.5, 26 and 16 kDa fragments. The presence of Ca2+ and urea protected the D1, D2 and CP43 proteins against degradation. Degradation of the D1 protein was also inhibited by the presence of a serine protease inhibitor suggesting that the putative protease involved belonged to the serine class of proteases. The protease had the optimum activity at pH 7.5; it was active at low temperature (0°C) but a brief heating (65°C) during solubilization destroyed the activity. Interestingly, the protease was active in isolated thylakoid membranes in complete darkness, suggesting that proteolysis may be a non-ATP-dependent process. Proteolytic activity present in thylakoid membranes seemed to reside outside of the PS II complex, as demonstrated by the 2-dimensional gel electrophoresis. These results represent the first (in vitro) demonstration of strong activity of a putative ATP-independent serine-type protease that causes degradation of the D1 protein in cyanobacterial thylakoid membranes without any induction by visible or UV light, by active oxygen species or by any chemical treatments.
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  • 62
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: copper ; electron transport ; photosynthesis ; TyrosineZ
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The thermoluminescence characteristics of functionally intact thylakoids and TRIS-washed BBY particles were studied under Cu(II) poisoned conditions. In thylakoids, both the A and B thermoluminescence bands corresponding to S3QA - and S2S3QB - charge recombinations, respectively showed specific responses to Cu(II) treatment. The amplitude of the B band was gradually decreased, which corresponds to the Cu(II) induced inactivation of TyrZ. The simultaneous stepwise shift in the peak position of the B band indicated, however, that S3QB - charge recombination is more resistant to Cu(II) poisoned conditions. The shifted peak position of the A band toward the higher temperature in Cu(II) treated thylakoids also showed a change in the redox span between the recombination partners generating the A band of the glow curve. The AT band due to the His+QA - recombination in TRIS-washed BBY particles was insensitive to Cu(II) addition indicating that Cu(II) did not affect either His+ or QA -. The unaffected intensity of the A and AT bands when Cu(II) inhibits TyrZ function favours the assumption of an alternative pathway in which functional TyrZ is not required. In addition, Cu-induced changes of the TL bands were compared to those produced by the Tyr and His modifiers NBD and DEPC, respectively. We obtained very similar results regarding TL bands by either adding NBD or Cu-poisoning in functional thylakoids. Regarding DEPC, the A and AT bands were abolished by increasing concentrations of the His modifier. This effect was associated with the decrease of the B band and its replacement by the Q band at around 0 °C. Comparing our data obtained by Cu, NBD and DEPC treatments, we have found a strong interrelation between His+ and S3 state. We assume that in some inhibitory conditions in the S3 state His is oxidized in place of Mn and this alternative pathway does not require functional TyrZ.
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  • 63
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: cyanobacteria ; photosynthesis ; Photosystem I ; prochlorophyte ; psaI ; psaL
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A 25 kDa protein associated with Photosystem I (PS I) of the divinyl-chlorophyll a/b-containing oxychlorobacterium Prochlorococcus marinus SS120 (CCMP 1375) was isolated, and the amino acid sequences of the N-terminus and one internal peptide were determined. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) with degenerate primers yielded a 92 bp fragment, which was used to isolate the complete gene from a genomic library. The corresponding gene was isolated from a library of Prochlorococcus sp. MED4 (CCMP 1378). In both Prochlorococcus strains, the gene encodes a protein of 199 amino acids. The gene products show a strong sequence similarity to the PS I subunit PsaL. The N-terminus contains a hydrophilic domain that has not been found in PsaL proteins from other organisms. In both strains, sequences encoding a protein similar to PsaI were found upstream of the psaL gene. Both genes are transcribed in the same direction.
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  • 64
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: herbicides ; photoinhibition ; photosynthesis ; protein degradation and synthesis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The effect of the Photosystem II (PSII) inhibitors dichlorophenyldimethylurea (DCMU) and bromonitrothymol (BNT) on the rate of the high-light induced D1 protein turnover was studied in whole cells of two cyanobacterial strains Synechocystis PCC 6803 and Synechococcus PCC 7942. In Synechocystis the D1 degradation was slowed down to a similar extent in the presence of either inhibitor compared with control cells. This slower degradation corresponded with the retardation of Photosystem II photoinactivation (PSIIPI) measured as a decline of PS II activity in the illuminated cells treated with chloramphenicol (CAP). The ongoing D1 synthesis in the presence of both PS II inhibitors was confirmed by unchanging PS II activity and the steady-state level of D1 during illumination in the absence of CAP. In Synechococcus cells both DCMU and BNT blocked the turnover of the 'low-light' D1 form (D1:1) but did not prevent the exchange of the 'high-light' form D1:2 for the D1:1 form. The similar effect of both herbicides on the D1 exchange was in contrast with their influence on the rate of PSIIPI. While DCMU had a pronounced protective effect, BNT significantly increased the rate of PS II photodamage. The fast BNT-induced decline of PS II activity was also observed in Synechocystis cells treated with azide, an inhibitor of reactive oxygen species scavenging enzymes. Therefore, we assume that the distinct sensitivity of the two cyanobacterial strains to BNT can be caused by different content and/or activity of these enzymes in each strain.
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  • 65
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    Photosynthesis research 57 (1998), S. 323-333 
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: ATPase phosphorylation ; chloroplast ; envelope ATPase ; photosynthesis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract P-ATPases such as the plasma membrane proton pump are known to generate a phosphorylated intermediate as a step in their reaction mechanism; phosphoenzyme formation is a basis for classification of an ATPase as a member of this subfamily of ion pumps. The chloroplast inner envelope is known to contain a H+-ATPase which acts to maintain an alkaline stroma and, thus, optimal photosynthesis. Our characterization of this chloroplast envelope proton pump described in this report focused on determining whether purified chloroplast inner envelope membrane protein preparations containing this ATPase form a phosphorylated intermediate. Incubation of envelope membranes with [γ-32P]ATP documented the formation of P-type ATPase phosphoenzyme intermediates by these membrane protein preparations. Our work cannot discount the possibility that more than one chloroplast inner envelope ATPase contributes to this phosphoenzyme formation. However, the kinetics of this phosphoenzyme formation, along with the sensitivity of phosphoenzyme formation to inhibitors and other assay conditions suggested that one of the envelope membrane proteins which is covalently radiolabeled by [γ-32P]ATP is a P-type H+-ATPase. Autoradiography of chloroplast envelope membrane proteins size fractionated on lithium dodecyl sulfate-PAGE indicated that the phosphoenzyme intermediate corresponds to a 103 kDa polypeptide. P-type proton pumps are known to be comprised of a single type of ∼100 kDa subunit. Experimental evidence presented in this report is consistent with the classification of a chloroplast inner envelope H+-ATPase as a P-type proton pump.
