Abstract: | In Monoraphidium braunii, uptake of NO3?, NO2? and Cl? is associated with proton transport and triggered by blue light (BL). Only 10 s after cells able to reduce NO3? to NH4+ were irradiated with continuous, low-fluence BL in the presence of NO3?, an alkalinization of the medium began and only became interrupted by switching off the BL with a 60–90 s time lag. With 30 s BL pulses, the NO3?-dependent alkalinization lasted 3–5 min until it stopped. When the cells were exposed to continuous BL in the presence of Cl?, the alkalinization also started within 10 s but lasted only 3 min. After that, the pH remained constant and decreased when the BL was switched off. With 30 s BL pulses, the Cl?-dependent alkalinization lasted 3 min and then decreased to its initial value. The NO3?-dependent alkalinization shown by cells unable to reduce NO3? to NH4+ was similar to that observed in the presence of Cl?. These alkalinization rates fit the Bunsen-Roscoe reciprocity law. With 2 s pulses of high-fluence BL, the delay time of the NO3 - or Cl?-dependent alkalinizations was only 2 s, one of the fastest BL responses reported so far. The action spectra for Cl? and NO3? uptakes proved to be very similar and matched the absorption spectra of flavins, including the 267 nm peak. |