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  • 66
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: circadian rhythms ; fluorescence ; gene regulation ; N2 fixation ; photosynthesis ; state transitions
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract N2 fixation and oxygenic photosynthesis are important metabolic processes that are at odds with each other, since the N2-fixing enzyme, nitrogenase, is highly sensitive to oxygen. This review will discuss the strategies devised by the unicellular, diazotrophic cyanobacterium, Cyanothece sp. ATCC 51142, to permit N2 fixation and photosynthesis to coexist in the same cell. This strain, like a number of other unicellular and filamentous (non-heterocystous) cyanobacteria, has developed a type of temporal regulation in which N2 fixation and photosynthesis occur at different times throughout a diurnal cycle. For nitrogenase, everyday dawns anew. The nifHDK operon is tightly regulated, such that transcription and translation occur within the first four hours of the dark period; nitrogenase is then proteolytically degraded. Photosynthesis also varies throughout the day reaching a minimum at the peak of nitrogenase activity and a maximum by late afternoon. This review will mainly concentrate on the various changes that occur in the photosynthetic apparatus as the cell modulates O2 evolution. The results indicate that the redox poise of the plastoquinone pool and the overall cellular energy needs are the basic driving forces behind these changes in the photosynthetic apparatus. Throughout the course of the diurnal cycle, Photosystem II becomes very heterogeneous as determined by 77 K fluorescence spectra, PAM fluorescence and O2-flash yield experiments. This system provides some important insight into cyanobacterial state transitions and, especially, on the organization of the photosystems within the membrane. Overall, PS II is altered on both the oxidizing and reducing sides of the photosystem.
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  • 67
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    Photosynthesis research 58 (1998), S. 293-302 
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: CO2 solubilization ; carbonic anhydrase ; Far-red light ; photosynthesis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Photoacoustic signals were measured in expanded tobacco leaves, exposed to a controlled atmosphere by being only partly enclosed within the photoacoustic cell. It was aimed to corroborate the conjecture of Reising and Schreiber (Photosynthesis Research 42: 65-73, 1994) that under exceptionally high CO2 levels (ca. 1–5%) the photobaric uptake contribution reflects CO2 uptake induced by light dependent stromal alkalinization. This is shown here by: (1) the shallower damping of the uptake signal vs. the modulation frequency, compared to a normal oxygen evolution signal; (2) the partial inhibition of the uptake signal under 5% CO2 by nigericin; (3) the complete absence of uptake signals under 5% CO2 in a carbonic-anhydrase-deficient mutant, which gave rather a normal oxygen evolution signal. The photoacoustic signals from the wild type and the transgenic tobacco in air could not be distinguished, indicating that the CO2 uptake signal is negligible under this condition. Uptake photobaric signals were also measured in modulated far-red light (ca. 715–750 nm), following addition of white background light (in light limiting intensity). In normal tobacco under 5% CO2, the background light induced an uptake transient, lasting about a minute, then declining to a low steady level. Significantly smaller transients were obtained under normal air, and in the carbonic-anhydrase deficient mutant also under 5% CO2. Extrapolation to zero frequency of the signal damping vs. modulation frequency, in both tobacco genotypes, suggests however similar magnitudes of the uptake transients. On the other hand, no proportional steady-state uptake was observed for the last two cases. Presumably, the steady uptake under 5% CO2 in modulated far-red light reflects CO2 solubilization, while it is an open question whether the transient could be partly contributed also by oxygen photoreduction by PS I (Mehler reaction). It is reasoned that, under conditions of low light, the respiratory activity results in accumulation of CO2 in the photoacoustic cell, which is sufficient to induce an uptake phenomenon, giving a more satisfactory interpretation for the so-called 'low light state' [Cananni and Malkin (1984) Biochim Biophys Acta 766: 525–532].
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  • 68
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    Photosynthesis research 56 (1998), S. 223-227 
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: luminescence quenching ; oxygen electrode ; oxygen optode ; photosynthesis ; pressure sensitive paint
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract We measured the light response curve of photosynthetic oxygen evolution by illuminating a leaf disc in an air-tight windowed chamber. Oxygen production was measured by monitoring the quenching of luminescence of an organometallic ruthenium compound. A photodiode based chlorophyll a fluorometer was used to measure the luminescence intensity. Oxygen evolution measurements with a traditional oxygen electrode gave the same numerical values at different light intensities when the same leaf disk was tested. The quality of the measurement signal of the new method was found to be similar to that obtained with the oxygen electrode method. The new luminescence based system is more stable against electrical disturbances than an oxygen electrode, its response to oxygen pressure changes is very rapid, and the new method allows the same basic equipment to be used for chlorophyll fluorescence and oxygen measurements.
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  • 69
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: blue-green fluorescence (BGF) ; intact isolated chloroplasts ; Pisum sativum ; photosynthesis ; pyridine nucleotides ; Spinacia oleracea L
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract In the present communication we report a spectral analysis of the blue-green fluorescence related to changes in NAD(P) redox state in chloroplasts and leaves. To assess the contribution of reabsorption and the inner filter effect, we compared transmission and fluorescence at different chloroplast concentrations, and showed that reabsorption by the photosynthetic pigments (chlorophylls and carotenoids) was at the origin of the two peaks in the emission spectrum in vivo. The absence of potential green-emitting fluorophores in chloroplasts was determined by measuring variable and time-resolved fluorescence at different wavelengths. We defined the conditions which optimize the UV-excited blue-green fluorescence signal dependent on NAD(P)H, and we present an example of monitoring of NAD(P)H fluorescence in intact leaves.
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  • 70
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: chlorophyll fluorescence ; C4 plant ; drought ; low CO2 ; photosynthesis ; zeaxanthin
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The effects of two light treatments (photosynthetically active photon flux density of either 650 or 1950 µmol m−2 s−1) on the photochemical efficiency of Photosystem II (PS II) (measured as variable to maximum fluorescence ratio) and on the xanthophyll cycle components was studied in wilted Zea mays leaves. For comparison, these parameters were followed under the same light conditions in well-hydrated leaves maintained either in normal or CO2-free air. The net CO2 assimilation of dehydrated leaves declined rapidly as their relative water content (RWC) decreased from 100 to 60% while the PS II efficiency measured after a prolonged dark period of 16 h declined only when RWC leaves was lower than 60%. Furthermore, drought caused an increase in the pool size of the xanthophyll cycle pigments and the presence of a sustained elevated level of zeaxanthin and antheraxanthin at the end of the long dark period. The leaf water deficit enhanced the sensitivity of PS II efficiency to light exposure. During illumination, strong inhibition of PS II efficiency and large violaxanthin deepoxidation was observed in wilted leaves even under moderate photon flux density compared to control leaves in the same conditions. After 2 h of darkness following the light treatment, the PS II efficiency that is dependent on the previous PPFD, decreased with leaf water deficit. Moreover, zeaxanthin epoxidation led to an accumulation of antheraxanthin in dehydrated leaves. All these drought effects on PS II efficiency and xanthophyll cycle components were also obtained in well-hydrated leaves by short-term CO2 deprivation during illumination. We conclude that the increased susceptibility of PS II efficiency to light in wilted maize leaves is mainly explained by the decrease of CO2 availability and the resulting low net CO2 assimilation.
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  • 71
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: chloroplast development ; chlorophyll fluorescence ; LHC ; photosynthesis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The origin of the long-wavelength chlorophyll (Chl) absorption (λpeak 〉 680 nm) and fluorescence emission (λpeak 〉 685 nm) has been investigated on Scenedesmus mutants (C-2A′-series, lacking the ability to synthesize chlorophyll in the dark) grown at 0.3 (LL), 10 (ML) and 240 µE s−1 m−2(HL). LL cells are arrested in an early greening state; consequently, ‘Chl availability’ determines the phenotype. LL thylakoids are totally lacking long-wavelength Chl; nonetheless, PS I and PS II are fully functional. Gel electrophoresis and Western blots indicate that four out of seven resolved LHC polypeptides seem to require a high Chl availability for assembly of functional chlorophyll-protein complexes. The PS I core-complex of ML and HL thylakoids contains long-wavelength chlorophylls, but in the PS I core-complex of LL thylakoids these pigments are lacking. We conclude that long-wavelength pigments are only present in the PS I core in the case of high Chl availability. The following hypothesis is discussed: Chl availability determines not only the LHC polypeptide pattern, but also the number of bound Chl molecules per individual pigment-protein complex. Chl-binding at non-obligatory, peripheral sites of the pigment-protein complex results in long-wavelength Chl. In the case of low Chl availability, these sites are not occupied and, therefore, the long-wavelength Chl is absent.
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  • 72
    ISSN: 1573-5079
    Keywords: chromatophores ; electron transfer ; kinetics ; photosynthesis ; structure
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract It is generally considered that metabolic reactions are well described by homogeneous kinetic models in which the reaction phase is statistically uniform. In membranes, especially in photosynthetic systems where the protein complement is high, it has recently been recognized that effects of local heterogeneity might contribute additional factors that perturb the kinetic behavior, and require more extensive treatment. We show in this paper that statistical heterogeneity in vesicular systems can also contribute to quite marked discrepancies from the behavior expected from standard kinetic and thermodynamic models, for reactions involving free diffusion in the aqueous phase. We explain the kinetic and thermodynamic effects observed in studies of photosynthetic electron transfer in cells and chromatophores from Rhodobacter sphaeroides previously attributed to supercomplexes, in terms of a model based on heterogeneity in distribution of electron transfer components among the chromatophore population. We discuss examples of data inconsistent with the supercomplex model, but well explained by the heterogeneity model.
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  • 73
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: leaf expansion rate ; modelling ; phosphorus ; photosynthesis ; sunflower
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract Reductions in leaf area and plant growth as a consequence of phosphorus (P) limitations have been attributed both to direct effects of P shortage on leaf expansion rate and to a reduced production of assimilates required for growth. Canopy assimilation and leaf area expansion are closely interrelated processes. In this work we used experimental and simulation techniques to identify and study their importance in determining leaf area on sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.) growing under P-deficient conditions. Experiment 1 was done outdoors, in Buenos Aires, Argentina, and Experiment 2 in a glasshouse in Wageningen, The Netherlands. In both experiments we studied the effects of soil P addition on leaf appearance, leaf expansion, dry matter accumulation, and leaf photosynthesis of non-water stressed plants grown in pots containing a P-deficient soil. Before sowing the equivalent amounts of 0–600 kg of super phosphate ha-1 were added to the pots. Phosphorus deficiency delayed leaf appearance increasing the value of the phyllochron (PHY) up to 76%, the rate of leaf area expansion during the quasi-linear phase of leaf expansion (LER) was reduced by up to 74%, with respect to high P plants. Phosphorus deficiency reduced by up to 50% the rate of light saturated photosynthesis per unit of leaf area (AMAX) in recently expanded leaves, while at low levels of leaf insertion in the canopy, AMAX was reduced by up to 85%, when compared to that in high P plants. Phosphorus deficiency also reduced the duration of the quasi-linear phase of leaf expansion by up to eight days. The values of LER were related (r = 0.56, P 〈 0.05) to the mean concentration of P in all the leaves (Leaves P%) and not to the concentration of P in the individual leaf where LER was determined (r = 0.22, P 〈 0.4) suggesting that under P deficiency individual leaf expansion was not likely to be regulated by the total P concentration at leaf level. The values of AMAX of individual leaves were related (r = 0.79, P 〈 0.01) to the concentration of total P in the corresponding leaf (Leaf P%). LER showed a hyperbolic relationship with Leaves P% (R2 = 0.94, P 〈 0.01, n = 13) that saturate at 0.14%. AMAX showed a hyperbolic relationship with Leaf P% (R2 = 0.73, P 〈 0.01, n = 53) that saturated with values of Leaf P% higher than 0.22. A morphogenetic model of leaf area development and growth was developed to quantify the effect of assimilate supply at canopy level on total leaf area expansion, and to study the effects of model parameters on the growth of sunflower plants under P-deficient conditions. With this model we identified the existence of direct effects of P deficiency on individual leaf area expansion. However, we calculated that under mild P stress conditions up to 83% of the reduction in the observed leaf area was explained by the particular effects of P% on the rate of leaf appearance, on the duration of the linear period of leaf expansion, and on the value of AMAX. We also calculated that the effects of P deficiency on the value of AMAX alone, explained up to 41% of the observed reductions in total leaf area between the highest and the intermediate P level in Experiment 2. Possible mechanisms of action of the direct effects of P on individual leaf expansion are discussed in this paper.
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  • 74
    ISSN: 1573-5060
    Keywords: Carbon isotope discrimination ; indica rice ; photosynthesis ; transpiration efficiency ; tropical japonica rice
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract There is limited information on the transpiration efficiency defined as the ratio of photosynthesis (A) to transpiration (T) of tropical japonica rice (Oryza sativa L.). In this study, transpiration efficiency (A/T) of seven tropical japonica lines developed by the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) were compared with seven indica cultivars one week after flowering in 1993. The gas exchange rate and A/T of one genotype from each type were compared throughout the growing season in 1994. Both A and T were measured on topmost fully expanded leaves under saturating light with a portable photosynthesis system (LI-6200). Indica cultivars had higher T than the tropical japonica lines. The differences in A between the two types were relatively small and inconsistent across growth stages and years compared with the differences in T. The A/T was 25% and 30% higher for the tropical japonica than the indica type in 1993 and 1994, respectively. The differences in T and A/T between the two types were not related to the differences in leaf N content or leaf water content. A lower carbon isotope (13C) discrimination in a tropical japonica line than an indica cultivar confirmed that the improved tropical japonica lines had higher A/T than the indica cultivars.
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  • 75
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: biomass ; growth ; photosynthesis ; salinity ; salt-tolerance
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract The influence of NaCl salinity on growth, dry-matter production and leaf photosynthesis of seedlings of Eucalyptus camaldulensis Dehnh. and Dalbergia sissoo Roxb. was studied by imposing 4 levels (40, 80, 120 and 160 mM) of NaCl in pot culture. Salinity up to 160 mM did not affect plant survival, but did affect plant growth and dry-matter production depending upon the species and salt concentration. NaCl reduced leaf number and dry-weight of all the plant components, but increased stem dry-weight, especially in E. camaldulensis. Salinization also stimulated total dry-matter production at all the salinity levels in E. camaldulensis but only at 40 mM in D. sissoo. The two species varied in protein and chlorophyll concentration and in leaf photosynthetic rate. Protein and chlorophyll concentration of the plants fell at all the levels of NaCl, except at 40 mM, where stimulation in the photosynthetic carbon assimilation of the plants occurred. However, no distinct relationship between leaf photosynthetic rate and dry-matter production was found. The study indicated that low salt concentrations generally stimulated growth, biomass production and rate of photosynthesis in both the species, and E. camaldulensis appeared more NaCl salt-tolerant than D. sissoo.
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  • 76
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: leaf expansion rate ; modelling ; phosphorus ; photosynthesis ; phyllochron ; wheat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract Under phosphorus deficiency reductions in plant leaf area have been attributed to both direct effects of P on the individual leaf expansion rate and to a reduced availability of assimilates for leaf growth. In this work we use experimental and simulation techniques to identify and quantify these processes in wheat plants growing under P-deficient conditions. In a glasshouse experiment we studied the effects of soil P addition (0–138 kg P2O5 ha-1) on tillering, leaf emergence, leaf expansion, plant growth, and leaf photosynthesis of wheat plants (cv. INTA Oasis) that were not water stressed. Plants were grown in pots containing a P-deficient (3 mg P g-1 soil) sandy soil. Sowing and pots were arranged to simulate a crop stand of 173 plants m-2. Experimental results were integrated in a simulation model to study the relative importance of each process in determining the plant leaf area during vegetative stages of wheat. Phosphorus deficiency significantly reduced plant leaf area and dry weight production. Under P-deficient conditions the phyllochron (PHY) was increased up to a 32%, compared to that of high-P plants. In low-P plants the rate of individual leaf area expansion during the quasi-linear phase of leaf expansion (LER) was significantly reduced. The effect of P deficiency on LER was the main determinant of the final size of the individual leaves. In recently expanded leaves phosphorus deficiency reduced the photosynthesis rate per unit leaf area at high radiation (AMAX), up to 57%. Relative values of AMAX showed an hyperbolic relationship with leaf P% saturating at 0.27%. Relative values of the tillering rate showed an hyperbolic relationship with the shoot P% saturating at values above 0.38%. The value of LER was not related to the concentration of P in leaves or shoots. A morphogenetic model of leaf area development and growth was developed to quantify the effect of assimilate supply at canopy level on total leaf area expansion, and to study the sensitivity of different model variables to changes in model parameters. Simulation results indicated that under mild P stress conditions up to 80% of the observed reduction in plant leaf area was due to the effects of P deficiency on leaf emergence and tillering. Under extreme P-deficient conditions the simulation model failed to explain the experimental results indicating that other factors not taken into account by the model, i.e. direct effects of P on leaf expansion, must have been active. Possible mechanisms of action of the direct effects of P on individual leaf expansion are discussed in this work.
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  • 77
    ISSN: 1573-5060
    Keywords: Above-ground biomass ; discriminant analysis ; environmental stress ; oat ; photosynthesis ; principal component analysis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract Seventeen morphological and physiological characteristics of three Avena barbata L. populations from Israel were measured in order to define possible combinations explaining adaptation of these populations to different precipitation, temperature and altitude regimes. Five genotypes from each A. barbata populations were collected from Ashqelon (31°63′N, low annual precipitation), En Hamifraz (32°46′N, high temperature), and Mount Carmel (32°73′N, high altitude), Israel. The behavior of the populations was followed by measuring the morpho-physiological characteristics under well-watered and moderately drought stressed conditions. The experiment was conducted at the Department of Plant Production, University of Helsinki, Finland (60°13′N). The measured traits characterized macro-morphology, transpiration rate, photosynthesis and chloroplast features. The data were subjected to principal component and discriminant analyses and the characteristic combinations that most adequately accounted for the differences among A.barbata populations were established. Differences among the populations were related to adaptation to low water availability and high altitude characterized by special light conditions. The Mount Carmel population (high water availability, high light intensities and increased proportion of UV-light) was characterized by higher tillering, hairy leaf sheaths, high transpiration, high stomatal conductance, slow fluorescence quenching capacity, and less starch granules per chloroplast when compared with populations adapted to lower altitudes. The En Hamifraz population (high mean temperature) was characterized by a high CO2 exchange rate and both En Hamifraz and Ashqelon populations (both adapted to arid conditions) used water sparingly when moderately drought stressed.
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  • 78
    ISSN: 1871-4528
    Keywords: benzylaminopurine ; gibberellic acid ; senescence ; photosynthesis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary The modifying effects of applying the plant growth regulators (PGRs) benzylaminopurine (BAP), gibberellic acid (GA3) and BAP+GA3 on physiological age were studied. Two experiments with two cultivars, differing in rate of physiological ageing (medium-early Pampeana, medium-late Huinkul) and two storage systems were performed during 1988/89 and 1989/90 in two different potato areas of Argentina. In both seasons seed tubers stored in heaps reached an advanced physiological age at planting, compared with tubers from the cold store. Seed tubers of cv. Pampeana were older than those of Huinkul. compared with control crops, those sprayed with BAP maintained ground cover and photosynthesis for longer, and those sprayed with GA3 for a shorter period. Consequently tuber yield was decreased by GA3 in 1988/89, but in 1989/90 all crops treated with PGRs outyielded the control. BAP could overcome effects of advanced physiological age on crop senescence and tuber yield.
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  • 79
    ISSN: 1573-5176
    Keywords: 14C ; photosynthesis ; population growth ; Selenastrum capricornutum ; suspended sediment elutriate ; zinc ; cadmium
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Short-term 14C-fixation (4 h) Selenastrum capricornutum algal toxicity tests were conducted with Cd (n=8), Zn (n=9) and suspended sediment aqueous elutriates (n=28) and the results were compared to those obtained in a 48 h population growth test. In order to provide more realistic experimental conditions, toxicity tests were carried out in prefiltered nutrient-spiked Lake Geneva water. The population growth inhibition test was significantly more sensitive than the14 C-fixation test for Cd (median EC50-4h and EC50-48h values of 600 and 118 µg L-1, respectively) whereas no significant difference was measured for Zn toxicity (median EC50-4h and EC50-48h values of 97 and 96 µg L-1, respectively). With suspended sediment aqueous elutriates, the relative sensitivity of the two different end points is sample dependent, with ratios of the EC25 for the14 C-fixation: population growth test ranging from 〈0.26 to 〉53.3. Elutriate toxicity shows no apparent relationship between the acute and chronic test, indicating that population growth inhibition cannot be derived directly or predicted from14 C-fixation. Both tests with their specific advantages and limitations provide valuable complementary information to measure the impact of single toxicants or complex mixtures on aquatic plants.
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  • 80
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    Journal of applied phycology 10 (1998), S. 547-554 
    ISSN: 1573-5176
    Keywords: herbicide ; green alga ; growth ; nutrients ; photosynthesis ; it Protosiphon botryoides ; respiration ; Thiobencarb
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The effects of the herbicide thiobencarb (Saturn) were tested on the growth and physiology of the chlorophyte Protosiphon botryoides isolated from an Egyptian paddy. Assays were conducted using 16-day batch cultures. Chlorophyll and dry weight biomass yields were significantly reduced at 2–3 mg L-1 thiobencarb, and dark respiration increased and protein decreased significantly at 3 mg L-1. Reductions in exponential specific growth rate (μ) were generally small, but in some cases significant. Thiobencarb also slightly, but significantly, reduced the 77 K fluorescence parameter Fv/Fm, an indicator of maximum photosynthetic efficiency. No consistent dose-dependent changes occurred in chlorophyll per unit dry weight, total carbohydrate or gross photosynthetic capacity. Whereas half of the added thiobencarb was recovered from control (uninoculated) medium, it was largely absent from cells and culture medium after sixteen days, indicating biodegradation by the alga or associated bacteria. P. botryoides recovered fully within sixteen days following subculture in thiobencarb-free medium. Independently varying phosphate and nitrate nine-fold had no clear effect on the sensitivity of P. botryoides to thiobencarb.
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  • 81
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    Journal of applied phycology 10 (1998), S. 447-452 
    ISSN: 1573-5176
    Keywords: dense algal suspension ; light-harvesting pigment ; photosynthesis ; Synechocystis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The effects on photoinhibition of light-harvesting pigments in microalgal cells were examined using the wild type and a phycocyanin- deficient mutant (PD-1) of Synechosystis PCC 6714. Mutant PD-1 showed higher resistance to high light than the wild type in terms of the decline of photosynthetic activity at any light intensity and with various cell densities. This suggests that the loss of productivity induced by high light intensity would be improved by reducing the content of light-harvesting pigments.
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  • 82
    ISSN: 1573-5176
    Keywords: Cyanobacterium ; Spirulina platensis ; Arthrospira ; CO2 ; organic carbon ; nitrogen ; photosynthesis ; batch culture
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The consequences of the addition of CO2 (1%) in cultures of S. platensis are examined in terms of biomass yield, cell composition and external medium composition. CO2 enrichment was tested under nitrogen saturating and nitrogen limiting conditions. Increasing CO2 levels did not cause any change in maximum growth rate while it decreased maximum biomass yield. Protein and pigments were decreased and carbohydrate increased by high CO2, but the capability to store carbohydrates was saturated. C:N ratio remained unchanged while organic carbon released to the external medium was enhanced, suggesting that organic carbon release in S. platensis is an efficient mechanism for the maintenance of the metabolic integrity, balancing the cell C:N ratio in response to environmental CO2 changes. CO2 affected the pigment content: Phycocyanin, chlorophyll and carotenoids were reduced in around 50%, but the photosynthetic parameters were slightly changed. We propose that in S. platensis CO2 could act promoting degradation of pigments synthetised in excess in normal CO2 conditions, that are not necessary for light harvesting. Nitrogen assimilation was significantly not affected by CO2, and it is proposed that the inability to stimulate N assimilation by CO2 enrichment determined the lack of response in maximum growth rate.
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  • 83
    ISSN: 1573-5028
    Keywords: ferredoxin-NADP+ oxidoreductase ; petH ; divergent operator ; antisense mRNA ; phosphoribulokinase ; prk Synechocystis PCC 6803 ; photosynthesis ; cyanobacteria
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The petH gene, encoding ferredoxin-NADP+ oxidoreductase (FNR), has been characterised in the unicellular cyanobacterium Synechocystis PCC 6803. Its product, FNR, was heterologously produced and functionally characterized. The start-site of the monocystronic petH transcript was mapped 523 bp upstream of the predicted PetH initiation codon, resulting in an unusually large 5′-untranslated region. The 5′ end of the petH transcript is situated within the open reading frame of phosphoribulokinase (encoded by prk), which is transcribed in opposite orientation with respect to petH. The transcription start site of the prk transcript was mapped 219 bp upstream of the initiation codon, resulting in a 223 bp antisense region between both transcripts. Under many conditions the expression of both genes (i.e. petH and prk) is co-regulated symmetrically at the transcriptional level, as was concluded from both northern hybridization experiments and from primer extension analyses; it became uncoupled, however, when specifically petH expression was stimulated, independent of prk expression, by stressing the Synechocystis cells with high salt concentrations. A model for a new type of bidirectional operator, regulating the expression of petH and prk, is proposed.
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  • 84
    ISSN: 1573-5176
    Keywords: Gelidium sesquipedale ; photosynthesis ; fluorescence ; light response curves ; pigments ; depth
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Photosynthesis-light response curves of Gelidium sesquipedale from the west coast of Portugal (Cape Espichel) were determined at four different depths, 3, 10, 15 and 22 m. Data acquisition using chlorophyll a fluorescence methodology and oxygen electrode measurements were compared. Response curves were determined over an increasing range of irradiance values (I), from darkness to 900 μmol photon m-2 s-1 PAR. In general, light response curves obtained for G. sesquipedale showed a similar pattern whether determined by the chlorophyll fluorescence method or by oxygen evolution. The photosynthetic capacity of G. sesquipedale decreased with depth, as expected, revealing a ‘sun’ and ‘shade’ acclimation pattern, between shallow and deeper waters.
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  • 85
    ISSN: 1573-5176
    Keywords: UV-radiation ; chlorophyll fluorescence ; photosynthesis ; stress tolerance ; electron transport
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
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    Notes: Abstract Photoinhibition and recovery kinetics after short exposure to solar radiation following three different irradiance treatments of irradiances (PAR, PAR+UVA and PAR+UVA+UVB) was assessed in two intertidal species of the genus Gelidium, Gelidium sesquipedale and G. latifolium, collected from Tarifa (southern Spain) using in vivo chlorophyll fluorescence (PAM fluorometry). After 3 h UV radiation exposure, optimal quantum efficiency (Fv/Fm) in G. sesquipedale decreased between 25 and 35% relative to the control. Under PAR alone, values decreased to 60%. In G. latifolium, photoinhibition did not exceed 40%. Similar results were found for the effective quantum yield (ΔF/Fm′), however, no marked differences in relation to light treatments were seen. When plants were shaded for recovery from stress, only in G. latifolium a significant increase in photosynthesis was observed (between 80 and 100% of control). In contrast, photosynthesis of G. sesquipedale suffered a chronic photoinhibition or photodamage under the three light irradiances. Full solar radiation (PAR+UVA+UVB) affected also the electron transport rate in both species. Here, initial slopes of electron transport vs. irradiance curves decreased up to 60% of controls. Although the recovery kinetic under PAR+UVA+UVB conditions was delayed in G. latifolium, after 24 h recovery this species reached significantly higher than G. sesquipedale. PAR impaired electron trasport only in G. sesquipedale. Overall, both species are characterized by different capacity to tolerate enhanced solar radiation. G. latifolium is a sun adapted plant, well suited to intertidal light conditions, whereas G. sesquipedale, growing at shaded sites in the intertidal zone, is more vulnerable to enhanced UV radiation.
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  • 86
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    Journal of applied phycology 10 (1998), S. 419-425 
    ISSN: 1573-5176
    Keywords: Gracilaria cornea ; photosynthesis ; respiration ; chlorophyll ; phycoerythrin ; Florida ; salinity ; temperature ; irradiance
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The agarophyte Gracilaria cornea, collected over 2.5 y in the Florida Keys, shows adaptations to oceanic salinities and subtropical to tropical water temperatures in its photosynthetic and respiratory responses as measured with a respirometer. No seasonal pattern in responses to irradiance, temperature, and salinity were evident between five collections over a 20-month period, indicating the tropical nature of the populations from Bahia Honda and Pigeon Keys. Concentrations of chlorophyll a (0.09 to 0.41 mg g d wt-1) and phycoerythrin (0.06 to 0.36 mg g d wt- 1) were low and reflect the low nutrient regime of the habitats, especially when compared to laboratory cultured plants. Compensation and saturation irradiances were also low (11–38 and 90–127 μmol photon m-2 s-1), indicating acclimation to lower irradiances in their shallow (1–2 m depth) habitats where turbidity can be high. In comparison with other subtropical and warm temperate species of Gracilaria, G. cornea had lower levels of pigment, but similarly high photosynthetic efficiency, demonstrating shade adaptation; it had only limited tolerance to salinities below 20‰ and temperatures below 15 °C. Thus, G. cornea from the Florida Keys in mariculture would require subtropical to tropical temperatures and stable oceanic salinities.
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  • 87
    ISSN: 1573-5176
    Keywords: Chlorophyll antenna size ; damage and repair cycle ; photon use efficiency ; photosynthesis ; photoinhibition ; Dunaliella salina
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
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    Notes: Abstract The photon use efficiencies and maximal rates of photosynthesis in Dunaliella salina (Chlorophyta) cultures acclimated to different light intensities were investigated. Batch cultures were grown to the mid-exponential phase under continuous low-light (LL: 100 μmol photon m-2 s-1) or high-light (HL: 2000 μmol photon m-2 s-1) conditions. Under LL, cells were normally pigmented (deep green) containing ∼500 chlorophyll (Chl) molecules per photosystem II (PSII) unit and ∼250 Chl molecules per photosystem I (PSI). HL-grown cells were yellow-green, contained only 60 Chl per PSII and 100 Chl per PSI and showed signs of chronic photoinhibition, i.e., accumulation of photodamaged PSII reaction centers in the chloroplast thylakoids. In LL-grown cells, photosynthesis saturated at ∼200 μmol photon m-2 s-1 with a rate (Pmax) of ∼100 mmol O2 (mol Chl)-1 s-1. In HL-grown cells, photosynthesis saturated at much higher light intensities, i.e. ∼2500 μmol photon m-2 s-1, and exhibited a three-fold higher Pmax (∼300 mmol O2 (mol Chl)-1 s-1) than the normally pigmented LL-grown cells. Recovery of the HL-grown cells from photoinhibition, occurring prior to a light-harvesting Chl antenna size increase, enhanced Pmax to ∼675 mmol O2 (mol Chl)-1 s-1. Extrapolation of these results to outdoor mass culture conditions suggested that algal strains with small Chl antenna size could exhibit 2–3 times higher productivities than currently achieved with normally pigmented cells.
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  • 88
    ISSN: 1573-5125
    Keywords: cryptomonads ; macromolecular ; Phototron ; photosynthesis ; UV radiation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract We used a device called a Phototron to measure the effects of UV radiation on the cosmopolitan algae, Cryptomonas erosa, grown in continuous cultures. In the Phototron, we investigated changes in photosynthetic parameters (Pmax – specific production rate at optimal light intensity; α – initial slope of the linear portion of the Photosynthesis-Irradiance curve; and θ – the convexity or rate of bending) and carbon allocation as a function of irradiance at three different environmentally-realistic doses of UV radiation in unconditioned (no prior UV exposure) and conditioned algae (15 d previous UV exposure). For unconditioned control algae, Pmax-Total was lower, although not significantly, than the two highest UV treatments. For conditioned control algae, Pmax-Total was higher, although not significantly, than all UV treatments. Our data suggest that short term (4 h) exposure to low levels of UV (8.09 W m−2 unweighted) does not affect Pmax-Total in C. erosa, but does change the proportion of carbon allocated to lipids and proteins. Also, comparisons of lipids, polysaccharides and proteins as a percent of total carbon uptake between unconditioned and conditioned algae indicate that exposure history to UV radiation can have a negative impact on carbon allocation to lipids and proteins, in a wetland alga species that is crucial to the efficient transfer of energy through freshwater food webs.
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  • 89
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    Journal of applied phycology 10 (1998), S. 51-53 
    ISSN: 1573-5176
    Keywords: blue-green alga ; cyanobacterium ; Fv/Fmlight ; Nostoc flagelliforme ; photosynthesis ; rewetting
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract PS II photochemical efficiency (Fv/Fm) of Nostoc flagelliforme was examined after rewetting in order to investigate the light-dependency of its photosynthetic recovery. Fv/Fm was not detected in the dark, but was immediately recognized in the light. Different levels of light irradiation (4, 40 and 400 µmol photon m2 s-1) displayed different effects on the recovery process of photosynthesis. The intermediate level led to the best recovery of photochemical efficiency; the low light required longer and the high light inhibited the extent of the recovered efficiency. It was concluded that the photosynthetic recovery of N. flagelliforme is both light-dependent and influenced by photon flux density.
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  • 90
    ISSN: 1573-5176
    Keywords: ammonium ; C:N ratio ; tank culture ; dietary fibre ; fatty acids ; nitrogen ; photosynthesis ; Ulva rigida
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Physiological and biochemical changes in relation to inorganic nitrogen availability were studied for tank-cultivated Ulva rigida grown under nitrogen- enriched and nitrogen-depleted seawater. U. rigida was initially cultivated in nitrogen-enriched seawater (daily concentrations of NH4+ and NO3- + NO2- ranged between 0.5–1.7 and 0.06–0.15 mg L-1, respectively), then transferred to nitrogen-depleted seawater where photosynthetic capacity decreased to zero after 23 d. At the time (14 d) when photosynthetic rates were lower than 2.0 μmol O2 g-1 FW min-1 and strong bleaching had occurred, some algae were returned to the initial nitrogen-enriched seawater to study recovery from N-limited growth. Data on biochemical composition (chlorophylls, ash, caloric content, fatty acids and dietary fibres) and colouration varied significantly depending on the nitrogen conditions. C:N ratios correlated significantly with biochemical parameters. Fatty acid (FA) synthesis continued during the N-starvation period; saturated and mono-unsaturated FA increased to a maximun of 72.2%, while poly-unsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) decreased to 27.7%. During the N-enriched recovery period, the reverse was found. C:N ratios above 10 correlated with carbohydrate synthesis as shown by the dietary fibre level. Under nitrogen enriched conditions, C:N ratios decreased along with a decrease in fibre level. Under controlled conditions, nitrogen represents a major influence on the development of intensive tank cultivation of Ulva rigida, not only by affecting parameters closely related to nitrogen metabolism but also some clearly influenced by carbon uptake.
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  • 91
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Key words Agrostis canina ; CO2 vents ; photosynthesis ; lignification ; growth
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract  The aim of this study was to characterise growth and photosynthetic capacity in plants adapted to long-term contrasting atmospheric CO2 concentrations (C a). Seeds of Agrostis canina L. ssp. monteluccii were collected from a natural CO2 transect in central-western Italy and plants grown in controlled environment chambers at both ambient and elevated CO2 (350 and 700 μmol mol−1) in nutrient-rich soil. Seasonal mean C a at the source of the plant material ranged from 610 to 451 μmol CO2 mol−1, derived from C4 leaf stable carbon isotope discrimination (δ13C). Under chamber conditions, CO2 enrichment stimulated the growth of all populations. However, plants originating from elevated C a exhibited higher initial relative growth rates (RGRs) irrespective of chamber CO2 concentrations and a positive relationship was found between RGR and C a at the seed source. Seed weight was positively correlated with C a, but differences in seed weight were found to explain no more than 34% of the variation in RGRs at elevated CO2. Longer-term experiments (over 98 days) on two populations originating from the extremes of the transect (451 and 610 μmol CO2 mol−1) indicated that differences in growth between populations were maintained when plants were grown at both 350 and 700 μmol CO2 mol−1. Analysis of leaf material revealed an increase in the cell wall fraction (CWF) in plants grown at elevated CO2, with plants originating from high C a exhibiting constitutively lower levels but a variable response in terms of the degree of lignification. In vivo gas exchange measurements revealed no significant differences in light and CO2 saturated rates of photosynthesis and carboxylation efficiency between populations or with CO2 treatment. Moreover, SDS-PAGE/ LISA quantification of leaf ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) showed no difference in Rubisco content between populations or CO2 treatments. These findings suggest that long-term adaptation to growth at elevated CO2 may be associated with a potential for increased growth, but this does not appear to be linked with differences in the intrinsic capacity for photosynthesis.
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  • 92
    ISSN: 1573-9058
    Keywords: D1 protein ; internal CO2 concentration ; maize ; oxygen evolution ; phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase ; photosynthesis ; photosystem 2 ; ribulose-1,5-bisphophate carboxylase/oxygenase ; stomatal conductance ; thermotolerance
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Photosystem 2 (PS2) in general, and the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) in particular, is one of the most thermolabile components of photosynthesis. We examined the effects of heat stress on net photosynthetic rate (PN) and content of several stromal and thylakoid-membrane proteins (including OEC proteins) in maize (Zea mays L.) in order to determine if decreases in PN during, and especially after, heat stress were correlated with decreases in the content of OEC proteins. The PN decreased with heat stress in maize, and post-heat stress recovery of PN required 4 d following the second of two heat-shocks. The decrease in PN was not the result of stomatal closure. Cellular levels of the 33, 23, and 16 kDa OEC proteins decreased with heat stress, and the decreases were greatest and most closely correlated with decreases in PN for OEC16. Following the second heat stress, full recovery of OEC levels (especially OEC16 and 33) coincided with full recovery of PN, more so than with other photosynthetic proteins examined. For example, decreases in levels of the 32-kDa QB-binding protein of the PS2 reaction center (D1), ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase large subunit, and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase were generally smaller than for the OEC proteins and full recovery of these proteins occurred at least 2 d prior to full recovery of photosynthesis. These results are consistent with previous fluorescence and in vitro studies by others in suggesting that heat-relaed effects on PS2 and the OEC are an important limitation to Pn during heat stress. Additionally, these results suggest that heat-related decreases in the content of OEC proteins may limit post-heat stress recovery of carbon fixation.
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  • 93
    ISSN: 1573-9058
    Keywords: photosynthates ; 14CO2 ; ear ; leaf insertion ; photosynthesis ; Triticum aestivum L.
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Leaf blades of the late-sown winter wheat produced the major portion, i.e., more than 60 %, of the total 14C-photosynthates at grain filling, but ear (rachis and glumes) only about 15 %, sheaths about 11 %, and stem internodes about 11 %. The change of plant density in this experiment had little influence on the 14CO2-photoassimilation of the ear (rachis and glumes), flag leaf lamina, sheaths and stem internodes, but markedly affected photosynthesis of the second, the third and lower leaves. The photosynthetic rate [expressed as specific radioactivity, s-1 kg-1(d.m.)] and the amount of 14CO2 photosynthates decreased significantly in the second, the third and other lower leaves at a high plant density. Upon grain-filling of the late-sown wheat, the grain was the major importer of photosynthates. Yet partitioning to the stem internodes depended on the plant density. Stem was the importer of photosynthates at a low plant density, but the exporter at a high plant density. In plants at a low plant density a fairly large proportion of photosynthates was distributed into the roots. The middle and lower above-ground parts of the late-sown wheat at a high plant density decreased or lost their function early. As a result, the plant senesced earlier. However, the grain setting, filling and yielding were restricted. An appropriately low plant density was suitable for prolonging the function of the middle and lower organs, delaying the senescence of plant, increasing the source supply for grain filling, and improving the grain yield.
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  • 94
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    Photosynthetica 33 (1997), S. 269-275 
    ISSN: 1573-9058
    Keywords: Malus domestica ; open-top cuvettes ; photosynthesis ; respiration ; water stress ; water use efficiency ; xylem water potential
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The response of fruiting or deblossomed trees to water stress such as drought or flooding was investigated in six semi open-top cuvettes each containing one apple (Malus domestica Borkh. cv. Golden Delicious) tree. Xylem water potentials of leaves dropped from -1.2 to -4.1 MPa within 7 d of drought, the effect being enhanced by fruiting. Apple trees without fruits showed smaller reductions in net photosynthetic rate (P N ) and dark respiration rate (R D ) after 2 d of drought and hence more positive carbon balances relative to fruiting trees. Flooding for 4 d had a more pronounced effect on P N than on transpiration, resulting in a reduced water use efficiency (WUE). This reduction in WUE was greater in the non-fruiting trees. Flooding reduced P N of the whole apple canopies irrespective of fruiting; aple trees without fruits increased R D resulting in a less positive carbon balance relative to fruiting trees. Fruiting increased the sensitivity to drought of apple trees (R D and P N ), but decreased their sensitivity to flooding (R D and WUE), suggesting different adaptation mechanisms for the two forms of water stress.
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  • 95
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    Biologia plantarum 39 (1997), S. 607-614 
    ISSN: 1573-8264
    Keywords: chloroplasts ; fern ; mitochondria ; photosynthesis ; respiration ; salt stress ; ultrastructure
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Gametophytes cultured in solutions containing 0.0 to 0.7 % NaCl exhibited no change in ultra structural organization of chloroplasts. In 1.0% NaCl-grown gametophytes, there were thinner granal stacks, relatively larger spaces between granal thylakoidal membranes and larger plastoglobuli in the chloroplasts. These changes were accompanied by a decrease in photosynthesis. Cup shape, horseshoe shape, ring shape, and amoeboid mitochondria were observed in gametophytes grown in 0.0 to 0.7% NaCl. Only round mitochondria were observed in the gametophytes grown in 1.0 % NaCl. Mitochondria seemed to be more resistant to salt stress compared to chloroplasts. There was no direct relationship between changes in respiration rate and changes in mitochondrial shape among gametophytes grown in different NaCl concentrations.
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  • 96
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    Biologia plantarum 40 (1997), S. 91-101 
    ISSN: 1573-8264
    Keywords: CER ; leaf thickness ; photosynthesis ; photosynthetic N-use efficiency succulence
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract We measured PAR-saturated CO2 exchange rate (CER), and leaf N, P and chlorophyll (Chl) concentrations in 21 plant species, selected to encompass as broad a range in specific leaf area (SLA) as possible, and encompassing non-succulent C3 as well as succulent CAM plants. We worked with plants growing under uniform conditions in the facilities of a biological research station to ensure that any correlations found were due to inherent, genetically controlled, relationships between the measured parameters and not due to variations in resource availability in different habitats. We found CER to be strongly correlated to SLA, leaf N concentration and Chl concentration. CER increased much faster with increasing leaf N concentration (CER ≈ N3.1) than with increasing SLA (CER ≈ SLA1.2). CER also increased much faster with leaf N concentration than with increasing Chl concentration (CER ≈ Chl1.3), indicating the photosynthetic N-use efficiency (NUE) to be higher for plants with high N concentration than for plants with low N concentration (NUE ≈ N2.1). Analysis of covariance showed that these relationships exist even when comparing plants of widely different growth forms - succulent or non-succulent, and of different photosynthetic pathways, as the C3 and CAM plants compared here. Testing against scaling coefficients calculated using dimensional analysis, showed that the scaling of N, Chl and CER against SLA was not merely a result of diluting N and Chl with carbon in thicker leaves but that SLA, probably through influencing light absorptio and/or CO2 diffusion pathway, played an independent role in controlling CER.
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  • 97
    ISSN: 1573-9058
    Keywords: chlorophyll ; DCMU ; exciton-radical pair equilibrium model ; NH2OH ; photosynthesis ; Pisum ; quinones ; relative air humidity ; wilting
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Detached leaves of pea (Pisum sativum) were submitted to water stress at different relative air humidities. The photosynthetic activity of photosystem 2 (PS2) was monitored by time-resolved picosecond chlorophyll (Chl) fluorescence spectroscopy. In the first days the well-known fast Chl fluorescence decay was observed which indicated high PS2 activity. After a few days the average fluorescence decay time τm reached a maximum, depending on the wilting conditions, but always at a relative loss of leaf mass of 80%. After this maximum, τm decreased within a few hours, the fluorescence decay became similar to that one of an intact leaf, but an additional fluorescence decay component with a lifetime of 3.6 ns appeared. At first the primary quinone QA was reduced due to inhibition of the electron transfer to the secondary quinone QB. Simultaneously, water deficiency caused an electron lack at the oxidizing site of PS2. This disabled the primary electron donor of PS2, tyrosine Z, from reducing the oxidized reaction centre of PS2 (P680+). Thus a recombination of P680+-pheophytin-QA- took place, and the energy was lost as heat. With further water stress, QA was decoupled from PS2. The new fluorescence decay component could therefore be assigned to energetically decoupled antenna complexes.
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  • 98
    ISSN: 1573-9058
    Keywords: chlorophyll fluorescence ; chloroplast ultrastructure ; photosynthesis ; photosystem 2 ; Thinopyrum bessarabicum
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A 24 h exposure of the salt-tolerant grass Thinopyrum bessarabicum (Savul. and Rayss) A. Love seedlings to 1 mM aluminium (Al) in nutrient solution at pH of 9.0 resulted in a significant reduction of the biomass. In control samples the mesophyll chloroplasts exhibited the usual lens shape with most grana arranged in straight or slightly curving lines, and only 6.5 % of the grana were out of order. In Al-treated plants the mesophyll chloroplasts displayed a slightly distorted shape and distended size with most grana arranged in bow-like lines, while in the central region of the organelle as many as 26.7 % of the grana were independent and out of order in relation to the long axis. The morphological changes in the chloroplast shape and grana arrangement were probably due to swelling and distension of the chloroplasts in consequence to the altered membrane permeability. The initial in vivo chlorophyll (Chl) fluorescence FO, as well as the intermediate FI and peak fluorescence FP were increased under the Al stress: this indicated a destruction of photosystem (PS) 2 reaction centres and increased reduction of QA. The (FI-FO)/(FP-FO) ratio exhibited a significant increase indicating higher proportion of PS2 centres unable to reduce QB. Changes in the chloroplast ultrastructure seemed to be the reason of photosynthetic electron transport inhibition. Yet all these changes in the photosynthetic performance and chloroplast ultrastructure were considered as indirect effects of Al treatment since Al concentration in the leaves was undetectable. Disturbances in the chloroplast ultrastructure could be caused by a reduced uptake and/or transport of other nutrients.
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  • 99
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    Photosynthetica 34 (1997), S. 563-567 
    ISSN: 1573-9058
    Keywords: oxygen flash yields ; photochemical activity ; photosynthesis ; photosystem 2 ; thermoluminescence
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Effects of the cytokinins 6-benzylaminopurine (BAP) and N-2-chloro-4-pyridyl-N′-phenylurea (4-PU-30) on the photochemical activity, oxygen flash yields, and thermoluminescence in bean plants under a water stress were studied. The cytokinins increased the photochemical (Hill reaction) activity and thermoluminescence "B"-band in control as well as in stressed and rehydrated plants, while the oxygen flash yields were affected only in the stressed and rehydrated plants.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 100
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    World journal of microbiology and biotechnology 13 (1997), S. 699-705 
    ISSN: 1573-0972
    Keywords: Phormidium laminosum ; phosphate uptake ; phosphorus-starved ; photosynthesis ; vanadate
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Process Engineering, Biotechnology, Nutrition Technology
    Notes: Abstract Phosphorus(P)-starved cells of the cyanobacterium Phormidium laminosum have been investigated in relation to their phosphate uptake characteristics. P-deficient cells showed much higher phosphate uptake rates from ultrapure water supplemented with this anion than P-sufficient ones. After 9 days of starvation in P-free medium, the total cellular P content of P-deficient cells was approximately five times lower than that of cells grown in the presence of phosphate. Phosphate uptake by P-deficient cells occurred in both light and dark under aerobic conditions. In anaerobiosis, light was required for uptake, suggesting that the necessary energy could be derived from the respiratory electron transport chain. Phosphate uptake in P-deficient cells was sensitive to vanadate, suggesting the involvement of a plasma membrane ATPase.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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